Microsoft Sam

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Microsoft Sam

Postby bot47 » Thu Nov 17, 2005 1:58 pm

Hm, btw, since I'm not a native speaker: You all (should) know the Microsoft TTS-engine. What kind of English is it speaking? British? American?
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Re: Microsoft Sam

Postby pear_eater » Thu Nov 17, 2005 2:13 pm

[quote="bot47":145a876cfe]
What kind of English is it speaking? British? American?
[/quote:145a876cfe]

It can be configured for either one.
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Postby bot47 » Thu Nov 17, 2005 4:11 pm

Not with my windows.
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Postby Alex » Thu Nov 17, 2005 4:24 pm

You probably need to install other languages
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Re: Microsoft Sam

Postby mikeazorin » Fri Jan 13, 2006 3:15 am

IMOM, Sam has fairly poor voice emulation, especially compared to the voices that can be found on OS X. I think Sam is set to American by default.
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Re: Microsoft Sam

Postby bot47 » Fri Jan 13, 2006 2:41 pm

Can you tell me a word to figure this out? Maybe if I let "him" say "pretty" I can here it?
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Re: Microsoft Sam

Postby Apple 101 » Fri Jan 13, 2006 11:52 pm

mikeazorin wrote:IMOM, Sam has fairly poor voice emulation, especially compared to the voices that can be found on OS X. I think Sam is set to American by default.

Microsoft Sam is set to American English by default.

bot47 wrote:Can you tell me a word to figure this out? Maybe if I let "him" say "pretty" I can here it?
I don't think "pretty" will help you out there bot47. Try a prefix, such as "multi".

In Australia and the UK and possibly other countries, "multi" is pronounced as "malt-ee". I believe, in America (no offense anyone) "multi" is said as "malt-eye".

If you input "multi" into Microsoft Sam, it should say "malt-eye".
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Re: Microsoft Sam

Postby bot47 » Sat Jan 14, 2006 9:27 am

Thanks a lot. He speaks American English Smile But why not "pretty"?
As far as I know Americans pronounce it "preedee" and Britains like "preetea"?
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Re: Microsoft Sam

Postby Apple 101 » Sun Jan 15, 2006 2:15 am

You're correct, MS Sam does say "preedee". I've never thought about it before...
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Re: Microsoft Sam

Postby CannotResolveSymbol » Tue Jan 17, 2006 5:07 am

I'm American and I say "malt-ee" (IPA /məlti/). Probably one of the better ways to differentiate "American" english from British or Recieved Pronunciation would be to use a word like Florida or origin, where you would get a /-or-/ in General American (unaccented to an American) and a /-ɒr-/ (are) in British English. The catch there is that speakers in New England will use the /-ɒr-/ sound like a British speaker, so you can't make a generalization there either. Sorrow and bother, among others, both retain the /-ɒr-/ sound in General American.

Here are the sources I used to figure this out:

Website Wikipedia: IPA
Website Wikipedia: General American
Website Wikipedia: IPA Chart for English: Shows Recieved Pronunciation, General American, and Australian English sounds and their IPA equivalents.
Website Wikipedia: International Phonetic Alphabet for English

There does not appear to be a Wikipedia chart mapping IPA directly onto German in either the English or German wikipedias, but I'm sure you could find one somewhere online if you actually knew German (which I don't).

Oh, and to try to answer the question at hand, it sounds to me like American english (General American), based on the borrow/sorrow difference. However, it isn't perfect and isn't really a great example of anything (it mispronounces the i in Florida-- that's the same in both dialects).
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