Shavian eGroup Archive Browser

From: Ewout Stam
Date: 2003-07-02 20:37:42 #
Subject: Re: [shavian] Lousy Americans

Toggle Shavian
1-7-03 1:31:18, Ethan <ethanl@...> wrote:

>06/30/03 7:07:13 PM, Star Raven <celestraof12worlds@...> wrote:
>
>>yeah, uh, I'm using linux...
>>--- Ewout Stam <teraiten@...> wrote:
>>> May I suggest using keyman.
>>>
>>> http://www.tavultesoft.com/keyman
>>
>
>For Linux users, I whole-heartedly recommend Yudit
>http://www.yudit.org/
>
>It can do all the things this Keyman prgram can do, and more (such as full
>Unicode support) and it's totally free!
>
>It doesn't have a graphical layout program, but it uses a text file to map one
>character to another. It's a very capable program, but I found that it isn't
>perhaps the most user friendly program, yet it is easier than trying to remap
>your keyboard in Linux!

I don't think keyman (well, at least the win 3.1 version I use) has a graphical interface either. It interprets
code like this:

'k' + 'k' > 'g'

'n' + 'n' > 'N'
'n' + 'k' > 'Nk'
'n' + 'g' > 'Ng'

'o' + 'o' > 'Y'
'o' + 'i' > 'q'
'o' + 'u' > 'O'

I think this is not too difficult to learn.

Yudit seems to work in a similar way, except its free.

NOTE: I will be gone on holiday now, for two weeks, so mind this if you're waiting for a reply from me




------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~-->
Get A Free Psychic Reading! Your Online Answer To Life's Important Questions.
http://us.click.yahoo.com/Lj3uPC/Me7FAA/ySSFAA/mx3olB/TM
---------------------------------------------------------------------~->



Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

From: Scott Stephens
Date: 2003-07-02 21:02:22 #
Subject: Re: [shavian] Lousy Americans

Toggle Shavian
>How would it behave with words like "mishap",
> "leaseholder", "messhall",
>etc.?
>
>Hugh B

Probably just like the so-called "U.S. International"
keyboard that comes with Windows and Linux. In those
arrangements, you hit the space bar when you don't
want the characters to combine. For example:

'"' + 'o' -> umlaut-o
',' + 'c' -> c-cedilla
'~' + 'n' -> tilde-n (nota)

There are a lot of times when you don't want this,
typing '"orange"' would end up '<umlaut-o>range"' if
you aren't careful. you get around this by getting
into the habit of typing space as in '"' + space +
'o'. The space cancels the escaping effect and you
get the original text. You get into the habit of
always typing a space after a quote when you mean
quote and not typing a space when you want an umlaut.
I used the international keyboard for about a year.
Then it became a pain to switch back to a regular
keyboard and get myself to stop typing spaces after
escaped characters. I find it very fast.

Shavian would be much easier. Most of the time, you
type 's'+'h' when you want 'S' and 's'+space+'h' when
you really want 'sh'.


------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~-->
Get A Free Psychic Reading! Your Online Answer To Life's Important Questions.
http://us.click.yahoo.com/Lj3uPC/Me7FAA/ySSFAA/mx3olB/TM
---------------------------------------------------------------------~->



Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

From: paul vandenbrink
Date: 2003-07-03 17:37:33 #
Subject: [shavian] Re: Overruled Transliteration

Toggle Shavian
Hi Ethan

While I have mixed feelings about focusing too much attanion on
standardization, let me recommend the NTC's Dictionary of American
English Pronunciation
by Bernard Silverstein
as the most practical guide to correct General American Pronunciation.
The set of phonetic letters used matches up very nicely with the Shaw
Alphabet and address the Subset of Shaw Letters required to represent
General American English.
It is published by NTC National Textbook Company
out of Lincolnwood, Illinois, USA
Elliot's pronouncing Dictionary is good, too.
Anyone had a chance to see these Dictionaries?

Regards, Paul V.

