Sites in Phonetics and Phonology
Sounds of the World's Animals
How animal sounds are represented in various languages.
Magical Letter Page
Site regarding phonosemantics, the meaning of sound.
Phonological Atlas of North America
Results of a telephone survey of the major urbanized areas of the U.S. and Canada.
Say...
Text-to-speech translator which also reads ASCII representations of the IPA.
The CMU Pronouncing Dictionary
Machine-readable pronunciation dictionary for North American English that contains over 100,000 words and their transcriptions.
Linguistics and Phonetics Worldwide
Virtual library of linguistics and phonetics.
Speech on the Web
Links to pages related to phonetics and speech sciences.
Contrasted Phonology of English and Portuguese Vowels
English, Portuguese, and Spanish vowels are discussed, and possible errors of Portuguese-speaking students of English are examined.
Speech Accent Archive
Archive of foreign accents recorded in English. Phonetic transcriptions and phonological generalizations are provided.
Vowels and Consonants
Collection of sound and speech examples of hundreds of languages and dialects. [by Peter Ladefoged, UCLA]
Acoustics of the vowel
Experiments concerning the physical characteristics of vowels: formants and pitches (F0), formant pattern ambiguity, formant number alteration. Important for all sciences related to speech, acoutsic phonetics, speech therapy and speech recognition.
Virtual Language Laboratory
Online language laboratory providing pronunciation practice and accent correction in a number of languages.
Speech Internet Dictionary
Comprehensive dictionary of terms used in phonetics and linguistics
Sound examples from the dissertation
Dissertation of Matthias Jilka on "The Contribution of Intonation to the Perception of Foreign Accent" [Postscript and PDF]
Analytic Listening: A New Approach to Ear-Training
Paper on a method for ear-training and auditory skill assessment of students of phonetics.
Auditory scales of frequency representation
Overview of conversion equations and suggestions as to when it is appropriate to use Hz, semi-tones, mel, bark, and ERB.
The Kiel Intonation Modell (KIM)
Paper on "The Kiel Intonation Model (KIM), its Implementation in TTS Synthesis and its Application to the Study of Spontaneous Speech."
Vowel Charts
Acoustic vowel charts of various languages [by Antti Iivonen, University of Helsinki Department of Phonetics]
The Rhythmic Speech Museum
Concerns rhythm in speech.
Four Tones and Downtrend
Preliminary report on pitch realization in Mambila, a language with four level tones.
Linguistic Annotation
Tools and formats for speech and text annotation
Prosody on the Web
Introduction to prosody, including chunking, focus, and pitch.
Studying Phonetics on the Net
List of categorized links concerning the study of spoken English.
Speech Web Sites
Variety of links to mainly acoustics-related sites.
Teaching English Intonation with a Visual Display of Fundamental Frequency
Paper on the use of fundamental frequency displays for teaching English intonation. [by Richard Stibbard]
The SpeechDat Project
Database of recordings of speech in various languages.
Rutgers Optimality Archive
Contributed-content index of Optimality Theory information. Searchable or browseable data, submission and update forms, font and utility downloads, links to other collections.
Spoken Language Corpus
Summary of work on spoken language at Göteborg University, including discusson of Modified Standard Orthography (MSO). [by Allwood et al, Göteborg University]
Socrates
Links to internet resources in phonetics and speech communication.
Talking Heads
Contains information concerning speech synthesis, vocal tract modeling, facial animation, and the McGurk effect.
How to Pronounce "Ghoti"
Brief analysis of why "ghoti" may be pronounced as "fish".
Infography about Phonology
List of mostly print resources on phonology recommended by a professor who specializes in phonological research.
English Conversational Grunts
Contains speech samples illustrating the phonetic diversity of non-lexical items in conversation, such as uh-huh, mm-hm, nn-hnn, nyeah, m-kay, together with discussion of their pragmatics. |
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sub categories in Phonetics and Phonology
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