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Spelling on the Net 
March, 2001     Simpl Spel Nuzletr     ssn-mar01 
News and Dialog about e-Spelling
editor:  a-h-campbell@clear.net.nz
writer:  sbett@lycos.com

IN THIS ISSUE                                    back issues:  ssn-oct00
  • Dictionary Resources 
  • Discussion boards popular
  • Ask a linguist
  • RITE releases Stage 1 reforms
  • Best Spelling websites
  • Augmenting Alphabets
  • Ideal writing system
  • The writing system is not the language - It's a code!
  • Explaining a new notation
  • page 2 -ssn-mar01b.html--whowhere-index.htm--1-Index-Spelling--fc-sitemap

    Dictionary Resources Improve

    On-Line Dictionaries have improved considerably in the last six months.
    Many of the old dictionary sites have been reworked to be even better.
    The top five sites are listed below along with their key feature.  The URLs can be found at the www.unifon.org/ssn-mar01.html or by using a search engine.

    1. Your Dictionary - clean, uncluttered, and quick. uses the m-w search engine

    2. www.yourdictionary.com
    3. Cambridge Dictionary - pronunciation guide uses IPA symbols

    4.  http://www.cup.cam.ac.uk/esl/dictionary/default.asp
    5. Merriam-Webster Dictionary - locates misspelled words, accepts fonetic spelling

    6. http://www.m-w.com
    7. Encarta Talking Dictionary  - over 70,000 words in the audiofile database http://dictionary.msn.com/find/
    8. One Look Dictionary and..All Dictionaries - do simultaneous searches.

    9.  http://afen.onelook.com                          http://www.alldictionaries.com
    10. new one

    Activity increases on simplified spelling discussion boards 

    What started out as one discussion group several years ago has now expanded to three.  One of the splinter groups, saundspel, had over 800 messages exchanged in January compared to an average of 80 messages during the previous four months.  The eGroup server software, now owned by Yahoo, archives and threads all discussions and provides a simple automatic way to subscribe and unsubscribe [subscribe now]. Subscribers have the option of having the mail sent daily or using webmail.  To read webmail, the subscriber has to go to one of the links listed below.  Other services including automated polling of members and file storage.
      Feb 2001 data:   members       messages......................
    www.egroups.com/group/saundspel        21              921
    www.egroups.com/group/RITEspel           14              235
    www.egroups.com/group/ssslist                16              138

    The RITE reform

    The RITEspel egroup has completed a set of 45 rules for the STAGE I reform recommendations.  Stage I changes an estimated 38% of T.O. A strictly phonemic reform would respell over 60% of the words.  Truespel, for instance, respells over 90%.  Systems such as ALC fonetic and Anglic have fewer respellings because they accept quite a few irregular high frequency words. RITE also includes a small set of sight words.   The RITE reform  will greatly improve the chances that a person can correctly spell words as they are pronounced.  Ze says, "The user will get it rite in 93% of the cases." http://www.unifon.org/rite.html

    Have a question about linguistics?

    Several places on the Net enable you to talk to [or argue with] a linguist.  The saundspel egroup, listed above, is one.  Another is Ask a Linguist, operated by UM and Wayne State.  URL http://linguistlist.org/~ask-ling/
    A recent site on handwriting features ask Dr. Alphabet

    The best spelling sites on the Net 
    Although not called the top ten spelling reform sites, the sss website has recently added a list of the best places to go for information on spelling and spelling reform:
    http://www.les.aston.ac.uk/sss/ssslinks.html
    One of the links listed is to the spelling reform ring [a link page]
    http://pages.prodigy.net/aesir/ring.htm

    Augmented alphabets and special fonts

    The unifon server [www.unifon.org] makes a few freeware extended fonts available for download. These include Unifon,  Symbol [Greek], Shavian, Cyrillic, and Serbo-Croatian. http://babel.uoregon.edu/Yamada/fonts/
    croatian.html. The Unicode IPA font is available on the Microsoft website. 
    www.microsoft.com/typography/

    We have been unable to locate a digital font for Goody's SSA and Pitman's i.t.a. or augmented roman.  So far the effort to convert these true type files [.ttf] from Windows to a Mac compatible format have not been very successful.