--- In shavian@..., Ethan <ethanl@3...> wrote:
> 06/20/03 2:09:54 PM, Scott Stephens <swstephe@y...> wrote:
>
> >I have to be a boor and disagree. Spelling
> >standardization is essential. In fact, here is a
> >quote from James Pitman's introduction on the Shaw
> >alphabet:
> >
> >"In personal and intimate writing the forty-eight
> >(40+8) characters of the Shaw alphabet may faithfully
> >portray the pronunciation of the individual; but, as
> >Shaw pointed out, too eccentric a dialect may hamper,
> >and even destroy, effective communication. He
> >considered that, though there was no need to
> >standardize writing if not intended for publication,
> >there was every need for conformity in print; standard
> >spellings being particularly desirable when that print
> >is intended for circulation throughout the
> >English-speaking world."
> >
> >(copied directly from
> >http://victorian.fortunecity.com/vangogh/555/Spell/pitmans-
intro.html)
>
> I think that it would be great if people who intend to circulate
their writing
> widely would be educated in the "standard dialect" of their
country. In the US
> that would be the dialect you hear on radio and television all the
time,
> basically the mid-western or California dialect. And in the UK
that would be
> "BBC English". Others may possibly be used as well, but those are
the main two.
> This would assure that they write according to the standard
dialect, as radio
> and television personalities today learn to speak the standard
dialect.
> Speaking and writing should not be so completely separate as they
are now, but
> rather we should seek to standardize speech, and writing as well.
I see no
> reason to expect a person to write differently than the way they
speak. If a
> person is educated, then they should be educated on proper speech
as well as
> proper writing.
>
> >
> >I make the counter offer, if you don't want to
> >standardize on spelling, why not just throw out the
> >Shavian alphabet, (why learn more rules?), and
> >standardized English spelling. While talking to a 1st
> >grade teacher recently, (in California), she said that
> >her current methodology was to *not* punish children
> >for mispelling words, but instead, let them explore
> >their creativity by spelling words any way they want
> >to. This horrified my wife, (also a school teacher,
> >but from a British-based system).
>
> This would horrify me too! I can think of nothing uglier than the
attempts to
> write English phonetically by using an outdated, inflexible system
of 26 letters
> originally designed to write Latin efficiently. Every attempt I
have seen to do
> this has resulted in some of the worst looking junk I have ever
seen! And when
> students are told to "Just spell it however you think it should be
spelled",
> well, the result is confusion and a major mess! That's not
education.
> Education must have structure, because if everybody does it however
they feel
> like it, things get out of hand very quickly. I have seen some of
this stuff
> recently, and it was written by a local elementary student. I
don't really know
> why we pay teachers to do stuff like that!
>
> >There may be some
> >advantage to writing in a local dialect, (which is
> >more clear in Shavian because of the wider range of
> >distinct sounds), but in business and non-fiction
> >communications, there has to be a standardized
> >spelling dictionary that everyone must know, even if
> >their local dialect doesn't make a distinction.
>
> I agree that a standard should exist. Just make it the standard
pronunciation
> which already exists. It might need a little refining, but I think
it's pretty
> close already. Broadcasters already use this standard today.
>
> >
> >But in either case, read more of the document, it
> >doesn't talk about throwing out the Roman alphabet,
> >either, any more than we threw out Roman numerals,
> >although relegated to movie titles and credits.
>
> No, we don't need to throw out traditional orthography, as it has
historical
> purposes. It should still be taught and used, although its use
would obviously
> become limited if the use of Shavian became widespread.
>
> --
> Ethan


------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~-->
Get A Free Psychic Reading! Your Online Answer To Life's Important Questions.
http://us.click.yahoo.com/Lj3uPC/Me7FAA/ySSFAA/mx3olB/TM
---------------------------------------------------------------------~->



Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

From: carl easton
Date: 2003-07-04 01:34:27 #
Subject: [shavian] A Standard Shavian Pronoucation

Toggle Shavian
I have spend some time thinking about a standard or Formal pronouncation for the English Language (Shavian). I concluded that the first thing we should do is find the words that are either spelled the same (in traditional) or pronouced the same (depending on dialect). These words probably should be spelled in shavian, by assign a particular related phoneme (i.e. ih or ee, or even the three ah's and uh's). This line of thinking is directed toward the common words we use daily. As far as the "big" words I recommend using the shavian equivilent of the Dictionary pronoucation.

Carl

paul vandenbrink <pvandenbrink@...> wrote:

Hi Ethan

While I have mixed feelings about focusing too much attanion on
standardization, let me recommend the NTC's Dictionary of American
English Pronunciation
by Bernard Silverstein
as the most practical guide to correct General American Pronunciation.
The set of phonetic letters used matches up very nicely with the Shaw
Alphabet and address the Subset of Shaw Letters required to represent
General American English.
It is published by NTC National Textbook Company
out of Lincolnwood, Illinois, USA
Elliot's pronouncing Dictionary is good, too.
Anyone had a chance to see these Dictionaries?

Regards, Paul V.

