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<<< Previous | Chapter 29. English phone lists |
This phoneset developed at CSTR a number of years ago is for Southern UK English (RP, "received pronunciation"). Its definition is in festival/lib/mrpa_phones.scm.
cUp, dOne
bEt, chEck
cAt, mAtch
cOttage, hOt
bIt, shIp
pUll, fOOt, bOOk
bEAt, shEEp
pOOl, bOOt
AUthor, cOURt
ARt, hEARt
sEARch, bURn
bIte, mIght, lIke
Ate, mAIl
tOY, OYster
sOUth, hOW
hOle, cOAt
AIR, bARE, chAIR
EAR, bEER
sUre, jUry
About, arlAs, equipmEnt
Pat, camPer
Tap, baT
Camera, jaCK, Kill
Book, aBrupt
Done, baD
Good, biGGer
Sit, maSS
Zero, quiZ, boyS
SHip, claSH
viSion, caSual
Fat, lauGH
Various, haVe
THeatre, baTH
THat, faTHer
CHart, larCH
diGit, Jack
Hello, loopHole
Man, gaMe
maN, New
baNG, sittiNG
Late, bLack
Yellow, Yacht
Reason, caReer,
Water, cobWeb
short silence
In addition to the phone sthemselves the nonsense word generated by the diphone schema also have some other notations to denote different type of phone.
The use of - (hyphen) in the nonsense word itself is used to denot an explicit syllable boundary. Thus pau t aa n - k aa pau is used to state that the word should be pronounced as tan ka rather than tank ah. Where no explicit syllable boundary is given the pronunciation should be pronounce naturally without any boundary (which is probabaly too underspecified in some cases).
The use of _ (underscore) in phone names is used to denote consonant clusters. That is t_-_r is the /tr/ as found in trip not that in cat run.
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