On 27.07.2017 13:14, Adam Snape wrote:
As long as it was clear from the tag (as it is in your example) that it was a spoken rather than
written form of the name then I wouldn't have a problem with it. To be most useful such a tag
should not just exist for TTS software, it could also be of use where the pronunciation is not clear
from the spelling eg. Edinburgh.
There are pronunciation dictionaries for different languages, which are not thicker than spelling
dictionaries. In electronic form they would measure in kilobytes, and be included in the dozens of
megabytes a TTS engine comes with, for each language module. So the correct spelling of common
geonames as Edinburgh should be an easy exercise.
I am still surprised however how badly implemented even the market leaders are, and poorly prepared
for the most common application nowadays, navigation. My German TTS still speaks "-straße" (-street)
inconsistently wrong.
On 27 July 2017 at 11:49, Michal Fabík <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
speaking of pronunciation, I was thinking about this too. In Czechia,
we have many cases of official street names containing abbreviations
and sometimes numbers, such as "Charles IV. sq.".
I have doubts that "sq." is the official name. I believe the official name would be "square", even
when it is abbreviated on the street signs to save by making smaller signs.
tom
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