--- In shavian@..., Ethan <ethanl@3...> wrote:
> 06/20/03 2:09:54 PM, Scott Stephens <swstephe@y...> wrote:
>
> >I have to be a boor and disagree. Spelling
> >standardization is essential. In fact, here is a
> >quote from James Pitman's introduction on the Shaw
> >alphabet:
> >
> >"In personal and intimate writing the forty-eight
> >(40+8) characters of the Shaw alphabet may faithfully
> >portray the pronunciation of the individual; but, as
> >Shaw pointed out, too eccentric a dialect may hamper,
> >and even destroy, effective communication. He
> >considered that, though there was no need to
> >standardize writing if not intended for publication,
> >there was every need for conformity in print; standard
> >spellings being particularly desirable when that print
> >is intended for circulation throughout the
> >English-speaking world."
> >
> >(copied directly from
> >http://victorian.fortunecity.com/vangogh/555/Spell/pitmans-
intro.html)
>
> I think that it would be great if people who intend to circulate
their writing
> widely would be educated in the "standard dialect" of their
country. In the US
> that would be the dialect you hear on radio and television all the
time,
> basically the mid-western or California dialect. And in the UK
that would be
> "BBC English". Others may possibly be used as well, but those are
the main two.
> This would assure that they write according to the standard
dialect, as radio
> and television personalities today learn to speak the standard
dialect.
> Speaking and writing should not be so completely separate as they
are now, but
> rather we should seek to standardize speech, and writing as well.
I see no
> reason to expect a person to write differently than the way they
speak. If a
> person is educated, then they should be educated on proper speech
as well as
> proper writing.
>
> >
> >I make the counter offer, if you don't want to
> >standardize on spelling, why not just throw out the
> >Shavian alphabet, (why learn more rules?), and
> >standardized English spelling. While talking to a 1st
> >grade teacher recently, (in California), she said that
> >her current methodology was to *not* punish children
> >for mispelling words, but instead, let them explore
> >their creativity by spelling words any way they want
> >to. This horrified my wife, (also a school teacher,
> >but from a British-based system).
>
> This would horrify me too! I can think of nothing uglier than the
attempts to
> write English phonetically by using an outdated, inflexible system
of 26 letters
> originally designed to write Latin efficiently. Every attempt I
have seen to do
> this has resulted in some of the worst looking junk I have ever
seen! And when
> students are told to "Just spell it however you think it should be
spelled",
> well, the result is confusion and a major mess! That's not
education.
> Education must have structure, because if everybody does it however
they feel
> like it, things get out of hand very quickly. I have seen some of
this stuff
> recently, and it was written by a local elementary student. I
don't really know
> why we pay teachers to do stuff like that!
>
> >There may be some
> >advantage to writing in a local dialect, (which is
> >more clear in Shavian because of the wider range of
> >distinct sounds), but in business and non-fiction
> >communications, there has to be a standardized
> >spelling dictionary that everyone must know, even if
> >their local dialect doesn't make a distinction.
>
> I agree that a standard should exist. Just make it the standard
pronunciation
> which already exists. It might need a little refining, but I think
it's pretty
> close already. Broadcasters already use this standard today.
>
> >
> >But in either case, read more of the document, it
> >doesn't talk about throwing out the Roman alphabet,
> >either, any more than we threw out Roman numerals,
> >although relegated to movie titles and credits.
>
> No, we don't need to throw out traditional orthography, as it has
historical
> purposes. It should still be taught and used, although its use
would obviously
> become limited if the use of Shavian became widespread.
>
> --
> Ethan



Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service <http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/> .


________________________________

Do you Yahoo!?
SBC Yahoo! DSL <http://pa.yahoo.com/*http://rd.yahoo.com/evt=1207/*http://promo.yahoo.com/sbc/> - Now only $29.95 per month!

Yahoo! Groups Sponsor
ADVERTISEMENT
<http://rd.yahoo.com/M=251812.3170658.4537139.1261774/D=egroupweb/S=1705213030:HM/A=1652964/R=0/SIG=11t2ts2ch/*http://www.netflix.com/Default?mqso=60178276&partid=3170658>
<http://us.adserver.yahoo.com/l?M=251812.3170658.4537139.1261774/D=egroupmail/S=:HM/A=1652964/rand=100499190>

Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service <http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/> .

From: paul vandenbrink
Date: 2003-07-06 18:05:53 #
Subject: [shavian] Re: A Standard Shavian Pronoucation

Toggle Shavian
Hi Carl

Am I understanding you?
You want to specify a standard for traditional spelling in Roman
Alphabet and then provide a list of exceptions. English words that
are pronounced differently from the standard?

Paul V.

