↑ ۱٫۰۰۱٫۰۱۱٫۰۲۱٫۰۳۱٫۰۴۱٫۰۵۱٫۰۶۱٫۰۷۱٫۰۸۱٫۰۹The letter ⟨i⟩, when it is followed by a vowel, represents a pronunciation like a ⟨j⟩ or a "soft" pronunciation of the preceding consonant (so pies is pronounced as if it were spelt ⟨pjes⟩). It has the same effect as an acute accent on alveolar consonants (⟨s⟩, ⟨z⟩, ⟨c⟩, ⟨dz⟩, ⟨n⟩) so się, cios and niania are pronounced as if they were spelt ⟨śę⟩, ⟨ćos⟩, ⟨ńańa⟩. A following ⟨i⟩ also softens consonants when it is itself pronounced as a vowel: zima, ci and dzisiaj are pronounced as if they were spelled ⟨źima⟩, ⟨ći⟩, ⟨dźiśaj⟩.
↑ ۲٫۰۲٫۱۲٫۲۲٫۳۲٫۴۲٫۵The affricates /ts,dz,tɕ,dʑ,tʂ,dʐ/) may be written more precisely with ligature ties: /t͡s,d͡z,t͡ɕ,d͡ʑ,t͡ʂ,d͡ʐ/, but they are omitted in transcriptions as they do not display correctly in all browsers. Nonetheless, Polish contrasts affricates with stop–fricative clusters: for example, czysta [[:مدیا:Pl-czysta.ogg|[ˈt͡ʂɨsta]]] (راهنما·اطلاعات) "clean" versus trzysta [[:مدیا:Pl-trzysta.ogg|[ˈtʂɨsta]]] "three hundred".
↑ ۳٫۰۳٫۱۳٫۲۳٫۳۳٫۴۳٫۵Polish makes contrasts between retroflex and alveolo-palatal consonants, both of which sound like the English postalveolars /ʃ,ʒ,tʃ,dʒ/. The retroflex sounds are pronounced "hard", with the tip of the tongue approaching the alveolar ridge and the blade of the tongue somewhat lowered, and the alveolo-palatal sounds are "soft", realized with the middle of the tongue raised, adding a bit of an ⟨ee⟩ sound to them.
↑Allophone of /ɲ/ in coda position or before fricatives.
↑ ۵٫۰۵٫۱۵٫۲۵٫۳۵٫۴۵٫۵The letters ⟨ą⟩ and ⟨ę⟩ represent the nasal vowels /ɔ̃,ɛ̃/ except when they are followed by a stop or affricate, when they represent oral vowels /ɔ,ɛ/ followed by a nasal consonanthomorganic with the following stop or affricate: kąt[ˈkɔnt], gęba[ˈɡɛmba], ręka[ˈrɛŋka], piszący[piˈʂɔnt͡sɨ], pieniądze[pjɛˈɲɔnd͡zɛ], pięć[ˈpjɛɲt͡ɕ], jęczy[ˈjɛnt͡ʂɨ] (as if spelled *kont, *gemba, *renka, *piszoncy, *pieńondze, *pieńć, *jenczy).