    John Well's SAMPA page [http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/sampa/unicodetest. htm and  http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/wells/ipa-unicode.htm] tests a new unicode font which displays IPA characters.  The SAMPA notation was developed years ago to transcribe IPA characters into ASCII or keyboard compatible characters.  Now the technology has caught up with the need.  It is still difficult to use IPA characters in email but they can now be viewed without downloading fonts by those with browsers 4.0 and above. [unicode font available from MS

    Characteristics of the Ideal Writing System

    The features of the ideal writing system were listed by linguist, David Kelley, on saundspel.  They may be as unattainable as the Holy Grail  [ san grael

    1. no code overlaps as with TO [out cow low]
    2. no silent or unpronounced letters [e.g., the e in give and have]
    3. no extra space requirements - more compact than traditional spelling
    4. no key required to pronounce or read with understanding
      1. readily read and pronounced without a key by English speakers 

      2. and by speakers of other European languages
    5. no special [non-ascii, non-qwerty] characters [see Latin-1]
    6. no numbers [5=sh, 2=zh] or caps [S=sh, Z=zh] for sound signs
      1. no dependency on upper case letters such as N for ng
    7. no more than one one sound per symbol [symbol = conventional sign]
    8. no diacritics [see is ae a digraph or diacritic?]
    9. no digraphs [double letters, eg Sh]   for single sounds
    The system closest to the ideal [and it is not all that close] is the world english notation, Romik.  Romik  is readable without a key and has been tested on speakers of languages other than English.  It is designed primarily as a starting point for ESL teachers.  It is basically IPA notation without special characters. Several of the notations used by those on the saundspel egroup, such as nu romaji, winglish, saundspel, and spanglish,  are very close to Romik.

    Promoting the idea that the writing system is not the language
    Traditional English:   Its just a code an not a very good one. 

    One source of resistance to new spelling is the notion that the writing system is the language and that changing the writing system will change the language.  If we stripped out etymological cues, morphological cues, and other irrelevancies from the code it would be much simpler to learn and would have no effect on the spoken language. 

    There are lots of things we learned from our 3rd grade teacher that are hard to dispel such as "Only unschooled people write [through] as [thru]."  The hardest myth to unseat is the idea that the traditional writing system deserves the same reverence as the language. 

    Valerie Yule, Steve Bett, and David Kelley are working on a book on writing systems with the underlying theme that a particular writing system is just one of many ways to code speech.  One of the pages developed so far is on Hotsuma, an ancient Japanese syllabary/alphabet.  To make hotsuma easier to understand and less alien, it is reworked for English. 

    The Hotsuma page underscores the fact that the phonological structure of English speech could be transcribed into visible speech in a variety of ways - all of them better [i.e., more phonemic] than what we use today.  Although David Kelley's Nu Hotsuma Syllabary is compact, analytical, and  ingenious, it is not recommended as a practical reform.  The project is part of an effort to write a new type of book on Writing Systems:  One that builds an analog of historic phonological and semantic codes that works with English.

    Similar pages are being constructed for two south american systems  Quipu and Maya.  The book is aimed at 8 to 14 year olds interested in secret codes and cryptography.  TO may be a  kind of a cryptographic system but the aim of most of these systems was to make it simple.

    Explaining a new notation in one page or less
       Can a PV be less than 12 pages and be complete?
    Is it possible to explain 99% of what you need to know about a proposed notation in less than one page?  The personal view [PV] series promoted by the SSS, allowed up to 12 pages and most writers wanted more pages to promote their particular reform proposal. 

    The chief differences between phonemic notations for English can be found in their handling of long vowels and diphthongs.  Therefore it should be possible to pack all the needed information in one 6 x 4 table.   Here is the minimal set of key words. 


    short              long            difthongz   r-comb
    ax      ah      ice   are
    ex      her     ace   air
    it      eel     oil   ear
    not     taut    owe   oar
    hook    hoop    use   tour
    up      ago     out   our


    To reduce the time needed for a reader to unpack the information, the table should be standardized.  Everyone should have to condense their notation to fit into the standard set of boxes the same way that PV authors are currently asked to respell a series of 50 words.

    The following is an example of one of the World English proposals.  Please write and tell me if you can figure out the notation from such a compact nutshell presentation.  Is this all you need to know?  sbett@lycos.com

    Non phonemic systems such as Cut Spelling and RITEspel [stage I] cannot be reduced to a 6x4 table.  However, broad quasi phonemic systems such as Spanglish and Fastrspel could be initially explained in a one sound - one symbol format before being decontructed.  i.t.a.'s are deconstructed by the addition of spelling patterns and competing principles.  Rapid writing systems are constructed by phoneme mergers and abbreviations. abbreviations

    The problem comes when readers try to unpack the information.  Another page would have to be developed for those who have trouble reading and making sense out of tabular data. 