--- In shavian@..., carl easton <shavintel16@y...> wrote:
> I have spend some time thinking about a standard or Formal
pronouncation for the English Language (Shavian). I concluded that
the first thing we should do is find the words that are either
spelled the same (in traditional) or pronouced the same (depending on
dialect). These words probably should be spelled in shavian, by
assign a particular related phoneme (i.e. ih or ee, or even the three
ah's and uh's). This line of thinking is directed toward the common
words we use daily. As far as the "big" words I recommend using the
shavian equivilent of the Dictionary pronoucation.
>
> Carl
>
> paul vandenbrink <pvandenbrink@s...> wrote:
> Hi Ethan
>
> While I have mixed feelings about focusing too much attanion on
> standardization, let me recommend the NTC's Dictionary of American
> English Pronunciation
> by Bernard Silverstein
> as the most practical guide to correct General American
Pronunciation.
> The set of phonetic letters used matches up very nicely with the
Shaw
> Alphabet and address the Subset of Shaw Letters required to
represent
> General American English.
> It is published by NTC National Textbook Company
> out of Lincolnwood, Illinois, USA
> Elliot's pronouncing Dictionary is good, too.
> Anyone had a chance to see these Dictionaries?
>
> Regards, Paul V.
>
> --- In shavian@..., Ethan <ethanl@3...> wrote:
> > 06/20/03 2:09:54 PM, Scott Stephens <swstephe@y...> wrote:
> >
> > >I have to be a boor and disagree. Spelling
> > >standardization is essential. In fact, here is a
> > >quote from James Pitman's introduction on the Shaw
> > >alphabet:
> > >
> > >"In personal and intimate writing the forty-eight
> > >(40+8) characters of the Shaw alphabet may faithfully
> > >portray the pronunciation of the individual; but, as
> > >Shaw pointed out, too eccentric a dialect may hamper,
> > >and even destroy, effective communication. He
> > >considered that, though there was no need to
> > >standardize writing if not intended for publication,
> > >there was every need for conformity in print; standard
> > >spellings being particularly desirable when that print
> > >is intended for circulation throughout the
> > >English-speaking world."
> > >
> > >(copied directly from
> > >http://victorian.fortunecity.com/vangogh/555/Spell/pitmans-
> intro.html)
> >
> > I think that it would be great if people who intend to circulate
> their writing
> > widely would be educated in the "standard dialect" of their
> country. In the US
> > that would be the dialect you hear on radio and television all
the
> time,
> > basically the mid-western or California dialect. And in the UK
> that would be
> > "BBC English". Others may possibly be used as well, but those
are
> the main two.
> > This would assure that they write according to the standard
> dialect, as radio
> > and television personalities today learn to speak the standard
> dialect.
> > Speaking and writing should not be so completely separate as they
> are now, but
> > rather we should seek to standardize speech, and writing as
well.
> I see no
> > reason to expect a person to write differently than the way they
> speak. If a
> > person is educated, then they should be educated on proper speech
> as well as
> > proper writing.
> >
> > >
> > >I make the counter offer, if you don't want to
> > >standardize on spelling, why not just throw out the
> > >Shavian alphabet, (why learn more rules?), and
> > >standardized English spelling. While talking to a 1st
> > >grade teacher recently, (in California), she said that
> > >her current methodology was to *not* punish children
> > >for mispelling words, but instead, let them explore
> > >their creativity by spelling words any way they want
> > >to. This horrified my wife, (also a school teacher,
> > >but from a British-based system).
> >
> > This would horrify me too! I can think of nothing uglier than
the
> attempts to
> > write English phonetically by using an outdated, inflexible
system
> of 26 letters
> > originally designed to write Latin efficiently. Every attempt I
> have seen to do
> > this has resulted in some of the worst looking junk I have ever
> seen! And when
> > students are told to "Just spell it however you think it should
be
> spelled",
> > well, the result is confusion and a major mess! That's not
> education.
> > Education must have structure, because if everybody does it
however
> they feel
> > like it, things get out of hand very quickly. I have seen some
of
> this stuff
> > recently, and it was written by a local elementary student. I
> don't really know
> > why we pay teachers to do stuff like that!
> >
> > >There may be some
> > >advantage to writing in a local dialect, (which is
> > >more clear in Shavian because of the wider range of
> > >distinct sounds), but in business and non-fiction
> > >communications, there has to be a standardized
> > >spelling dictionary that everyone must know, even if
> > >their local dialect doesn't make a distinction.
> >
> > I agree that a standard should exist. Just make it the standard
> pronunciation
> > which already exists. It might need a little refining, but I
think
> it's pretty
> > close already. Broadcasters already use this standard today.
> >
> > >
> > >But in either case, read more of the document, it
> > >doesn't talk about throwing out the Roman alphabet,
> > >either, any more than we threw out Roman numerals,
> > >although relegated to movie titles and credits.
> >
> > No, we don't need to throw out traditional orthography, as it has
> historical
> > purposes. It should still be taught and used, although its use
> would obviously
> > become limited if the use of Shavian became widespread.
> >
> > --
> > Ethan
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Sponsor
> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of
Service.
>
>
>
> ---------------------------------
> Do you Yahoo!?
> SBC Yahoo! DSL - Now only $29.95 per month!


------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~-->
Inkjet cartridges up to 80% off. HP, Epson, Lexmark--we have your brand.
Free shipping on every order to the U.S. and Canada! Excellent service.
http://www.c1tracking.com/l.asp?cid=5510
http://us.click.yahoo.com/QWB0QC/.eUGAA/ySSFAA/mx3olB/TM
---------------------------------------------------------------------~->



Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

From: carl easton
Date: 2003-07-07 19:11:49 #
Subject: Re: [shavian] Re: A Standard Shavian Pronoucation

Toggle Shavian
Hi Paul,

Sorry, due to my poor writing skills I think I even misunderstand myself. Now I will attempt to correct my mistake. In order to come up with a Formal Pronoucation to Shavian. I was speculating that we could find a Standard Pronucation based loosely on Traditional Roman Spelling. That is, for example: with the three "uh"'s -- because they get confused depending on dialect. Straighten them out by transliterating them based on the shavian letter names. Such as "ado" (the schwa) for an "a" (or when ever the phoneme is present) as in Spart"a"n. And "up" for a "u" as in "u"nderstand. And "wool"
for "oo" as in b"oo"k. However now that I think of it we should should rely more on dictionaries for pronoucation, in Shavian. That's all I have to say for a Standard or Formal Spelling in Shavian.

