Pronunciation with SSML

You can use Speech Synthesis Markup Language (SSML) with text to speech to specify how the speech is pronounced. For example, you can use SSML with phonemes and a custom lexicon to improve pronunciation. You can also use SSML to define how a word or mathematical expression is pronounced.

Refer to the following sections for details about how to use SSML elements to improve pronunciation. For more information about SSML syntax, see SSML document structure and events.

phoneme element

The phoneme element is used for phonetic pronunciation in SSML documents. Always provide human-readable speech as a fallback.

Phonetic alphabets are composed of phones, which are made up of letters, numbers, or characters, sometimes in combination. Each phone describes a unique sound of speech. The phonetic alphabet is in contrast to the Latin alphabet, where any letter might represent multiple spoken sounds. Consider the different en-US pronunciations of the letter "c" in the words "candy" and "cease" or the different pronunciations of the letter combination "th" in the words "thing" and "those."

Note

For a list of locales that support phonemes, see footnotes in the language support table.

Usage of the phoneme element's attributes are described in the following table.

Attribute Description Required or optional
alphabet The phonetic alphabet to use when you synthesize the pronunciation of the string in the ph attribute. The string that specifies the alphabet must be specified in lowercase letters. The following options are the possible alphabets that you can specify:
The alphabet applies only to the phoneme in the element.
Optional
ph A string containing phones that specify the pronunciation of the word in the phoneme element. If the specified string contains unrecognized phones, text to speech rejects the entire SSML document and produces none of the speech output specified in the document.

For ipa, to stress one syllable by placing stress symbol before this syllable, you need to mark all syllables for the word. Or else, the syllable before this stress symbol is stressed. For sapi, if you want to stress one syllable, you need to place the stress symbol after this syllable, whether or not all syllables of the word are marked.
Required

phoneme examples

The supported values for attributes of the phoneme element were described previously. In the first two examples, the values of ph="tə.ˈmeɪ.toʊ" or ph="təmeɪˈtoʊ" are specified to stress the syllable meɪ.

<speak version="1.0" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/10/synthesis" xml:lang="en-US">
    <voice name="en-US-AvaNeural">
        <phoneme alphabet="ipa" ph="tə.ˈmeɪ.toʊ"> tomato </phoneme>
    </voice>
</speak>
<speak version="1.0" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/10/synthesis" xml:lang="en-US">
    <voice name="en-US-AvaNeural">
        <phoneme alphabet="ipa" ph="təmeɪˈtoʊ"> tomato </phoneme>
    </voice>
</speak>
<speak version="1.0" xmlns="https://www.w3.org/2001/10/synthesis" xml:lang="en-US">
    <voice name="en-US-AvaNeural">
        <phoneme alphabet="sapi" ph="iy eh n y uw eh s"> en-US </phoneme>
    </voice>
</speak>
<speak version="1.0" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/10/synthesis" xml:lang="en-US">
    <voice name="en-US-AvaNeural">
        <s>His name is Mike <phoneme alphabet="ups" ph="JH AU"> Zhou </phoneme></s>
    </voice>
</speak>
<speak version="1.0" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/10/synthesis" xml:lang="en-US">
     <voice name="en-US-AvaNeural">
        <phoneme alphabet='x-sampa' ph='he."lou'>hello</phoneme>
    </voice>
</speak>

Custom lexicon

You can define how single entities (such as company, a medical term, or an emoji) are read in SSML by using the phoneme and sub elements. To define how multiple entities are read, create an XML structured custom lexicon file. Then you upload the custom lexicon XML file and reference it with the SSML lexicon element.

Note

For a list of locales that support custom lexicon, see footnotes in the language support table.

Usage of the lexicon element's attributes are described in the following table.

Attribute Description Required or optional
uri The URI of the publicly accessible custom lexicon XML file with either the .xml or .pls file extension. Using Azure Blob Storage is recommended but not required. For more information about the custom lexicon file, see Pronunciation Lexicon Specification (PLS) Version 1.0. Required

Custom lexicon examples

The supported values for attributes of the lexicon element were described previously.

After you publish your custom lexicon, you can reference it from your SSML. The following SSML example references a custom lexicon that was uploaded to https://www.example.com/customlexicon.xml. We support lexicon URLs from Azure Blob Storage, Advanced Media Services (AMS) Storage, and GitHub. However, note that other public URLs may not be compatible.

