Until 1957, only two pronunciations were allowed: an alveolar trill [r] and an alveolar flap [ɾ]. After 1957, a uvular trill [ʀ] was also allowed. A voiced uvular fricative [ʁ], used extensively in contemporary Standard German, is not allowed. Therefore, rot ('red') can be pronounced [roːt], [ɾoːt] and [ʀoːt] but not [ʁoːt].[3]
Rhoticism
The vocalized [ɐ̯] realization of /r/ found in German or Austrian Standard German corresponds to [r~ɾ~ʀ] in Bühnendeutsch so für 'for' is pronounced [fyːr~fyːɾ~fyːʀ] rather than [fyːɐ̯].[4]
Whenever the sequence /ər/ is vocalized to [ɐ] in German or Austrian Standard German, Bühnendeutsch requires a sequence [ər~əɾ~əʀ] so besser 'better' is pronounced [ˈbɛsər~ˈbɛsəɾ~ˈbɛsəʀ] rather than [ˈbɛsɐ].[4]
In contemporary Standard German, both of these features are found almost exclusively in Switzerland.
No schwa-elision
Contrary to Standard German, /ə/ cannot be elided before a sonorant consonant (making it syllabic) so Faden 'yarn' is pronounced [ˈfaːdən] rather than the standard [ˈfaːdn̩].[5]
Fronting of word-final schwa
In loanwords from Latin and Ancient Greek, the word-final /ə/ is realized as a short, tense [e] so Psyche 'psyche' is pronounced [ˈpsyːçe] rather than the standard [ˈpsyːçə].[4]
Obstruents
Syllable-final fortition
As in Standard German, syllable-final obstruents written with the letters used also for syllable-initial lenis sounds (⟨b, d, g⟩ etc.) are realized as fortis so Absicht 'intention' is pronounced [ˈʔapz̬ɪçt] (note the full voicing of /z/, which, in position immediately after a fortis, occurs in Bühnendeutsch: see below), but Bad 'bath' is pronounced [baːt].
The corresponding standard southern (Southern German, Austrian, Swiss) pronunciations contain lenis consonants in that position: [ˈab̥z̥ɪçt~ˈab̥sɪçt] and [b̥aːd̥], respectively.
Strong aspiration of /p,t,k/
The voiceless plosives /p,t,k/ are aspirated [pʰ,tʰ,kʰ] in the same environments as in Standard German but more strongly, especially to environments in which the Standard German plosives are aspirated moderately and weakly: in unstressed intervocalic and word-final positions.[6] That can be transcribed in the IPA as [pʰʰ,tʰʰ,kʰʰ]. The voiceless affricates /p͡f,t͡s,t͡ʃ/ are unaspirated [p͡f˭,t͡s˭,t͡ʃ˭], as in Standard German.
Complete voicing of lenis obstruents
The lenis obstruents /b,d,ɡ,d͡ʒ,v,ð,ʝ,z,ʒ/[7] are fully voiced [b̬,d̬,ɡ̬,d̬͡ʒ̬,v̬,ð̬,ʝ̬,z̬,ʒ̬] after voiceless obstruents so abdanken 'to resign' is pronounced [ˈʔapd̬aŋkən].[4] That is in contrast with the Northern pronunciation, which requires the lenis sounds to be devoiced in that position: [ˈʔapd̥aŋkn̩]. Southern accents (Southern German, Austrian, Swiss) generally realize the lenis sounds as voiceless in most or all positions and do not feature syllable-final fortition: [ˈab̥d̥aŋkŋ̩].
^Mangold transcribes the voiced palatal fricative with the symbol ⟨j⟩: as if it were an approximant. However, he explicitly states that /j/ is the lenis fricative counterpart of the fortis fricative /ç/ (Mangold (2005:44, 51)). It is also worth noting that among the lenis obstruents /d͡ʒ,ð,ʒ/ as well as the fortis counterpart of the /ð/ (/θ/) appear only in loanwords.