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Topic: Ipa



  
 IPA
ASCII IPA the way to represent speech using a computer keyboard
http://www.mova.org/~lowry/d1e4020.html

  
 IPA [Definition]
The difference between these alphabets and IPA is relatively small, although often the special characters of the IPA are abandoned in favour of diacritics or digraphs in these alphabets, since many typewriters and older computer software have no support for the many special characters of the IPA.
The IPA's major contribution to the academic community is the International Phonetic Alphabet—a notational standard for the phonetic representation of all languages.
There also exist systems for representing the information contained in IPA in ASCII, including SAMPA, Kirshenbaum and other ad hoc systems to work around the difficulty of displaying IPA on computers....
http://www.wikimirror.com/IPA

  
 AUE: ASCII IPA: a way to represent speech using a computer keyboard
ASCII IPA is similar to the International Phonetic Alphabet used in modern dictionaries, but it uses the symbols available on most computer keyboards.
ASCII IPA: a way to represent speech using a computer keyboard
AUE: ASCII IPA: a way to represent speech using a computer keyboard
http://www.alt-usage-english.org/ipa/ascii_ipa_combined.shtml

  
 sampa
The result of this problem is that SAMPA cannot be used as an ASCII representation of the general IPA alphabet.
As many symbols as possible have been taken over from the IPA; where this is not possible, other signs that are available are used, e.g.
Like IPA, SAMPA is usually enclosed in square brackets or slashes, which are not part of the alphabet proper and merely signify that it is phonetic as opposed to regular text.
http://www.yourencyclopedia.net/SAMPA.html

  
 International Phonetic Alphabet - Enpsychlopedia
The difference between these alphabets and IPA is relatively small, although often the special characters of the IPA are abandoned in favour of diacritics or digraphs in these alphabets, since many typewriters and older computer software have no support for the many special characters of the IPA.
SAMPA, X-SAMPA and Kirshenbaum are other methods of mapping IPA designations into ASCII.
As a result, there does exist some ambiguity in IPA usage.
http://psychcentral.com/wiki/International_Phonetic_Alphabet

  
 SAMPA - free-definition
The result of this problem is that SAMPA cannot be used as an ASCII representation of the general IPA alphabet.
As many symbols as possible have been taken over from the IPA; where this is not possible, other signs that are available are used, e.g.
Like IPA, SAMPA is usually enclosed in square brackets or slashes, which are not part of the alphabet proper and merely signify that it is phonetic as opposed to regular text.
http://www.free-definition.com/SAMPA.html

  
 5-806
Esling, John, "Computer coding of the IPA: Supplementary Report," in Journal of the IPA (1990) 20:1, pp.
Even when computers are not involved, it is already much easier to write the sounds of a language using a streamlined, phonemicized spelling system than to use IPA proper, and this system is not nearly as pretty as IPA.
IPA does not represent this class with a common visual feature, but the symbols are all so far from anything in ASCII that a single operator is called for.
http://umich.edu/~archive/linguistics/linguist.list/volume.5/no.801-850/5-806

  
 SAMPA
The result of this problem is that SAMPA cannot be used as an ASCII representation of the general IPA alphabet.
As many symbols as possible have been taken over from the IPA; where this is not possible, other signs that are available are used, e.g.
Like IPA, SAMPA is usually enclosed in square brackets or slashes, which are not part of the alphabet proper and merely signify that it is phonetic as opposed to regular text.
http://www.worldhistory.com/wiki/S/SAMPA.htm

  
 Number-phonemes
The two problems with the IPA extended alphabet solution are [1] The new symbols are not supported making It difficult to type and [2] It is not easy to read without a key.
The first problem was solved by creating an ascii-ipa such as SAMPA.
IPA limits the number of vowels to 21 and lists 26 consonants.
http://www.fortunecity.com/victorian/vangogh/555/Spell/number-of-phonemes.htm

  
 The ASCII Phonetic Alphabet Antimoon.com
The International Phonetic Alphabet is very popular, but there is a big problem with this alphabet: the IPA symbols are difficult to type on computers.
We've named it the ASCII Phonetic Alphabet, because the letters and symbols displayed by computers are called ASCII characters.
Here is a table with all the symbols of the ASCII Phonetic Alphabet.
http://www.antimoon.com/how/pronunc-ascii.htm

