Mundbildschrift and Mundbild ;-)
K.J. Boal
kjoanne403 at HOTMAIL.COM
Mon May 14 04:32:07 UTC 2007
>From: "Valerie Sutton" <signwriting at MAC.COM>
>Reply-To: sw-l at majordomo.valenciacc.edu
>To: sw-l at majordomo.valenciacc.edu
>Subject: [sw-l] Mundbildschrift and Mundbild ;-)
>Date: Sun, 13 May 2007 07:16:55 -0700
>
>SignWriting List
>May 13, 2007
>
>Adam Frost wrote:
>>Ok. That helps me understand what Mundbildschrift is. I could possibly be
>>called Speech Writing. :-) So what I was thinking is called Mundbild, or
>>maybe called in English Mouth Writing or Lip Writing. Your explanation
>>helps a lot. Thanks. :-)
>
>Hello Stefan, Adam, Sandy, Charles and everyone!
>
>You are correct, Adam, that you are interested in writing what Stefan
>calls Mundbild...which are SignWriting symbols applied to writing the
>movements we see on the mouth while signing...and writing Mundbild should
>be a part of the ISWA (the International SignWriting Alphabet). I think
>your name LipWriting is fun! Or Mouthing Writing...or just plain
>SignWriting Facial Expressions might be fine too ;-)
>
>and you are right again, that Mundbildschrift is not the same...and will
>not be a part of the ISWA.
>
>I asked Stefan to choose an English translation of the term
>"Mundbildschrift" for us, so we can understand it in English...and Stefan
>chose this translation:
>
>Mundbildschrift (Woehrmann's SpeechWriting System)
>
>Woehrmann's SpeechWriting System writes the sounds of the IPA
>(International Phonetic Alphabet) using some symbols from SignWriting
>Facial Expressions, but then developing those symbols further, to create a
>standard way of writing the sounds of the IPA.
>
>Here is an example...see attached...this is a sentence written in
>Woehrmann's SpeechWriting System. This sentence writes the sounds of the
>English sentence at the bottom of the diagram. You can see there are seven
>words, read from left to right. If a person memorizes what sound is
>represented by each standardized facial expression, they can produce the
>sounds of of the IPA:
>
>
>
><< Woehrmann_sSpeechWriting.gif >>
I believe I read somewhere that Alexander Graham Bell had actually developed
a SpeechWriting type of system, where anyone could look at it and see how
the mouth, tongue, nose and even throat worked together to produce sounds.
The story goes (if I remember correctly) that he demonstrated this system at
some kind of Exhibition; he left the stage while his assistant wrote several
suggestions from the audience. When he came back on stage, he easily read
the first few sentences, but he couldn't make sense of the last one. He
started to read the sounds, even though he didn't know what he was doing...
and did a perfect impression of wood being sawn!
I've wanted to take a look at the system ever since, but I haven't been able
to find anything else written about it. I wish I knew whether it really
worked as well as that story would suggest... anyway, Stefan's system looks
pretty understandable to me - at least for sounds that are pronounced at or
near the front of the mouth!
I'm just not sure about the sounds produced way in the back of the throat,
like G and K, or how voicing is represented. I also notice that the R in
"Speechwriting" and the OE sound in "Woehrmann" are represented by the same
symbol... I would be surprised if they were actually the same sound. But
representing the retroflexed R that we use in English (and in every English
accent I'm aware of, we would actually pronounce the R in a word like
"Speechwriting" because it comes before a vowel)... I'm not sure how you
would do that. Just my initial impression...
KJ
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