Repeat short chunks, not long sentences.
Take one phrase like Kedu? Ọ dị m mma. and repeat it several times with the audio. Focus on matching rhythm and pitch instead of translating every word in your head.
This guide walks through Igbo vowels, consonants, and tone marks so you can sound more natural when you speak.
STEP 1
Igbo has seven main vowel sounds. Getting these right makes everything else easier.
| Letter | Approximate sound | Example word |
|---|---|---|
| a | like “a” in father | aka – hand |
| e | like “e” in get | ebe – place |
| i | like “ee” in see | ịrị – to climb (written with dotted i in standard orthography) |
| ị | centralised “i”, closer to the vowel in roses | ịje – to walk/go |
| o | like “o” in go but shorter | okwu – word |
| ọ | open “aw” sound, like “o” in off | ọkụ – fire / light |
| u | like “oo” in food | ukwu – leg |
STEP 2
Igbo is tonal. The pitch of your voice can change the meaning of a word, even if the letters look the same.
Standard Igbo writing often marks tones with accents:
Compare these examples:
In daily writing (messages, social media) many people skip tone marks. That means you must listen a lot for context and pitch. IgboLearn helps by pairing written words with native audio.
STEP 3
Use these small habits inside the app and with family to train your ear and tongue.
Take one phrase like Kedu? Ọ dị m mma. and repeat it several times with the audio. Focus on matching rhythm and pitch instead of translating every word in your head.
When possible, let your ear lead. Play the audio, guess the meaning from context, then confirm with the text. This reduces fear of tone marks and builds intuition.
Names like Chiamaka, Chidera, or Obinna are great for tone practice. Say them slowly, syllable by syllable, then speed up.
Use your phone to record yourself saying 3–5 words, then play them next to the IgboLearn audio. Small adjustments over time make a big difference.