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ArtikelJohn Wild of Littleleek, an early eighteenth-century spelling reformer, and the evolution of a new alphabet  
Oleh: Jones, Charles
Jenis: Article from Journal - ilmiah internasional
Dalam koleksi: English Language and Linguistics (Full Text & ada di PROQUEST th. 2005 - terbaru) vol. 5 no. 1 (May 2001), page 17-40.
Fulltext: vol5.1;17-40.pdf (254.24KB)
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    • Nomor Panggil: SS23
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Isi artikelThe eighteenth century has by and large been viewed as a period during which there was little attention paid to alphabet innovation as a mechanism for achieving the `visible speech' required to represent and ultimately `®x' the prescribed national standard of propriety in pronunciation with which it was obsessed. While there were several writers who sought to achieve a `one symbol-one-sound' co-relation through an elaborate use of diacritic marks attached to the standard alphabet letter-set, with the exception of Thomas Spence and Abraham Tucker, there were very few who advocated the production of entirely new alphabets as a means of achieving this goal. John Wild, schoolmaster of Littleleek, Nottinghamshire, belongs to this symbol-innovating group. The small extant sample of his phonetic symbol system demonstrates a sophisticated and radical attempt to unambiguously match sound with symbol, one which provides important insights into both contemporary pronunciation and, uniquely, into one of its major regional manifestations.
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