IPA phoneme /ɪ/

In English, both in Received Pronunciation and in General American, the IPA phonetic symbol /ɪ/ corresponds to the vowel sound in words like "kit" and "English". It is one of the two vowel sounds we use in English for unstressed syllables, the other one being /ə/.

In some dictionaries the vowel of KIT is written /i/. There is no confusion as long as the user knows the symbol for /iː/ (the vowel of FLEECE ).

Stressed /ɪ/

 * with "i": begin - big - bit - bring - chips - did - different - finish - fish - fit - give - hip - hit - interest - issue - kill - kiss - link - lip - liquid - little - quick - since - sing - sit - thick - thin - thing - think - this - will - win - with
 * with "y": crystal - physics - syllable - sympathy - system - typical

Spelling
Stressed /ɪ/ is always followed by one or more consonants. In derived words a single consonant is usually doubled (begin, beginning; win, winner).

Spelling anomalies

 * with "e": England - English - pretty
 * with "u": business - busy
 * with "ui": build - built
 * with "o": women

/ɪ/ followed by /r/
Both in Received Pronunciation and in General American when /ɪ/ is followed by /r/ in the same syllable, a diphthong is pronounced: IPA phoneme /ɪə/. Near is [nɪər].

In Received Pronunciation but not in General American there is a difference between /ɪər/ and /ɪr/ when these sequences are followed by a vowel: nearer is [ˈnɪərər] and mirror is [ˈmɪrər]. In General American there is no difference: some people pronounce [ˈnɪərər] and [ˈmɪərər] and others [ˈnɪrər] and [ˈmɪrər]. Since the difference between [ɪər] and [ɪr] is predictable, phoneticians say that in American English there is no phoneme /ɪə/, only phoneme /ɪ/.

These words don't rhyme

 * limb - climb; rescind - remind; pretty - petty;

Unstressed /ɪ/

 * with "i": benefit - finish - important - include - liquid - music - office - practice - president - public - service - visit - without
 * -ing forms: eating - going - having - living - saying - singing


 * with "e": become - begin - believe - demand - emotion - report - result
 * with "y": homonym - synthetic
 * with "a": spinach
 * with "'-age": average - mortgage - package - percentage - village


 * with "ia": carriage - marriage
 * with "ui": biscuit - circuit
 * with "u": conjugal - minute - lettuce
 * Unwritten /ɪ/ (see also Pronunciation of the morpheme “-s”)
 * church’s - Dennis’s - fish’s - Leeds’s

For unstressed final /ɪ/ (happy, coffee, money, recipe, taxi, zombie) see Pronunciation exercises: /ɪ/ vs /iː/ § Unstressed syllable

Anticipated pronunciation difficulties depending on L1
Preconceived ideas and other interferences from L1 obviously interfere in many cases with how students perceive - and pronounce - sounds/words in English. The following section aims to point out some of the most typical difficulties teachers and students may encounter regarding pronunciation.

Spanish
The Spanish sound represented by the spelling "i" is similar to /iː/ but shorter, and also similar to /ɪ/ but longer (and of a different quality). Most Spanish speakers have difficulty distinguishing between the vowel sound in "sin" and that of "seen".