Solution 1:

http://php.net/manual/en/language.types.array.php

<?php
$array = array(
    "foo" => "bar",
    "bar" => "foo",
);

// as of PHP 5.4
$array = [
    "foo" => "bar",
    "bar" => "foo",
];
?>

Standard arrays can be used that way.

Solution 2:

There are no dictionaries in php, but PHP array's can behave similarly to dictionaries in other languages because they have both an index and a key (in contrast to Dictionaries in other languages, which only have keys and no index).

What do I mean by that?

$array = array(
    "foo" => "bar",
    "bar" => "foo"
);

// as of PHP 5.4
$array = [
    "foo" => "bar",
    "bar" => "foo",
];

The following line is allowed with the above array in PHP, but there is no way to do an equivalent operation using a dictionary in a language like Python(which has both arrays and dictionaries).

print $array[0]

PHP arrays also give you the ability to print a value by providing the value to the array

print $array["foo"]

Solution 3:

Normal array can serve as a dictionary data structure. In general it has multipurpose usage: array, list (vector), hash table, dictionary, collection, stack, queue etc.

$names = [
    'bob' => 27,
    'billy' => 43,
    'sam' => 76,
];

$names['bob'];

And because of wide design it gains no full benefits of specific data structure. You can implement your own dictionary by extending an ArrayObject or you can use SplObjectStorage class which is map (dictionary) implementation allowing objects to be assigned as keys.