Icelandic orthography


Icelandic orthography is the way in which Icelandic words are spelled and how their spelling corresponds with their pronunciation.

Alphabet

The Icelandic alphabet is a Latin-script alphabet including some letters duplicated with acute accents; in addition, it includes the letter eth, transliterated as d, and the runic letter thorn, transliterated as th ; Ææ and Öö are considered letters in their own right and not a ligature or diacritical version of their respective letters. Icelanders call the ten extra letters, especially thorn and eth, , although they are not. Eth is also used in Faroese and Elfdalian, and while thorn is no longer used in any other living language, it was used in many historical languages, including Old English. Icelandic words never start with ð, which means the capital version Ð is mainly just used when words are spelled using all capitals.
The alphabet consists of the following 32 letters.


LetterNameIPAFrequency
Aaa10.11%
Ááá1.8%
Bb1.04%
Dd1.58%
Ðð4.39%
Eee6.42%
Ééé0.65%
Ffeff3.01%
Ggge4.24%
Hh1.87%
Iii7.58%
Ííí1.57%
Jjjoð1.14%
Kk3.31%
Llell4.53%
Mmemm4.04%
Nnenn7.71%
Ooo2.17%
Óóó0.99%
Pp0.79%
Rrerr8.58%
Ssess5.63%
Tt4.95%
Uuu4.56%
Úúú0.61%
Vvvaff2.44%
Xxex0.05%
Yyufsilon y0.9%
Ýýufsilon ý0.23%
Þþþorn1.45%
Æææ0.87%
Ööö0.78%

;Obsolete letter
LetterNameIPA
Zzseta

The letters a, á, e, é, i, í, o, ó, u, ú, y, ý, æ and ö are considered vowels, and the remainder are consonants.
The letters C, Q and W are only used in Icelandic in words of foreign origin and some proper names that are also of foreign origin. Otherwise, c, qu, and w are replaced by k/s/ts, hv, and v respectively.
The letter Z was used until 1973, when it was abolished, as it was only an etymological detail. It originally represented an affricate, which arose from the combinations t+s, d+s, ð+s; however, in modern Icelandic it came to be pronounced, and as it was a rare letter anyway it was decided in 1973 to replace all instances of z with s. However, one of the most important newspapers in Iceland, Morgunblaðið, still uses it sometimes, and a secondary school, Verzlunarskóli Íslands has it in its name. It is also found in some proper names, and loanwords such as pizza. Older people, who were educated before the abolition of the z sometimes also use it.
While the letters C, Q, W, and Z are found on the Icelandic keyboard, they are rarely used in Icelandic; they are used in some proper names of Icelanders, mainly family names. The letter C is used on road signs according to European regulation, and cm is used for the centimetre according to the international SI system. Many believe these letters should be included in the alphabet, as its purpose is a tool to collate. The alphabet as taught in schools up to about 1980 has these 36 letters : a, á, b, c, d, ð, e, é, f, g, h, i, í, j, k, l, m, n, o, ó, p, q, r, s, t, u, ú, v, w, x, y, ý, z, þ, æ, ö.

History

The modern Icelandic alphabet has developed from a standard established in the 19th century, by the Danish linguist Rasmus Rask primarily. It is ultimately based heavily on an orthographic standard created in the early 12th century by a document referred to as The First Grammatical Treatise, author unknown. The standard was intended for the common North Germanic language, Old Norse. It did not have much influence, however, at the time.
The most defining characteristics of the alphabet were established in the old treatise:
The later Rasmus Rask standard was basically a re-enactment of the old treatise, with some changes to fit concurrent North Germanic conventions, such as the exclusive use of k rather than c. Various old features, like ð, had actually not seen much use in the later centuries, so Rask's standard constituted a major change in practice.
Later 20th century changes are most notably the adoption of é, which had previously been written as je, and the replacement of z with s in 1973.

Function of symbols

This section lists Icelandic letters and letter combinations, and how to pronounce them using a narrow International Phonetic Alphabet transcription.

Vowels

Icelandic vowels may be either long or short, but this distinction is only relevant in stressed syllables: unstressed vowels are neutral in quantitative aspect. The vowel length is determined by the consonants that follow the vowel: if there is only one consonant before another vowel or at the end of a word, the vowel is long; if there are more than one, counting geminates and pre-aspirated stops as CC, the vowel is short. There are, however, some exceptions to this rule:
  1. A vowel is long when the first consonant following it is and the second, e.g. esja, vepja, akrar, vökvar, tvisvar.
  2. A vowel is also long in monosyllabic substantives with a genitive -s whose stem ends in a single following a vowel, except if the final is assimilated into the, e.g. báts.
  3. The first word of a compound term preserves its long vowel if its following consonant is one of the group, e.g. matmál.
  4. The non-compound verbs vitkast and litka have long vowels.

    Consonants

GraphemePhonetic realization Examples
bin most cases:

Code pages

Besides the alphabet being part of Unicode, which is much used in Iceland, ISO 8859-1 has historically been the most used code page. ISO 8859-15 also supports Icelandic and Windows-1252 that extends it, which may also have a lot of use.
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