Sorry for the confusion,

Carl
paul vandenbrink <pvandenbrink@...> wrote:

Hi Carl

Am I understanding you?
You want to specify a standard for traditional spelling in Roman
Alphabet and then provide a list of exceptions. English words that
are pronounced differently from the standard?

Paul V.

--- In shavian@..., carl easton <shavintel16@y...> wrote:
> I have spend some time thinking about a standard or Formal
pronouncation for the English Language (Shavian). I concluded that
the first thing we should do is find the words that are either
spelled the same (in traditional) or pronouced the same (depending on
dialect). These words probably should be spelled in shavian, by
assign a particular related phoneme (i.e. ih or ee, or even the three
ah's and uh's). This line of thinking is directed toward the common
words we use daily. As far as the "big" words I recommend using the
shavian equivilent of the Dictionary pronoucation.
>
> Carl
>
> paul vandenbrink <pvandenbrink@s...> wrote:
> Hi Ethan
>
> While I have mixed feelings about focusing too much attanion on
> standardization, let me recommend the NTC's Dictionary of American
> English Pronunciation
> by Bernard Silverstein
> as the most practical guide to correct General American
Pronunciation.
> The set of phonetic letters used matches up very nicely with the
Shaw
> Alphabet and address the Subset of Shaw Letters required to
represent
> General American English.
> It is published by NTC National Textbook Company
> out of Lincolnwood, Illinois, USA
> Elliot's pronouncing Dictionary is good, too.
> Anyone had a chance to see these Dictionaries?
>
> Regards, Paul V.
>
> --- In shavian@..., Ethan <ethanl@3...> wrote:
> > 06/20/03 2:09:54 PM, Scott Stephens <swstephe@y...> wrote:
> >
> > >I have to be a boor and disagree. Spelling
> > >standardization is essential. In fact, here is a
> > >quote from James Pitman's introduction on the Shaw
> > >alphabet:
> > >
> > >"In personal and intimate writing the forty-eight
> > >(40+8) characters of the Shaw alphabet may faithfully
> > >portray the pronunciation of the individual; but, as
> > >Shaw pointed out, too eccentric a dialect may hamper,
> > >and even destroy, effective communication. He
> > >considered that, though there was no need to
> > >standardize writing if not intended for publication,
> > >there was every need for conformity in print; standard
> > >spellings being particularly desirable when that print
> > >is intended for circulation throughout the
> > >English-speaking world."
> > >
> > >(copied directly from
> > >http://victorian.fortunecity.com/vangogh/555/Spell/pitmans-
> intro.html)
> >
> > I think that it would be great if people who intend to circulate
> their writing
> > widely would be educated in the "standard dialect" of their
> country. In the US
> > that would be the dialect you hear on radio and television all
the
> time,
> > basically the mid-western or California dialect. And in the UK
> that would be
> > "BBC English". Others may possibly be used as well, but those
are
> the main two.
> > This would assure that they write according to the standard
> dialect, as radio
> > and television personalities today learn to speak the standard
> dialect.
> > Speaking and writing should not be so completely separate as they
> are now, but
> > rather we should seek to standardize speech, and writing as
well.
> I see no
> > reason to expect a person to write differently than the way they
> speak. If a
> > person is educated, then they should be educated on proper speech
> as well as
> > proper writing.
> >
> > >
> > >I make the counter offer, if you don't want to
> > >standardize on spelling, why not just throw out the
> > >Shavian alphabet, (why learn more rules?), and
> > >standardized English spelling. While talking to a 1st
> > >grade teacher recently, (in California), she said that
> > >her current methodology was to *not* punish children
> > >for mispelling words, but instead, let them explore
> > >their creativity by spelling words any way they want
> > >to. This horrified my wife, (also a school teacher,
> > >but from a British-based system).
> >
> > This would horrify me too! I can think of nothing uglier than
the
> attempts to
> > write English phonetically by using an outdated, inflexible
system
> of 26 letters
> > originally designed to write Latin efficiently. Every attempt I
> have seen to do
> > this has resulted in some of the worst looking junk I have ever
> seen! And when
> > students are told to "Just spell it however you think it should
be
> spelled",
> > well, the result is confusion and a major mess! That's not
> education.
> > Education must have structure, because if everybody does it
however
> they feel
> > like it, things get out of hand very quickly. I have seen some
of
> this stuff
> > recently, and it was written by a local elementary student. I
> don't really know
> > why we pay teachers to do stuff like that!
> >
> > >There may be some
> > >advantage to writing in a local dialect, (which is
> > >more clear in Shavian because of the wider range of
> > >distinct sounds), but in business and non-fiction
> > >communications, there has to be a standardized
> > >spelling dictionary that everyone must know, even if
> > >their local dialect doesn't make a distinction.
> >
> > I agree that a standard should exist. Just make it the standard
> pronunciation
> > which already exists. It might need a little refining, but I
think
> it's pretty
> > close already. Broadcasters already use this standard today.
> >
> > >
> > >But in either case, read more of the document, it
> > >doesn't talk about throwing out the Roman alphabet,
> > >either, any more than we threw out Roman numerals,
> > >although relegated to movie titles and credits.
> >
> > No, we don't need to throw out traditional orthography, as it has
> historical
> > purposes. It should still be taught and used, although its use
> would obviously
> > become limited if the use of Shavian became widespread.
> >
> > --
> > Ethan
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Sponsor
> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of
Service.
>
>
>
> ---------------------------------
> Do you Yahoo!?
> SBC Yahoo! DSL - Now only $29.95 per month!



Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service <http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/> .


________________________________

Do you Yahoo!?
SBC Yahoo! DSL <http://pa.yahoo.com/*http://rd.yahoo.com/evt=1207/*http://promo.yahoo.com/sbc/> - Now only $29.95 per month!

Yahoo! Groups Sponsor
<http://rd.yahoo.com/M=249982.3512844.4795476.1261774/D=egroupweb/S=1705213030:HM/A=1524963/R=0/SIG=12o72ctft/*http://hits.411web.com/cgi-bin/autoredir?camp=556&lineid=3512844&prop=egroupweb&pos=HM>
<http://us.adserver.yahoo.com/l?M=249982.3512844.4795476.1261774/D=egroupmail/S=:HM/A=1524963/rand=697015806>

Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service <http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/> .

From: carl easton
Date: 2003-07-07 19:20:39 #
Subject: [shavian] The Aesthetic value of the original Shavian Alphabet

Toggle Shavian
Have you ever seen the the difference between the original Shavian (1962) vs the later ones Kingsley Read did. Though the later Shavian Alphabets seem (or can be) more more efficent at expressing the English Language. To me the later "alphabets" seem sloppier than the original. And besides the original Shavian Alphabet is the funnest one to write with, by through handwriting. (Which is the only way I can write in Shavian until I can buy a computer of my own.

Carl

________________________________

Do you Yahoo!?
SBC Yahoo! DSL <http://pa.yahoo.com/*http://rd.yahoo.com/evt=1207/*http://promo.yahoo.com/sbc/> - Now only $29.95 per month!

Yahoo! Groups Sponsor
<http://rd.yahoo.com/M=249982.3512844.4795476.1261774/D=egroupweb/S=1705213030:HM/A=1524963/R=0/SIG=12o72ctft/*http://hits.411web.com/cgi-bin/autoredir?camp=556&lineid=3512844&prop=egroupweb&pos=HM>
<http://us.adserver.yahoo.com/l?M=249982.3512844.4795476.1261774/D=egroupmail/S=:HM/A=1524963/rand=358822895>

Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service <http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/> .

From: paul vandenbrink
Date: 2003-07-08 22:18:18 #
Subject: [shavian] Re: The Aesthetic value of the original Shavian Alphabet

Toggle Shavian
Hi Carl

I really like the look of the Original Shavian Alphabet. The internal
consistency of the letters is amazing. One of many examples is that
voiced letters which typically go together in consonsant pairs,
are all bottom letters. They look so neat and well designed together.
And Even tho it uses less space, it doesn't look crowded together.
Regards, Paul V.

--- In shavian@..., carl easton <shavintel16@y...> wrote:
> Have you ever seen the the difference between the original Shavian
(1962) vs the later ones Kingsley Read did. Though the later Shavian
Alphabets seem (or can be) more more efficent at expressing the
English Language. To me the later "alphabets" seem sloppier than the
original. And besides the original Shavian Alphabet is the funnest
one to write with, by through handwriting. (Which is the only way I
can write in Shavian until I can buy a computer of my own.
>
> Carl
>
>
> ---------------------------------
> Do you Yahoo!?
> SBC Yahoo! DSL - Now only $29.95 per month!


------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~-->
Buy Coral Calcium for Greater Health - $23.95
http://www.challengerone.com/t/l.asp?cid=2805&lp=calcium2.asp
http://us.click.yahoo.com/MmkSQC/NTVGAA/ySSFAA/mx3olB/TM
---------------------------------------------------------------------~->



Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

From: Star Raven
Date: 2003-07-08 22:27:10 #
Subject: Re: [shavian] Re: The Aesthetic value of the original Shavian Alphabet

Toggle Shavian
I have to agree that quikscript is more like sloppy shorthand, while
the original shavian is neat, readable, and concise, as, I'm sure, Shaw
meant for it to be. I don't believe in sub-sets, though I do thing the
/hw/ sound should be used if not the quikscript check-mark added. These
seem to fit for me. Any comments?