    One helpful addition might be the inclusion of three sample paragraphs in the new spelling.  Here is an example:


    VY's BEAUTIFUL PRINCESS STORY IN FOUR NOTATIONS
    The diacritic version of Spanglish has been around for a couple of years. 
    In the latest version, below, letter markers replace the diacritics.

    Saxon - Spanglish Fonetic ALC Fonetik. (A ver. of New Spelling)
    Wàns àpon à taim thè byutifùl dotèr òv à gret majiciàn wantèd mor pèrlz tu pùt àmòng hèr trezhèrz.  "Lùk thru thè centèr òv thè mun hwen ìt ìz blu." sed hèr mòthèr ìn ansèr tu hèr queschàn,  "Yu mait faind yur hartz dezair."  [with diacritics] Wuns upon a tiem, the buetiful dauter of a graet majishun wonted mor perls to puut amung her trezhers. "Luuk thru the senter of the moon when it is bloo,"  sed her muther in anser to her qestchun, "Ue miet fiend yur harts dezier."
    Above is the phonemic version.  The marked vowels à è indicate mid lax unaccented vowels [IPA  '-schwa]
    - F
    This version of Spanglish [below] does not use diacritics and represents  ^ and @. with the letters a and e.
    This short story by Valerie Yule is supposed to contain every phoneme in English.  Fonetik is very close to ITA

    RITEspel - RITEpel SR-1
    Ritespel SR-1 is a collaborative notation that brings back the Magic e

    Wans apon a taim the byutifwl doter av a greyt majishan waanted mor perlz tu pwt amang her treaszherz, "Lwk thru the center av the mun wen itt izz blu sed her mather inn annser tu her queschan, "Yu mait faind yur haartz dezair." Wunce upon a time, the butiful dauter of a grate majician wanted mor perls tu put amung her tresures. Look thru the center of the moon wen it is blu, sed her muther in anser tu her question "U mite fynd your harts dezire"
     It is unlikely that the reader will have any trouble reading any of these regularized notations
    The most fonemic notations above is Spanglish followed by ALC and RITE.  TO is about 40% fonemic.

    Compare ALC fonetic with RITE.  Both try to approximate the traditional system and allow certain specified irregularities [the, of, a,...]  Saxon Spanglish is more phonemic than ALC Fonetic or RITE but this because these partial reforms  accept about a dozen sight words such as The, OF, IS, TO, A, Wh, Wa, 

    Spelling Reform Proposals  longer list atsitemap-Lalternota.html
    1. Akses by James H. Kanzelmeyer  [jimk@forcomm.net] has 44 phonemes (not 44 sounds).  AKSES is a program for transitioning from TO to a phonemic writing system using the Roman  alphabet as the basis for 44 phonemic characters.
    2. ALC Fonetic[American Literacy Council] see also the spelling converter
    3. Burn's MillenniumAn augmented alphabet with an extender  letter that replaces the colon in IPA. pv-4.html
    4. Cut Spelling - Cuts or removes redundant letters in traditional spelling.
    5. RITEspel SR-1 [Stage I Reform]  RITEspel is a collaborative notation developed by near consensus among 16 members of the RITEspel egroup.  Over 200 polls were taken on different word spellings.  After the notation looked about right to everyone, the authors  compiled a set of 35 rules that would generate most [about 93%] of the RITE spellings. rite-rules.html

    6. Hotsuma  Not a serious reform proposal but a great cryptography game for kids to build phonemic awareness.
    7. Truespel - A new spelling derivitive that indicates stress
    8. Unifon is an augmented alphabet developed by John Malone, a Chicago economist in 1959.  It was proposed as an initial teaching alphabet but like so many similar  proposals, never caught on.  I like it because it provides a way for primary school children to play with a phonemic script.  Here is the Unifon alphabet along with the keyboard locations of the 16 new characters.

    9. in YnifOn EK letcr iz csOsEAtcd wiT wcn and xnlE wcn sqnd.in YnifOn EK letcr iz csOsEAtcd wiT wcn and xnlE wcn sqndThis keyboard Unifon can be deciphered using the table below. Bby installing the Unifon font, this code can be displayed in Unifon making it easier to read.
      Over half of the keyboard locations are unchanged.  The caps represent the "long vowels [ill eel] would be spelled [il El.].  The schwa is represented by c with C used for the short u in book. These can be visualized as LAZY-U's.
      .
      .
      Download the font
      UNIFON has the "long" sound symbol incorporated into the characters as a prominent horizontal element in any location, top, middle, or bottom.  No matter where the "long" signal appears it is a strong intuitive indication of the proper "long" phoneme. [JK] James H. Kanzelmeyer   jimk@forcomm.net

      uni-fonemic-transkripshcn.htmlunifon-keyboard.htmunifon-malone.htmlunifon-tables.html unifon-toc.html uni-rationale.html 