  
 [WikiEN-l] Re: Pronunciations and IPA/SAMPA
I think this is probably the simplest solution to get working quickly, and it can be easily expanded to include additional ASCII IPA schemes (there are several) or auto-generated IPA images if someone implements that.
David Friedland wrote: > Anyhow, it seems that just using the HTML entities for the Unicode IPA > extensions is not an acceptable solution because it leaves IE users with > lovely but useless rectangles where there ought to be IPA characters.
If this were installed into the TeX math > extensions, then a similar syntax could be used to generate images of > the IPA from LaTeX input.
http://mail.wikipedia.org/pipermail/wikien-l/2003-September/006374.html

  
 Codifica ASCII dell'IPA
I devised a simplified system for representing IPA on an ASCII keyboard, in the hopes of using this over email and on my tiny palmtop computer in the field.
In some cases where the ampersand might be used, it has not been; for instance, the unrounded u vowel, called "turned m" in IPA, could have been written "m&", but instead I have written it "W".
The following tables follow the arrangement of the chart published in the Journal of the IPA, except that non-pulmonic consonants have been arranged with pulmonic ones.
http://www.univ.trieste.it/~nirital/lughi/infohum/codifica/codascii.html

  
 IPA - International Phonenetic Alphabet - and Writing Systems
The IPA was invented in the late 1800's as a way to describe human speech.
SAMPA was an attempt to simulate the IPA with ASCII characters, other IPA analogs attempt to approximate traditional spelling.
This is difficult in IPA because it has so many special characters (7 in the first row).
http://www.foolswisdom.com/~sbett/ipa-writing.htm

  
 SAMPA
Consequently, while agreeing on the IPA to ASCII mapping, it is possible to make different choices of phonemic analyses for different languages, and thus define different SAMPA representations.
SAMPA is an ASCII encoding of the phonemes of particular languages, based on the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), and a given SAMPA application thus depends on three choices:
Choice of ASCII code for IPA symbols (which are represented by standard ASCII characters).
http://coral.lili.uni-bielefeld.de/Documents/sampa.html

  
 k is for /k@n 'sIs t@n ,si/
The International Phonetics Association (IPA), established in 1886, maintains a standard system for written representation of all phonemes used in all languages: the International Phonetic Alphabet (also known as the IPA).
Unfortunately for those of us using computers, most of the IPA consists of characters which aren't in the ASCII character set.
Undisinterested plug: Those interested in the IPA might enjoy Magnetic Phonetics, in which the IPA is printed on a set of magnetic tiles.
http://www.kith.org/logos/words/lower/k.html

  
 Ipa
A suitcase of three IPA fonts in all formats (TrueType, PostScript, and bitmapped) well equipped A phonetic system, although not a complete IPA set.
In most cases IPA is run on public servers, software routers, etc. For more information about IPA please look at its manual pages (manual pages are
A Sound Reference to the IPA: active, sound-enabled version of the
http://recommendlist.com/q/ipa.html

  
 Encyclopedia: IPA in Unicode
There also exist systems for representing the information contained in IPA in ASCII, including SAMPA, Kirshenbaum and other ad hoc systems to work around the difficulty of displaying IPA on computers.
The following is a representation of the IPA chart encoded in Unicode.
Extended IPA for disordered speech Speech disorders are a type of communication disorders where normal speech is disrupted.
http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/IPA-in-Unicode

  
 International Phonetic Alphabet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
To properly view IPA symbols in Internet Explorer for Windows, you must set your browser font to a typeface that includes the IPA extensions, such as Lucida Sans Unicode (which comes with Windows XP), Gentium (which is freely available), Doulos (SIL) (same source, SIL), or Arial Unicode MS (which comes with Microsoft Office).
The general principle of the IPA is to provide a separate symbol for each speech segment, avoiding letter combinations (digraphs) such as sh and th in English orthography, and avoiding ambiguity such as that of c in English.
The letters chosen for the IPA are generally drawn from the Latin and Greek alphabets, or are modifications of Latin or Greek letters.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPA   (3813 words)

  
 Ascii
The ascii utility provides easy conversion between various byte and the American Standard Code for Information Interchange (ASCII) character table.
A side-by-side comparision of ASCII and EBCDIC encoding.
Supporting the development of new free tools and software to create your own ASCII media converter.
http://recommendlist.com/q/ascii.html   (3813 words)

