Links to linguistic and phonetic glossaries and explanations
Many terms from linguistics and from phonetic and phonological theory are
used in this document without explanation. Instead of setting up a glossary
of terms myself, I refer to some sites on Internet where you might find
some clarifications:
-
IPA symbols chart
-
Spoken IPA chart, by Jonathan Dowse
-
Spoken IPA chart, by
Peter Ladefoged
-
Spoken IPA chart, by Paul Meier
-
Spoken IPA symbols chart
-
Another spoken IPA symbols chart (includes IPA and Sampa symbols;
but some samples are now missing)
-
Samples of IPA sounds (very well done! but now a broken link ...)
- IPA symbols, and ASCII transcription systems
compared
- Differences
between the IPA and North American vowel charts
(University of Manitoba).
- History of the IPA (wikipedia)
History of the IPA (answers.com).
-
IPA bij Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
-
Cardinal Vowels:
Daniel
Jones:
samples recorded in 1956
Grammatics
University of Stirling
-
Cardinal vowels by John Wells, Susan Ramsaran and Peter Ladefoged.
- IPA vowel
symbols for British English in dictionaries
-
Université de Lausanne,
Intro to phonetics, with sound samples.
-
Handbook of the International Phonetic Association
Downloadable
Language recordings, also of
Portuguese.
-
Index of sounds
- Praat:
doing phonetics by computer, by
Paul Boersma and
David Weenink.
-
Formants in vowels in several languages
- Phonation
-
Unicode
code charts, including one for
phonetic symbols.
-
Glossary which is part of an
on-line phonology course.
-
Phonetics Glossary,
referenced from
here.
-
Phonology
-
Fonologia histórica
do Português
- Old books
about Portuguese orthography and phonology and phonetics
Of course, you might want to find your own references using search engines like
Google
or
AltaVista.
Comments may be sent to me, R. Harmsen.