      9. SaxonSpanglish is a family of transcription codes based on the 10th century Saxon alphabet [see below].  Since this is an augmented Latin alphabet, Saxon-Spanglish looks a little like Spanish or Italian.  Spanglish F is an ascii-IPA, a replacement for IPA notation.  The fonemic transcription system is both an alternative pronunciation guide and a transitional alphabet [or i.t.a.] for learning English.  Spanglish distinguishes the short vowels by doubling the trailing consonant.
       
       
      A Fowniemic Alphabet for English
      The Saxon alfabett: 45 fownimz - 19 vaulz - 26 connsonants
      A
      ago
      AA
      caar
      A. AE
      catt
      AI 'y
      ais ice
      A.U
      aut out
      B
      bibb
      C
      cennt
      Ch
      check
      D
      didd
      E
      the
      E. EA
      bread
      EI ey
      eys ace
      ER R
      herdr
      F
      fetch
      G
      gwd
      H
      hurrdl
      I.
      tipp
      I IE
      iestern
      J
      judj
      K
      kick
      L
      littl
      M
      maund

      nunn
      NG
      singl
      O.
      otter
      O AO
      dog
      OW
      owe
      OY oi
      oyster
      P
      pick
      Qu
      quill
      R
      rowr
      S
      sisster
      Sh
      shwd
      T
      tot tott
      ThDh
      thy thai
      U.
      upp
      U uu
      guru
      V
      vatt
      WWh
      wenn
      W
      hwk
      X
      tax
      Y Yu
      yess
      Y
      very
      Z
      zipp
      Zh
      mezhr
       white cells contain vowels  ©2001 Beta
      As these charts show, the total number of phonemes in English is not a fixed number [See Bett, 1999 & Brown, 2000].  There may be 12 pure vowels and 22 pure consonants but there is little agreement on the number of diphthongs and combinations.  Neither chart isolates Dh as a phoneme.  Dh is certainly more important than redundant Q, C or X. [hw] is not isolated because it is not recognized by all dialects.  W and Y are semivowels, W is isolated but in the second chart Y is combined with I.  IPA does not isolate Ch or J since these can be represented as tsh and dzh respectively.


      A Fonimic Alphabet for English
      The Saxon alfabett: 42 fownimz - 17 vaulz - 25 connsonants
      A
      ago
      AA  q
      caar
      A. AE
      catt
      AI 'y
      ais ice
      A.U
      aut out
      B
      bibb
      C
      cennt
      Ch tsh
      check
      D
      didd
      E  ER
      the her
      E. EA
      bread
      EI ey
      eys ace
      F
      fetch
      G
      gwd
      H *hw
      hurrdl
      I.
      tipp
      I IE Y
      iest
      J dzh
      judj
      Q
      kick
      'l
      littl
      'm
      maund
      'n
      nunn
      NG
      singl
      O.
      otter
      O AO
      dog
      OW
      owe
      OY oi
      oyster
      P
      pick
      'r
      rowr
      S
      sisster
      Sh
      shipp
      T
      tot tott
      Dh Th
      thy  thai
      U.
      upp
      W
      hwk
      U uu
      guru
      V
      vatt
      Wwh-hw
      wenn
      ks
      tax
      Y Yu
      yess
      Z
      zipp
      Zh
      mezhr
       

    Is the IPA good enough?  The font developed just before 1900 by Jones, Passey and the International Phonetic Association is certainly good enough for a pronounciation guide.  Its appearance in extended text, however,  leaves something to be desired in terms of asethetics, readability and accessability.  The IPA font has the look of a font called "ransome note".  It looks as if the characters were cut from a variety of sources.  It does not have the flow of a  coherent design.  A good type designer could improve the font if the IPA gave him some artistic freedom.  Goody made a beautiful IPA equivalent [the SSA font] that was used in Dewey's books. 

    Althought it uses all of the Latin alphabet, IPA  sill looks alien and remains a difficult first read even with the beneift of a key.  Compare this with some of the phonemic alphabets above.  What is the best alternative.  World English is isomorphic with IPA and does not have any special [non-ascii] characters.  A few additional characters are needed such as [š] for sh  and [] for schwa and [d] for the /dh/.