  
 Personal View #7 - Alphabets for English - part I
IPA refers to the notational system endorsed by International Phonetic Association for the narrow transcription of any language.
New Follick is an ASCII - IPA notation (also referred to as an "askey-bet" or "phonascii").
The primary concerns are (1) to find a way to bridge the gap between IPA notation, European letter pronunciations, and traditional English spelling and (2) to find systematic ways to generate compact word spellings similar to Cut Spelling.
http://victorian.fortunecity.com/vangogh/555/Spell/pv7-1.html   (3813 words)

  
 ASCII IPA
ASCII IPA: the way to represent speech using a computer keyboard
Representation of IPA with ASCII -- The four most commonly used ASCII-IPA systems and SAMPA.
http://odur.let.rug.nl/~kleiweg/ascii-ipa   (3813 words)

  
 LINGUIST List 5.411: They, Computational Arabic, IPA to ASCII, Mac fonts
Qs: They, Computational Arabic, IPA to ASCII, Mac fonts
LINGUIST List 5.411: They, Computational Arabic, IPA to ASCII, Mac fonts
Greetings, Does anybody know how to represent the IPA phonetic alphabet in the ASCII code?
http://www.sfs.nphil.uni-tuebingen.de/linguist/issues/5/5-411.html   (3813 words)

  
 dBforums - Displaying IPA characters in Tkinter
How do I make my Tkinter application accept IPA characters as input in
How do I make my Tkinter application accept IPA characters as input
http://dbforums.com/t819513.html   (3813 words)

  
 ipa.htm
An ASCII version of the IPA can be found in Evan Kirschenbaum's article, "FAQ: Representaing IPA Phonetics in ASCII".
There are some vowels in this table which are not represented in standard IPA charts.
IPA symbols include a number of marks which indicate different properties which affect the pronunciation of the sound.
http://www.sungwh.freeserve.co.uk/flux/ipa.htm   (3813 words)

  
 IPA: Fonts
Production First Software has 20 Unicode 2.0-2.1 font packages available which include support for 1989 or 1993 IPA letterforms, some of which include the revisions up to 1996.
What this means is that everyone with recent versions of Windows and Word can now use IPA characters in documents without changing fonts -- eg with a set-up such as Windows 2000, Word 2000, HP deskjet 930C, and Internet Explorer 6/NN6.
Rogers Fonts (IPAPhon) is a family of four fonts with the full set of IPA symbols (1993 revision, with 1996 update).
http://www2.arts.gla.ac.uk/IPA/ipafonts.html   (866 words)

  
 UTF-8 and Unicode FAQ
FriBidi is Dov Grobgeld’s free implementation of the Unicode bidi algorithm.
Unicode database) is now also available, which is implemented by just overstriking (logical OR-ing) a base-character glyph with up to two combining-character glyphs.
UTF-32 was introduced in Unicode to describe a 4-byte encoding of the extended “21-bit” Unicode.
http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/unicode.html   (14421 words)

  
 yourDictionary.com • Library: The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA)
Because of the precision the IPA affords, it is used in everything from language journals to dictionaries.
Everyone involved in learning or teaching languages can use the IPA, because its underlying principles are simple and intuitive.
Using the IPA as a transcription tool also reduces ambiguity, which means that you can always read your written notes weeks after you made them.
http://www.yourdictionary.com/library/ipa.html   (2051 words)

  
 SAMPA computer readable phonetic alphabet
The IPA turned e, turned a, and turned c are unavailable in IPA and Latin-1
All IPA symbols that coincide with lower-case letters of the Latin alphabet remain the same; all other symbols are recoded within the ASCII range 37..126.
In this current WWW document the IPA symbols cannot be shown, but the columns indicate respectively a SAMPA symbol, its ASCII/ANSI number, the shape of the corresponding IPA symbol, and the symbol's meaning or use.
http://victorian.fortunecity.com/vangogh/555/Spell/sampa.htm   (2051 words)

  
 Unicode IPA: Creating word processing documents
OS X includes an input method called “Unicode Hex Input”, which can be used to input Unicode IPA characters into a Unicode-savvy application such as TextEdit.
In order to create a word processing document containing Unicode IPA, it is necessary to have an input method for Unicode IPA characters, in addition to a Unicode IPA font and a word processing application that supports Unicode.
The second method for inputting Unicode IPA characters in Word 2000 comes from Dermod Quirke and Brian Holser, and involves entering AutoCorrect entries that replace mnemonic abbreviations such as \barredi\ with their Unicode IPA equivalents.
http://depts.washington.edu/llc/help/presentations/unicode_ipa/5_creating_word_processing.html   (451 words)

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