<speak version="1.0" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/10/synthesis"
          xmlns:mstts="http://www.w3.org/2001/mstts"
          xml:lang="en-US">
    <voice name="en-US-AvaNeural">
        <lexicon uri="https://www.example.com/customlexicon.xml"/>
        BTW, we will be there probably at 8:00 tomorrow morning.
        Could you help leave a message to Robert Benigni for me?
    </voice>
</speak>

Custom lexicon file

To define how multiple entities are read, you can define them in a custom lexicon XML file with either the .xml or .pls file extension.

Note

The custom lexicon file is a valid XML document, but it cannot be used as an SSML document.

Here are some limitations of the custom lexicon file:

  • File size: The custom lexicon file size is limited to a maximum of 100 KB. If the file size exceeds the 100-KB limit, the synthesis request fails. You can split your lexicon into multiple lexicons and include them in SSML if the file size exceeds 100 KB.
  • Lexicon cache refresh: The custom lexicon is cached with the URI as the key on text to speech when it's first loaded. The lexicon with the same URI isn't reloaded within 15 minutes, so the custom lexicon change needs to wait 15 minutes at the most to take effect.

The supported elements and attributes of a custom lexicon XML file are described in the Pronunciation Lexicon Specification (PLS) Version 1.0. Here are some examples of the supported elements and attributes:

  • The lexicon element contains at least one lexeme element. Lexicon contains the necessary xml:lang attribute to indicate which locale it should be applied for. One custom lexicon is limited to one locale by design, so if you apply it for a different locale, it doesn't work. The lexicon element also has an alphabet attribute to indicate the alphabet used in the lexicon. The possible values are ipa and x-microsoft-sapi.
  • Each lexeme element contains at least one grapheme element and one or more grapheme, alias, and phoneme elements. The lexeme element is case sensitive in the custom lexicon. For example, if you only provide a phoneme for the lexeme "Hello", it doesn't work for the lexeme "hello".
  • The grapheme element contains text that describes the orthography.
  • The alias elements are used to indicate the pronunciation of an acronym or an abbreviated term.
  • The phoneme element provides text that describes how the lexeme is pronounced. The syllable boundary is '.' in the IPA alphabet. The phoneme element can't contain white space when you use the IPA alphabet.
  • When the alias and phoneme elements are provided with the same grapheme element, alias has higher priority.

Microsoft provides a validation tool for the custom lexicon that helps you find errors (with detailed error messages) in the custom lexicon file. Using the tool is recommended before you use the custom lexicon XML file in production with the Speech service.

Custom lexicon file examples

The following XML example (not SSML) would be contained in a custom lexicon .xml file. When you use this custom lexicon, "BTW" is read as "By the way." "Benigni" is read with the provided IPA "bɛˈniːnji."

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<lexicon version="1.0"
      xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/01/pronunciation-lexicon"
      xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
      xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.w3.org/2005/01/pronunciation-lexicon
        http://www.w3.org/TR/2007/CR-pronunciation-lexicon-20071212/pls.xsd"
      alphabet="ipa" xml:lang="en-US">
    <lexeme>
        <grapheme>BTW</grapheme>
        <alias>By the way</alias>
    </lexeme>
    <lexeme>
        <grapheme>Benigni</grapheme>
        <phoneme>bɛˈniːnji</phoneme>
    </lexeme>
    <lexeme>
        <grapheme>😀</grapheme>
        <alias>test emoji</alias>
    </lexeme>
</lexicon>

You can't directly set the pronunciation of a phrase by using the custom lexicon. If you need to set the pronunciation for an acronym or an abbreviated term, first provide an alias, and then associate the phoneme with that alias. For example:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<lexicon version="1.0"
      xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/01/pronunciation-lexicon"
      xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
      xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.w3.org/2005/01/pronunciation-lexicon
        http://www.w3.org/TR/2007/CR-pronunciation-lexicon-20071212/pls.xsd"
      alphabet="ipa" xml:lang="en-US">
    <lexeme>
        <grapheme>Scotland MV</grapheme>
        <alias>ScotlandMV</alias>
    </lexeme>
    <lexeme>
        <grapheme>ScotlandMV</grapheme>
        <phoneme>ˈskɒtlənd.ˈmiːdiəm.weɪv</phoneme>
    </lexeme>
</lexicon>

You could also directly provide your expected alias for the acronym or abbreviated term. For example:

  <lexeme>
    <grapheme>Scotland MV</grapheme>
    <alias>Scotland Media Wave</alias>
  </lexeme>

The preceding custom lexicon XML file examples use the IPA alphabet, which is also known as the IPA phone set. We suggest that you use the IPA because it's the international standard. For some IPA characters, they're the "precomposed" and "decomposed" version when they're being represented with Unicode. The custom lexicon only supports the decomposed Unicode.

