This series consists of facsimile reprints of whole books which chart the historical emergence of key language groups in the 18th and 19th centuries, and the methodology of linguistics.
Edited
By Anthony P R Howatt, Anthony Howatt, Richard C Smith, Richard Smith
December 20, 2001
This volume forms part of a five volume set charting the progress of the nineteenth century movement, which was instrumental in establishing international guidelines for the teaching of modern languages. It was during this period that for the first time, co-operation between phoneticians and ...
Edited
By Anthony P R Howatt, Anthony Howatt, Richard C Smith, Richard Smith
December 20, 2001
This volume forms part of a five volume set charting the progress of the nineteenth century movement, which was instrumental in establishing international guidelines for the teaching of modern languages. It was during this period that for the first time, co-operation between phoneticians and ...
Edited
By Paul Carley
December 23, 2015
After a period during which pronunciation teaching has been somewhat out of favour in English Language Teaching (ELT), interest has revived in recent years. It is important, therefore, that sources are made available for applied linguists better to understand past approaches to pronunciation ...
Edited
By Anthony P R Howatt, Anthony Howatt, Richard C Smith, Richard Smith
December 20, 2001
This volume forms part of a five volume set charting the progress of the nineteenth century movement, which was instrumental in establishing international guidelines for the teaching of modern languages. It was during this period that for the first time, co-operation between phoneticians and ...
Edited
By Anthony P R Howatt, Anthony Howatt, Richard C Smith, Richard Smith
December 20, 2001
This volume forms part of a five volume set charting the progress of the nineteenth century movement which was instrumental in establishing international guidelines for the teaching of modern languages. It was during this period that for the first time, co-operation between phoneticians and ...
Edited
By Beverley Collins, INGER MEES, Paul Carley
July 31, 2013
Co-published by Routledge and Edition Synapse By the end of the nineteenth century, phonetics was increasingly recognized as a valid scientific discipline. While early experimental and instrumental research in speech science was concentrated in Germany, France, and the USA, in Britain—thanks to the...
Edited
By Beverly Collins, Inger Mees
November 01, 2006
Work on speech sound and the sound systems of languages can be traced back in the British Isles at least as far as the sixteenth century. It was, however, only in the nineteenth century that the word ‘phonetics’ was actually coined, and it was also at this time that a wider interest in the subject ...
Edited
By Richard C. Smith
January 28, 2005
Following the Second World War, the British Council, along with British publishers and universities, began to take a serious interest in English as a foreign language teaching ('ELT') and the UK soon gained a dominant role in the development and export of teaching approaches and materials.This set ...
Edited
By Beverley Collins, Inger M. Mees
November 28, 2002
Daniel Jones (1881-1967) played a significant role in the emergence of phonetics as a fully developed academic discipline in the first half of the twentieth century. His views on the subject not only provided the foundations for the British tradition but also had a considerable, and often ...
Edited
By Beverley Collins, Inger M. Mees
November 28, 2002
First published in 2002. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company....
Edited
By Beverley Collins, Inger M. Mees
November 28, 2002
First published in 2002. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company....
Edited
By Beverley Collins, Inger M. Mees
November 28, 2002
First published in 2002. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company....