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  1. The English Phonotypic Alphabet is a phonetic alphabet developed by Sir Isaac Pitman and Alexander John Ellis originally as an English language spelling reform. Although never gaining wide acceptance, elements of it were incorporated into the modern International Phonetic Alphabet .

  2. As of Unicode version 15.1, there are 149,878 characters with code points, covering 161 modern and historical scripts, as well as multiple symbol sets. This article includes the 1,062 characters in the Multilingual European Character Set 2 subset, and some additional related characters.

  3. Apr 30, 2024 · Third Revised Proposal to encode characters for the English Phonotypic Alphabet (EPA) in the UCS, October 18th 2011. Pitman Collection at the University of Bath. The English Phonotypic Alphabet is a phonetic alphabet developed by Sir Isaac Pitman and Alexander John Ellis originally as an English language spelling reform.

  4. English Phonotypic Alphabet. Ewellic alphabet. General Alphabet of Cameroon Languages. General Chinese. Initial Teaching Alphabet. Kirshenbaum. Norvegia transcription. Palaeotype alphabet. Phonetic notation of the American Heritage Dictionary. Pinyin. Pronouncing Orthography. Pronunciation respelling for English. Quikscript. RFE Phonetic Alphabet.

  5. Second Revised Proposal to encode characters for the English Phonotypic Alphabet (EPA) in the UCS. Page 2 of 47 . 2011-05-23 . The EPA is an extension of the Latin alphabet, including some special punctuation marks. It also assigns special meanings of existing Latin characters and punctuation marks when used in its domain.

  6. Revised Proposal to encode characters for the English Phonotypic Alphabet (EPA) in the UCS. Page 2 of 48 . 2011-01-18 • It is closely related to the widely used Pitman Shorthand (being based on the same phonemes, as its inventor was also one of the main contributors and propagators of EPA). • It played a role in the history of IPA.

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  8. Proposal to encode characters for the English Phonotypic Alphabet (EPA) in the UCS. Page 2 of 41 . 2010-07-12, revised 2010-10-24 . The term "phonotypic" was coined to distinguish the project from "phonographic" which then was used for the shorthand, referring to its design for lead . types (while the other was designed for "graphics" done by ...

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