--Star

--- paul vandenbrink <pvandenbrink@...> wrote:
> Hi Carl
>
> I really like the look of the Original Shavian Alphabet. The internal
>
> consistency of the letters is amazing. One of many examples is that
> voiced letters which typically go together in consonsant pairs,
> are all bottom letters. They look so neat and well designed together.
>
> And Even tho it uses less space, it doesn't look crowded together.
> Regards, Paul V.
>
> --- In shavian@..., carl easton <shavintel16@y...> wrote:
> > Have you ever seen the the difference between the original Shavian
> (1962) vs the later ones Kingsley Read did. Though the later Shavian
>
> Alphabets seem (or can be) more more efficent at expressing the
> English Language. To me the later "alphabets" seem sloppier than the
>
> original. And besides the original Shavian Alphabet is the funnest
> one to write with, by through handwriting. (Which is the only way I
> can write in Shavian until I can buy a computer of my own.
> >
> > Carl
> >
> >
> > ---------------------------------
> > Do you Yahoo!?
> > SBC Yahoo! DSL - Now only $29.95 per month!
>
>


=====
"Alright, enough with the storyline, let's get back to the monster killing...Hello!"

__________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
SBC Yahoo! DSL - Now only $29.95 per month!
http://sbc.yahoo.com

------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~-->
Buy Coral Calcium for Greater Health - $23.95
http://www.challengerone.com/t/l.asp?cid=2805&lp=calcium2.asp
http://us.click.yahoo.com/MmkSQC/NTVGAA/ySSFAA/mx3olB/TM
---------------------------------------------------------------------~->



Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

From: paul vandenbrink
Date: 2003-07-08 22:34:52 #
Subject: [shavian] Towards a Standard Shavian Pronunciation

Toggle Shavian
Hi Carl
I agree that a Shavian Dictionary in General American English, would
be an invaluable guide for any student of Shavian.
And as I was saying before,
the NTC's Dictionary of American
English Pronunciation
by Bernard Silverstein
uses almost exactly the same set of phonemes as the American subset
of the Shavian Alphabet. It has 12 vowel letters and 25 consonant
letters using the I.P.A. Alphabet. It uses Diagraphs to represent the
other Shavian Letters.
It would be easy to create Shavian version of this dictionary, as the
set of phonetic IPA letters used matches up very nicely with the Shaw
Alphabet and addresses concisely the Subset of Shaw Letters required
to represent General American English.

> > It is published by NTC National Textbook Company
> > out of Lincolnwood, Illinois, USA

Regards, Paul V.

P.S. An on-line version would be invaluable.