The Speech service defines a phonetic set for these locales: en-US, fr-FR, de-DE, es-ES, ja-JP, zh-cn, zh-HK, and zh-TW. For more information on the detailed Speech service phonetic alphabet, see the Speech service phonetic sets.

You can use the x-microsoft-sapi as the value for the alphabet attribute with custom lexicons as demonstrated here:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<lexicon version="1.0"
      xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/01/pronunciation-lexicon"
      xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
      xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.w3.org/2005/01/pronunciation-lexicon
        http://www.w3.org/TR/2007/CR-pronunciation-lexicon-20071212/pls.xsd"
      alphabet="x-microsoft-sapi" xml:lang="en-US">
  <lexeme>
    <grapheme>BTW</grapheme>
    <alias> By the way </alias>
  </lexeme>
  <lexeme>
    <grapheme> Benigni </grapheme>
    <phoneme> b eh 1 - n iy - n y iy </phoneme>
  </lexeme>
</lexicon>

say-as element

The say-as element indicates the content type, such as number or date, of the element's text. This element provides guidance to the speech synthesis engine about how to pronounce the text.

Usage of the say-as element's attributes are described in the following table.

Attribute Description Required or optional
interpret-as Indicates the content type of an element's text. For a list of types, see the following table. Required
format Provides additional information about the precise formatting of the element's text for content types that might have ambiguous formats. SSML defines formats for content types that use them. See the following table. Optional
detail Indicates the level of detail to be spoken. For example, this attribute might request that the speech synthesis engine pronounce punctuation marks. There are no standard values defined for detail. Optional

The following content types are supported for the interpret-as and format attributes. Include the format attribute only if format column isn't empty in this table.

Note

The characters and spell-out values for the interpret-as attribute are supported for all text to speech locales. Other interpret-as attribute values are supported for all locales of the following languages: Arabic, Catalan, Chinese, Danish, Dutch, English, French, Finnish, German, Hindi, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, and Swedish.

interpret-as format Interpretation
characters, spell-out The text is spoken as individual letters (spelled out). The speech synthesis engine pronounces:

<say-as interpret-as="characters">test</say-as>

As "T E S T."
cardinal, number None The text is spoken as a cardinal number. The speech synthesis engine pronounces:

There are <say-as interpret-as="cardinal">10</say-as> options

As "There are ten options."
ordinal None The text is spoken as an ordinal number. The speech synthesis engine pronounces:

Select the <say-as interpret-as="ordinal">3rd</say-as> option

As "Select the third option."
number_digit None The text is spoken as a sequence of individual digits. The speech synthesis engine pronounces:

<say-as interpret-as="number_digit">123456789</say-as>

As "1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9."
fraction None The text is spoken as a fractional number. The speech synthesis engine pronounces:

<say-as interpret-as="fraction">3/8</say-as> of an inch

As "three eighths of an inch."
date dmy, mdy, ymd, ydm, ym, my, md, dm, d, m, y The text is spoken as a date. The format attribute specifies the date's format (d=day, m=month, and y=year). The speech synthesis engine pronounces:

Today is <say-as interpret-as="date">10-12-2016</say-as>

As "Today is October twelfth two thousand sixteen."
Pronounces:

Today is <say-as interpret-as="date" format="dmy">10-12-2016</say-as>

As "Today is December tenth two thousand sixteen."
time hms12, hms24 The text is spoken as a time. The format attribute specifies whether the time is specified by using a 12-hour clock (hms12) or a 24-hour clock (hms24). Use a colon to separate numbers representing hours, minutes, and seconds. Here are some valid time examples: 12:35, 1:14:32, 08:15, and 02:50:45. The speech synthesis engine pronounces:

The train departs at <say-as interpret-as="time" format="hms12">4:00am</say-as>

As "The train departs at four A M."
duration hms, hm, ms The text is spoken as a duration. The format attribute specifies the duration's format (h=hour, m=minute, and s=second). The speech synthesis engine pronounces:

