Titre du document

Updating the Theory

Lien vers le document
Nom du corpus

Ortho

Auteur(s)
  • Peter Ladefoged
Affiliation(s)
  • Phonetics Laboratory, Department of Linguistics, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90024-1543, U.S.A.
Langue(s) du document
Anglais
Revue

Journal of the International Phonetic Association

Éditeur
Cambridge
Année de publication
1987
Type de publication
Journal
Type de document
Research-article
Résumé

The International Phonetic Association is not usually considered as a group of theoreticians. If the members have a self-image, they probably consider themselves as practical people, who apply their particular skills to real problems such as pronunciation teaching, speech pathology, the description of spoken languages, and speech recognition. They probably do not think of themselves as part of one of the very few organized groups in the world that promulgates an official theory about its subject matter. But that is precisely what the International Phonetic Association does. It sanctions an official set of symbols for representing the sounds of spoken language. By doing so it prescribes a certain way of describing sounds; the symbols are, after all, just symbols. They are shorthand ways of representing certain information, namely, the choices permitted by the phonetic theory.

Catégories INIST
  • 1 - sciences humaines et sociales
Score qualité du texte
5.472
Version PDF
1.4
Présence de XML structuré
Non
Identifiant ISTEX
847B1F35984F40822F2014FFA40DA79990329205
Nom du fichier dans la ressource
ortho-ang_0151
ark:/67375/6GQ-TTND78DQ-J
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