英文26个字母标准读音,具体如下:
A[ei];B[bi:];C[si:];D[di:];E[i:];F[ef];G[d?i:];H[eit∫];I[ai];J[d?ei];K[kei];L[el];M [em];N[en];O[?u];P[pi:];Q[kju:];R[a:];S[es];T[ti:];U[ju:],V[vi:];W[′d∧blju:];X[eks];Y[wai];Z[zi:].
--The 26 letters of the English alphabet
The 26 letters of the alphabet originally originated from Egyptian hieroglyphics, which were later improved by the Phoenicians who invented the Phoenician alphabet; the Greeks reformed the Phoenician alphabet and created the Greek alphabet; the Romans reformed the Greek alphabet and invented the Greek alphabet; the Romans reformed the Greek alphabet and invented the Greek alphabet; the Greek alphabet and invented the Greek alphabet; the Greek alphabet and invented the Greek alphabet. The Greeks reformed the Greek alphabet and then invented the Latin alphabet, to which the English alphabet belongs.
Introduction to the Alphabet
Around the 13th century BC, the Phoenicians created the first alphabetic scripts in the history of mankind, *** 22 letters (no vowels). This was the Phoenicians' great contribution to human culture. The Phoenician alphabet was the beginning of the world's alphabetic writing. In the West, it gave rise to the ancient Greek alphabet, which in turn developed into the Latin and Slavic alphabets.
And the Greek and Latin alphabets were the basis of the alphabets of all Western countries. In the East, it gave rise to the Aramean alphabet, from which evolved the Indian, Arabic, Hebrew, Persian and other national alphabets. The Chinese Uighur, Mongolian, and Manchu alphabets also evolved from it.
The Phoenician alphabet was used by the Phoenicians to write their Phoenician language. Phoenician is a Semitic language. Phoenician inscriptions have been found in archaeological sites, including a number of Phoenician cities and colonies around the Mediterranean Sea, such as Byblos (in present-day Lebanon) and Carthage (in present-day Tunisia).
Originally the original Sinai alphabet was hieroglyphic, however by the time of the Phoenician alphabet, the meaning of some words had changed. Since the letters were originally carved in stone, most of the letters were straight and square, just like the ancient Germanic alphabets. Though there were a few more curvier versions afterward that became the North African Neo-Carthaginian alphabet of the Roman era.
Phoenician was usually written from right to left, while some scripts used left-right reciprocal writing (boustrophedon, also known as planchette writing). Some of the letters have alternative ways of writing them, for example, taw can be written as if it had a '+' sign instead of an 'x' sign, and heth can have two horizontal lines running through it. The Latin letter X comes from the pronunciation of the Greek letter Χ, not directly from the word Ξ (samekh-inspired).