--- In shavian@..., carl easton <shavintel16@y...> wrote:
> Hi Paul,
>
> Sorry, due to my poor writing skills I think I even misunderstand
myself. Now I will attempt to correct my mistake. In order to come
up with a Formal Pronoucation to Shavian. I was speculating that we
could find a Standard Pronucation based loosely on Traditional Roman
Spelling. That is, for example: with the three "uh"'s -- because
they get confused depending on dialect. Straighten them out by
transliterating them based on the shavian letter names. Such
as "ado" (the schwa) for an "a" (or when ever the phoneme is present)
as in Spart"a"n. And "up" for a "u" as in "u"nderstand. And "wool"
> for "oo" as in b"oo"k. However now that I think of it we should
should rely more on dictionaries for pronoucation, in Shavian.
That's all I have to say for a Standard or Formal Spelling in Shavian.
>
> Sorry for the confusion,
>
> Carl
> paul vandenbrink <pvandenbrink@s...> wrote:
> Hi Carl
>
> Am I understanding you?
> You want to specify a standard for traditional spelling in Roman
> Alphabet and then provide a list of exceptions. English words that
> are pronounced differently from the standard?
>
> Paul V.
>
> --- In shavian@..., carl easton <shavintel16@y...>
wrote:
> > I have spend some time thinking about a standard or Formal
> pronouncation for the English Language (Shavian). I concluded that
> the first thing we should do is find the words that are either
> spelled the same (in traditional) or pronouced the same (depending
on
> dialect). These words probably should be spelled in shavian, by
> assign a particular related phoneme (i.e. ih or ee, or even the
three
> ah's and uh's). This line of thinking is directed toward the
common
> words we use daily. As far as the "big" words I recommend using
the
> shavian equivilent of the Dictionary pronoucation.
> >
> > Carl
> >
> > paul vandenbrink <pvandenbrink@s...> wrote:
> > Hi Ethan
> >
> > While I have mixed feelings about focusing too much attanion on
> > standardization, let me recommend the NTC's Dictionary of
American
> > English Pronunciation
> > by Bernard Silverstein
> > as the most practical guide to correct General American
> Pronunciation.
> > The set of phonetic letters used matches up very nicely with the
> Shaw
> > Alphabet and address the Subset of Shaw Letters required to
> represent
> > General American English.
> > It is published by NTC National Textbook Company
> > out of Lincolnwood, Illinois, USA
> > Elliot's pronouncing Dictionary is good, too.
> > Anyone had a chance to see these Dictionaries?
> >
> > Regards, Paul V.
> >
> > --- In shavian@..., Ethan <ethanl@3...> wrote:
> > > 06/20/03 2:09:54 PM, Scott Stephens <swstephe@y...> wrote:
> > >
> > > >I have to be a boor and disagree. Spelling
> > > >standardization is essential. In fact, here is a
> > > >quote from James Pitman's introduction on the Shaw
> > > >alphabet:
> > > >
> > > >"In personal and intimate writing the forty-eight
> > > >(40+8) characters of the Shaw alphabet may faithfully
> > > >portray the pronunciation of the individual; but, as
> > > >Shaw pointed out, too eccentric a dialect may hamper,
> > > >and even destroy, effective communication. He
> > > >considered that, though there was no need to
> > > >standardize writing if not intended for publication,
> > > >there was every need for conformity in print; standard
> > > >spellings being particularly desirable when that print
> > > >is intended for circulation throughout the
> > > >English-speaking world."
> > > >
> > > >(copied directly from
> > > >http://victorian.fortunecity.com/vangogh/555/Spell/pitmans-
> > intro.html)
> > >
> > > I think that it would be great if people who intend to
circulate
> > their writing
> > > widely would be educated in the "standard dialect" of their
> > country. In the US
> > > that would be the dialect you hear on radio and television all
> the
> > time,
> > > basically the mid-western or California dialect. And in the UK
> > that would be
> > > "BBC English". Others may possibly be used as well, but those
> are
> > the main two.
> > > This would assure that they write according to the standard
> > dialect, as radio
> > > and television personalities today learn to speak the standard
> > dialect.
> > > Speaking and writing should not be so completely separate as
they
> > are now, but
> > > rather we should seek to standardize speech, and writing as
> well.
> > I see no
> > > reason to expect a person to write differently than the way
they
> > speak. If a
> > > person is educated, then they should be educated on proper
speech
> > as well as
> > > proper writing.
> > >
> > > >
> > > >I make the counter offer, if you don't want to
> > > >standardize on spelling, why not just throw out the
> > > >Shavian alphabet, (why learn more rules?), and
> > > >standardized English spelling. While talking to a 1st
> > > >grade teacher recently, (in California), she said that
> > > >her current methodology was to *not* punish children
> > > >for mispelling words, but instead, let them explore
> > > >their creativity by spelling words any way they want
> > > >to. This horrified my wife, (also a school teacher,
> > > >but from a British-based system).
> > >
> > > This would horrify me too! I can think of nothing uglier than
> the
> > attempts to
> > > write English phonetically by using an outdated, inflexible
> system
> > of 26 letters
> > > originally designed to write Latin efficiently. Every attempt
I
> > have seen to do
> > > this has resulted in some of the worst looking junk I have ever
> > seen! And when
> > > students are told to "Just spell it however you think it should
> be
> > spelled",
> > > well, the result is confusion and a major mess! That's not
> > education.
> > > Education must have structure, because if everybody does it
> however
> > they feel
> > > like it, things get out of hand very quickly. I have seen some
> of
> > this stuff
> > > recently, and it was written by a local elementary student. I
> > don't really know
> > > why we pay teachers to do stuff like that!
> > >
> > > >There may be some
> > > >advantage to writing in a local dialect, (which is
> > > >more clear in Shavian because of the wider range of
> > > >distinct sounds), but in business and non-fiction
> > > >communications, there has to be a standardized
> > > >spelling dictionary that everyone must know, even if
> > > >their local dialect doesn't make a distinction.
> > >
> > > I agree that a standard should exist. Just make it the
standard
> > pronunciation
> > > which already exists. It might need a little refining, but I
> think
> > it's pretty
> > > close already. Broadcasters already use this standard today.
> > >
> > > >
> > > >But in either case, read more of the document, it
> > > >doesn't talk about throwing out the Roman alphabet,
> > > >either, any more than we threw out Roman numerals,
> > > >although relegated to movie titles and credits.
> > >
> > > No, we don't need to throw out traditional orthography, as it
has
> > historical
> > > purposes. It should still be taught and used, although its use
> > would obviously
> > > become limited if the use of Shavian became widespread.
> > >
> > > --
> > > Ethan
> >
> >
> > Yahoo! Groups Sponsor
> > Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of
> Service.
> >
> >
> >
> > ---------------------------------
> > Do you Yahoo!?
> > SBC Yahoo! DSL - Now only $29.95 per month!
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Sponsor
> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of
Service.
>
>
>
> ---------------------------------
> Do you Yahoo!?
> SBC Yahoo! DSL - Now only $29.95 per month!


------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~-->
Get A Free Psychic Reading! Your Online Answer To Life's Important Questions.
http://us.click.yahoo.com/Lj3uPC/Me7FAA/ySSFAA/mx3olB/TM
---------------------------------------------------------------------~->



Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/