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The Oxford Dictionary of Original Shakespearean Pronunciation David Crystal (Honorary Professor of Linguistics, Honorary Professor of Linguistics, University of Wales, Bangor)

The Oxford Dictionary of Original Shakespearean Pronunciation By David Crystal (Honorary Professor of Linguistics, Honorary Professor of Linguistics, University of Wales, Bangor)

The Oxford Dictionary of Original Shakespearean Pronunciation by David Crystal (Honorary Professor of Linguistics, Honorary Professor of Linguistics, University of Wales, Bangor)


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Summary

This dictionary is the first comprehensive description of Shakespearean original pronunication (OP), enabling practitioners to deal with any queries about the pronunciation of individual words. It includes all the words in the First Folio, transcribed using IPA, and the accompanying website hosts sound files as a further aid to pronunciation.

The Oxford Dictionary of Original Shakespearean Pronunciation Summary

The Oxford Dictionary of Original Shakespearean Pronunciation by David Crystal (Honorary Professor of Linguistics, Honorary Professor of Linguistics, University of Wales, Bangor)

This dictionary is the first comprehensive description of Shakespearean original pronunication (OP), enabling practitioners to deal with any queries about the pronunciation of individual words. It includes all the words in the First Folio, transcribed using IPA, and the accompanying website hosts sound files as a further aid to pronunciation. It also includes the main sources of evidence in the texts, notably all spelling variants (along with a frequency count for each variant) and all rhymes (including those occurring elsewhere in the canon, such as the Sonnets and long poems). An extensive introduction provides a full account of the aims, evidence, history, and current use of OP in relation to Shakespeare productions, as well as indicating the wider use of OP in relation to other Elizabethan and Jacobean writers, composers from the period, the King James Bible, and those involved in reconstructing heritage centres. It will be an invaluable resource for producers, directors, actors, and others wishing to mount a Shakespeare production or present Shakespeare's poetry in original pronunciation, as well as for students and academics in the fields of literary criticism and Shakespeare studies more generally.

The Oxford Dictionary of Original Shakespearean Pronunciation Reviews

This unique book, the result of more than a decade of research, offers a careful, nuanced account of the sounds and rhythms of individual words, as they might have sounded to the audiences of Shakespeares day, revealing rhymes and puns that are often lost or unclear in many varieties of Present Day English (PDE). In doing so, it provides fresh insights into Shakespeares work for a wide range of readers. * Sarah Grandage, Early Theatre *
Crystal presents his robust, careful research, drawing together insights from linguistics, Shakespearean studies, and theatre practice, with his typical clarity and user-friendly style, repaying both targeted queries and meandering browsing ... [The book] provides insights for a wide range of users beyond theatre makers, including scholars, teachers, and students, the wider early modern heritage industry, as well as linguists with an interest in phonology, sociolinguistics, or stylistics. * Sarah Grandage, Early Theatre *
Crystals work definitely surpasses all of the expectations that one could have of a magnum opus such as this one, which can definitely be considered as a must-have reference book for all of those interested in the language of Shakespeare. This dictionary is unquestionably another masterpiece by this British linguist. * Pablo Tagarro Melon and Nerea Suarez Gonzalez, Clomputense Journal of English Studies *
Crystal's unique dictionary joins his other worthy Shakespearean language works to form an essential collection covering the language of the Bard. * R. A. Aken, University of Kentucky *
A whole linguistic world is anatomised by David Crystal ... * Spectator *
fascinating * Stratford-on-Avon Observer *
Crystal has looked to capture the state of our language at the time when Shakespeare was writing ... he has achieved something quite remarkable. * The Bookbag *

About David Crystal (Honorary Professor of Linguistics, Honorary Professor of Linguistics, University of Wales, Bangor)

David Crystal is known throughout the world as a writer, editor, lecturer, and broadcaster on language. His work on the language of Shakespeare includes Pronouncing Shakespeare (CUP, 2005), Think on my Words: Exploring Shakespeare's Languages (CUP, 2008), and, with Ben Crystal, Shakespeare's Words (Penguin, 2002), The Shakespeare Miscellany (Penguin, 2005), and The Oxford Illustrated Shakespeare Dictionary (OUP, 2015).

Table of Contents

PART I: INTRODUCTION; PART II: THE DICTIONARY

Additional information

NGR9780199668427
9780199668427
0199668426
The Oxford Dictionary of Original Shakespearean Pronunciation by David Crystal (Honorary Professor of Linguistics, Honorary Professor of Linguistics, University of Wales, Bangor)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press
20160324
704
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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