The International Phonetic Alphabet of the German Alphabet is listed below:
Expanded Information:
The Phonetic Teachers' Association, founded in 1886 as the Phonetic Teachers' Association, which is now the International Phonetics International Phonetics Association (also known by its acronym IPA).
In 1889, the association was renamed L'Association Phonétique des Professeurs de Langues Vivantes (AP, now the Phonetics Association of Language Teachers);
In 1897, the name "International Phonetics Association "It was in 1897 that the name officially appeared on the stage of history - L'Association Phonétique Internationale (API), also known in English as the International Phonetics
The Association of Phonetic Instruments (API), which at the time was still the "Association of Phonetic Teachers", put forward several basic principles of the phonetic alphabet in 1888 (which are categorized by me), which have been used by generations of phoneticians to this day:
1. One sound, one symbol, one symbol, one sound. One symbol, one phoneme. Each symbol can only represent one phoneme, and each phoneme can only correspond to one symbol, so as to avoid ambiguity in the process of translation.
2. Common Roman letters are used as much as possible to facilitate learning and application. If original letters have to be used, the new letters should suggest to some extent the phonemes indicated.
3. Try to avoid the use of unnecessary additional symbols to avoid omissions and misunderstandings.
References:
Baidu Encyclopedia - International Phonetic Alphabet
Baidu Encyclopedia - German Alphabet p>