<say-as interpret-as="duration">01:18:30</say-as>

As "one hour eighteen minutes and thirty seconds".
Pronounces:

<say-as interpret-as="duration" format="ms">01:18</say-as>

As "one minute and eighteen seconds".
This tag is only supported on English and Spanish.
telephone None The text is spoken as a telephone number. The speech synthesis engine pronounces:

The number is <say-as interpret-as="telephone">(888) 555-1212</say-as>

As "My number is area code eight eight eight five five five one two one two."
currency None The text is spoken as a currency. The speech synthesis engine pronounces:

<say-as interpret-as="currency">99.9 USD</say-as>

As "ninety-nine US dollars and ninety cents."
address None The text is spoken as an address. The speech synthesis engine pronounces:

I'm at <say-as interpret-as="address">150th CT NE, Redmond, WA</say-as>

As "I'm at 150th Court Northeast Redmond Washington."
name None The text is spoken as a person's name. The speech synthesis engine pronounces:

<say-as interpret-as="name">ED</say-as>

As [æd].
In Chinese names, some characters pronounce differently when they appear in a family name. For example, the speech synthesis engine says 仇 in

<say-as interpret-as="name">仇先生</say-as>

As [qiú] instead of [chóu].

say-as examples

The supported values for attributes of the say-as element were described previously.

The speech synthesis engine speaks the following example as "Your first request was for one room on October nineteenth twenty ten with early arrival at twelve thirty five PM."

<speak version="1.0" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/10/synthesis" xml:lang="en-US">
    <voice name="en-US-AvaMultilingualNeural">
        <p>
        Your <say-as interpret-as="ordinal"> 1st </say-as> request was for <say-as interpret-as="cardinal"> 1 </say-as> room
        on <say-as interpret-as="date" format="mdy"> 10/19/2010 </say-as>, with early arrival at <say-as interpret-as="time" format="hms12"> 12:35pm </say-as>.
        </p>
    </voice>
</speak>

sub element

Use the sub element to indicate that the alias attribute's text value should be pronounced instead of the element's enclosed text. In this way, the SSML contains both a spoken and written form.

Usage of the sub element's attributes are described in the following table.

Attribute Description Required or optional
alias The text value that should be pronounced instead of the element's enclosed text. Required

sub examples

The supported values for attributes of the sub element were described previously.

The speech synthesis engine speaks the following example as "World Wide Web Consortium."

<speak version="1.0" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/10/synthesis" xml:lang="en-US">
    <voice name="en-US-AvaMultilingualNeural">
        <sub alias="World Wide Web Consortium">W3C</sub>
    </voice>
</speak>

Pronunciation with MathML

The Mathematical Markup Language (MathML) is an XML-compliant markup language that describes mathematical content and structure. The Speech service can use the MathML as input text to properly pronounce mathematical notations in the output audio.

Note

The MathML elements (tags) are currently supported in the following locales: de-DE, en-AU, en-GB, en-US, es-ES, es-MX, fr-CA, fr-FR, it-IT, ja-JP, ko-KR, pt-BR, and zh-cn.

All elements from the MathML 2.0 and MathML 3.0 specifications are supported, except the MathML 3.0 Elementary Math elements.

Take note of these MathML elements and attributes:

  • The xmlns attribute in <math xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML"> is optional.
  • The semantics, annotation, and annotation-xml elements don't output speech, so they're ignored.
  • If an element isn't recognized, it's ignored, and the child elements within it are still processed.

The XML syntax doesn't support the MathML entities, so you must use the corresponding unicode characters to represent the entities, for example, the entity &copy; should be represented by its unicode characters &#x00A9;, otherwise an error occurs.

MathML examples

The text to speech output for this example is "a squared plus b squared equals c squared".

<speak version='1.0' xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2001/10/synthesis' xmlns:mstts='http://www.w3.org/2001/mstts' xml:lang='en-US'>
    <voice name='en-US-JennyNeural'>
        <math xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML'>
            <msup>
                <mi>a</mi>
                <mn>2</mn>
            </msup>
            <mo>+</mo>
            <msup>
                <mi>b</mi>
                <mn>2</mn>
            </msup>
            <mo>=</mo>
            <msup>
                <mi>c</mi>
                <mn>2</mn>
            </msup>
        </math>
    </voice>
</speak>

Next steps