SAMPA

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The 'Speech Assessment Methods Phonetic Alphabet (SAMPA)' is a computer-readable phonetic script using 7-bit printable ASCII characters, based on the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA).
It was originally developed in the late 1980s for six European languages by the EEC ESPRIT information technology research and development program. As many symbols as possible have been taken over from the IPA; where this is not possible, other signs that are available are used, e.g. [@] for schwa (IPA ), [2] for the vowel sound found in French ''deux'' (IPA ), and [9] for the vowel sound found in French ''neuf'' (IPA ).
Today, officially, SAMPA has been developed for all the sounds of the following languages:

Arabic
Bulgarian
Cantonese
Czech
Danish
Dutch
English
Estonian
French

German
Greek
Hebrew
Hungarian
Italian
Norwegian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian

Russian
Scots
Serbo-Croatian
Slovak
Spanish
Swedish
Thai
Turkish

The characters ['"s{mp@'] represent the pronunciation of the name SAMPA in English. Like IPA, SAMPA is usually enclosed in square brackets or slashes, which are not part of the alphabet proper and merely signify that it is phonetic as opposed to regular text.

Contents
Problems with SAMPA
See also
References
External links

Problems with SAMPA


SAMPA tables are valid only in the language they were created for. The tables of languages are not harmonised so there are conflicts between languages. The result of this problem is that SAMPA cannot be used as an ASCII representation of the general IPA alphabet. To solve this problem X-SAMPA was created, which provides ''one single table'' without language-specific differences.
SAMPA was devised as a hack to work around the inability of text encodings to represent IPA symbols. However, as Unicode support for IPA symbols becomes more widespread, the necessity for a separate, computer-readable system for representing the IPA in ASCII decreases.

See also



★ A concise version of SAMPA chart for English sounds.

★ A more complete SAMPA chart of the sounds found in most of the European languages.

Kirshenbaum, sometimes called ASCII-IPA is another ASCII phonetic alphabet.

★ IPA, International Phonetic Alphabet

X-SAMPA, a language-independent notation similar to SAMPA, but covering the entire IPA repertoire.

CXS, an unofficial, extended version of X-SAMPA used for language construction

References



★ Ranchhod, Elisabeth & J. Mamede, Nuno (2002). ''Advances in Natural Language Processing: Third International Conference, PorTAL 2002, Faro, Portugal, June 23-26, 2002. Proceedings (Lecture Notes in Computer Science)''. (1st ed.). Springer. ISBN 3-540-43829-7.

★ L. DeMiller, Anna & Rettig, James (2000). ''Linguistics: A Guide to the Reference Literature'' (2nd ed.). Libraries Unlimited. ISBN 1-56308-619-0.

★ Lamberts, Koen & Goldstone, Rob (2004). ''Handbook of Cognition''. Sage Publications Ltd. ISBN 0-7619-7277-3.

External links



SAMPA computer readable phonetic alphabet

Phonemic notation of English in SAMPA

SAMPA for Scots

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