OK, I am using Eloquence, and Thunderbird. Reading to the end, or arrowing line by line, it doesn't matter - I do not see the behavior you are experiencing, sorry. Yet, I do appreciate that you may have another synthesizer, and you may have settings or even apps that could cause this kind of behavior, so the following will be of general interest, annd hence you will have to do a bit of playing to see what would help you out.

Looking through the line in question, the main differences between the two I's, that I noticed, is that there is a comma at the end of the preceeding word of the first I. Now, if some ap you have installed, or even your synthesizer's firmware interprets a capitalized I in the beginning of a clause, should be pronounced as the Roman number 1, you are right at the core of the issue.

Solutions?
My first go, would have been to copy the line in question to a blank document in something like Notepad. This so as to let you play around with it, without disturbing anything. try to edit the line, removing the comma, and then let the synthesizer read it out to you. Does the same behavior display? Try leaving the comma in place, but break the phrase into two different lines, that the first line will hold the text up to the comma, and the second line will start out with the first I. Arrow up and down, realizing how your synth will do the job.

If any of the above would improve the speech, chances are that my guess had something to it - your screen reader interprets the first I as Roman number 1. Numerous reasons could play their role, the two main ones would be the synth used may have this kind of built-in interpretation, and the second one would be any apps you have installed. So try turning off any apps that may have an impact on your textual interpretation. I do know, there used to exist an app on App Central for making the speech read out Roman numbers correctly, so if you happen to be a user of that one, it might be one to turn off for the testing. And again, changing the synth may be the whole solution worth.

Hope any of this would prove helpful in your tracing the reason for this behavior. Like I said, I did not hear the pronunciation you described. To me, both the I's were spoken properly as what they inreality are, the capitalized letter I. this even if arrowed up and down, or left and right through your sample line. There did exist no difference in the pronunciation. Hence, you may have something in use on your system, that causes this kind of behavior to come through.

Like others on the list, if you happen to trace a possible reason for the behavior, would you mind to post the results to the list? At least it would be of informative value. And who knows, probably it could be the basis for some kind of "fixing app". :)


David

On 7/22/2016 6:05 PM, Carol and Roger via Talk wrote:
Can anyone explain why my screen says two different things when pronouncing the first "I" in the below partial sentence?

Hi Carol, I will let you know if I

This was in an email and when I opened the message, both of the I's said "eye". When I arrowed through the message, one line at a time, the first "I" was spoken as "one" and the second was spoken as "eye." As far as I can tell, they both have the same unicode symbol and everything seems equal. Yes, I know it is not a big deal, I am just puzzled as to why it would happen. Thanks. Also, I sent this message to myself before sending it to the group and it still does the same thing. There are many I's in this message and they all are spoken correctly except the one in the message. Really, I am mostly curious as to why only one letter would change its pronunciation

Carol

_______________________________________________
Any views or opinions presented in this email are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of Ai Squared.

For membership options, visit http://lists.window-eyes.com/options.cgi/talk-window-eyes.com/trailerdavid%40hotmail.com. For subscription options, visit http://lists.window-eyes.com/listinfo.cgi/talk-window-eyes.com List archives can be found at http://lists.window-eyes.com/private.cgi/talk-window-eyes.com



David

On 7/22/2016 6:05 PM, Carol and Roger via Talk wrote:
Can anyone explain why my screen says two different things when pronouncing the first "I" in the below partial sentence?

Hi Carol, I will let you know if I

This was in an email and when I opened the message, both of the I's said "eye". When I arrowed through the message, one line at a time, the first "I" was spoken as "one" and the second was spoken as "eye." As far as I can tell, they both have the same unicode symbol and everything seems equal. Yes, I know it is not a big deal, I am just puzzled as to why it would happen. Thanks. Also, I sent this message to myself before sending it to the group and it still does the same thing. There are many I's in this message and they all are spoken correctly except the one in the message. Really, I am mostly curious as to why only one letter would change its pronunciation

Carol

_______________________________________________
Any views or opinions presented in this email are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of Ai Squared.

For membership options, visit http://lists.window-eyes.com/options.cgi/talk-window-eyes.com/trailerdavid%40hotmail.com. For subscription options, visit http://lists.window-eyes.com/listinfo.cgi/talk-window-eyes.com List archives can be found at http://lists.window-eyes.com/private.cgi/talk-window-eyes.com



_______________________________________________
Any views or opinions presented in this email are solely those of the author 
and do not necessarily represent those of Ai Squared.

For membership options, visit 
http://lists.window-eyes.com/options.cgi/talk-window-eyes.com/archive%40mail-archive.com.
For subscription options, visit 
http://lists.window-eyes.com/listinfo.cgi/talk-window-eyes.com
List archives can be found at 
http://lists.window-eyes.com/private.cgi/talk-window-eyes.com

Reply via email to