Wikipedia:WikiProject Phonetics
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This WikiProject aims to make sure the phonetics related topics on Wikipedia are covered completely and consistently.
Contents |
[edit] Parentage
The parent of this WikiProject is the WikiProject Linguistics.
[edit] Participants
- Nohat
- Gareth Hughes
- Peter Isotalo
- moyogo
- Mustafaa
- Ish_ishwar
- J. 'mach' wust
- User:IceKarma
- Pablo D. Flores
- Whimemsz
- Angr/tɔk tə mi
- Benwing
- jnothman
- Duja
- Shingrila
- Ciacchi
- tsuiwaiming
- Ƶ§œš¹ [aɪm ˈfɻɛ̃ⁿdˡi]
- Tropylium
[edit] Structure
The main page for this project is list of phonetics topics. Please add phonetics topics to this page.
[edit] Language phonologies
The current standard suggested for phonology articles titles is XXX phonology. Please feel free to convert the articles to the naming standard and the phonology template. The following articles should all be in Category:Language phonologies.
- Ancient Greek phonology
- Bernese German phonology
- Catalan phonology
- Danish phonology
- Dutch phonology
- International Phonetic Alphabet for Dutch (should be merged into above?)
- Category:English phonology
- English phonology (a real mess; help please!)
- Australian English phonology
- International Phonetic Alphabet for English
- Esperanto phonology
- Finnish phonology
- French phonology
- German phonology
- Hebrew phonology
- Hungarian phonology
- Inuktitut phonology and phonetics
- Irish phonology
- Category:Japanese phonology
- Latin spelling and pronunciation
- Old English phonology
- Ojibwe phonology
- Persian phonology
- Portuguese phonology
- Romanian phonology
- Russian phonology
- Spanish phonology
- Swedish phonology
- Ubykh phonology
- Vietnamese phonology
[edit] Phonology sections in language articles
[edit] Goals
The main projects for this WikiProject:
- write articles for all the red links on list of phonetics topics.
- add links to list of phonetics topics in the "See also" section of all those pages
- Provide examples for each sound on list of vowels and list of consonants, with an example of a language that has that sound, a word in that language with phonetic transcription and an English gloss.
- For each of the articles about a class of sounds, such as velar consonant or open vowel, include a list of all the International Phonetic Alphabet symbols for the sounds that are in that class. For an example, see alveolar consonant.
[edit] Good and featured articles
[edit] Good articles
[edit] Featured articles
[edit] Resources
[edit] Templates
- {{WikiProject Phonetics}} - for use on the talk pages of articles relating to this WikiProject
- {{Vowels}} - a table of all the cardinal vowels of the International Phonetic Association
- {{Manner of articulation}}
- {{Place of articulation}}
- {{IPA}} - Template that makes sure that IPA-characters are properly presented in the most common web browsers.
- {{Listen}} - A template for linking to sound files in Commons; includes a clear help link and is best suited as a standalone template outside of text. Very good for linking to longer sentences or reading of texts.
- {{Audio}} - A second audio template that; much more compact and better suited for smaller sound samples and links that are enclosed in text. Appropriate for tables and for linking to shorter sound files like the pronunciation of individual phones or shorter words and phrases.
- {{Audio-IPA}}, a variant of {{Audio}} to be used with IPA notation.
- {{Audio-IPA-nohelp}}, a variant with no help links.
- Stub type: {{phonetics-stub}} / Cat:phonetics stubs
- Clean up/translation needed:
- {{Cleanup-ipa}}
- {{RoughTranslation}}
- {{Cleanup-translation}}
- {{Notenglish}}
[edit] Links
- The official homepage of the International Phonetic Association
- A guide to the Handbook of the IPA - Includes recordings of all the phonologies in the handbook.
- UCLA Phonetic Data - Recordings of a wide range of sounds in various languages.
- EGG and Voice Quality - site on electroglottography, phonation, & related topics
- UPSID languages - An inventory of some 500 languages and their phonemes; a very useful tool for checking how common certain sounds are.