    How Phonemic or Alphabetic or Predictable is the traditional orthography?
    There is more than one way to answer this question but perhaps the easiest is to determine how many times traditional spelling matches the pronunciation guide. Even if the most frequent spelling patterns are used as the pronunciation guide, the matches are less than 40%. 
     phonemic-awanress-go.htmlpredictabiity.html  deweyMSJ-article.html aphabet definition
     phon-inv-art-long.htm phon-inventory-art.html phonology-course.html
     


    Handryting Group Formed
    A new discussion group with Kate Gladstone as the moderator focusing on handwriting improvement and writing systems already has 35 members.  This represents an attempt to branch out to audiences that do not think they are interested in spelling reform. There should probably be additional groups formed for home schooling, reading research, and spelling improvement.
    join the saund-spellers


      quik-dic.html
      number of phonemes
      http://www.les.aston.ac.uk/sss/
      Numbers from one to ten in many languages - european
      go to language-rank.html  jolly-fonics.htmlhomofonz.html
      writing-samples.htm   writq-samplz.htm
       transcription-training.html
       letter-names.html
       map-pron.html
       planned-language.html
       quayle-spell.html
       500words-alc.htm  needs a link back to the source
       rosetta-stonec.html
       sampson.html
       saunds-eng2.html
       uses.html

      http://linguistsoftware.com/lsrb-cro.htm
      500 words
      http://linguistsoftware.com/lsrb-cro.htm
      fonts http://babel.uoregon.edu/Yamada/fonts/croatian.html
      http://www.barnsdle.demon.co.uk/spell/

       http://www.users.dircon.co.uk/~nik/spelling/email_d.html


    UNIFON & SAXON SPANGLISH TRANSCRIPTIONS

    The Cau
    inn Spanglish
    by Robert Louis Sstevenson

    The frendly cau ol red and hwait
    Ai luvv with ol mai haart
    Shi givz mi kriem with ol her mait
    Tu iet with appl taart

    Shi wanderz lowing hir and therr
    Annd yett shi cannot strey
    Ol inn the pleasent owpen err
    The pleasent lait av dey

    And blown bai ol the winndz thatt pass
    and wett with ol the shaurz
    She woks amang the meadow grass
    and ietz the meadow flaurz

    Spanglish is an alphabetical notation based on the restored Saxon augmented Latin alphabet.  This
    particular phonemic transcriptions retains a high number of spellings previously considered to be irregular.  Spanglish is an excellent transitional alphabet or i.t.a.  By adding additional spelling patterns and principles it can closely approximate traditional spelling. Through abbreviation, it can eliminate the double vowels which distinguish the short and long vowels.  Each letter is normally associated with three different sounds.  Marker letters rather than diacritics are used to distinguish which is being used.  Critiques are welcome.


    Alternative Notations Compared

    Du yu havv a  problem sieing with yer aneided aiz?
    Cann yu sie dhatt seil with yer aiz? ai ai ser. [Spanglish]

    Duu yuu haev a praablam siying widh yor aneidid aaiz?
    Kan yuu siy dhaet seil widh yor aaiz? Aai aai, Sar. [K-Spel]

    IPA          ðei sei ai ai  s3: 
    Ianspl       4ei sei ai ai s3:
    Winglish   dei sei ai ai sr 
    Iqliz          de se 'i 'i  'i s'r 
    RITE        thay say y  y ser 
    NuSpel     thae sae ie ie sur 
    Unifon      DA sA I I scr 
    Shavian    DE sE F F sX 
    MenuS     thay say ie ie suhr 
    Unigraf     DA sA I I sR 
    Intrspel*   thä sä  ï   ï  s*r 
    Kleyr       dhey sei aai aai, sar 
    Spanglish  they sey ai  ai ser 
     

    The Quarterly Simpl Spel Newsletter is mailed to the over 100 dues paying members of the Simplified Spelling Socieity.  The aims of the society can be summarized as follows.
    To reform English spelling for the benefit of learners and users throughout the world
    Objectives
    A. To publicize the unnecessary difficulties of English spelling and the benefits that its simplification would bring.
    .
    B. To raise awareness of the alphabetic principle, its corruption during the long history of written English, and its more rational application in other languages.
    .
    C. To promote research and debate on ways of reforming English spelling and to prepare proposals for improving by stages the predictability of sound syimbol relationships in English
    .
    D. To help co-ordinate proposals for English spelling reform across both English speaking and non-English speaking countries.
    .
    E. To persuade the public, opinion makers, policy-makers, and relevant agencies on the need for and practical possibilities of reforming English spelling.
    .
    See also the six axioms on english spelling
    page 2 - edited version of what actually made it into print
    © 2000 BETA Information Design