

The Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary (CEPD see Figure 1 for main screen) on CD-ROM is a remarkable achievement in electronic phono-lexicography, and this is not only because it is the first of its kind. Their authority, founded by the epoch-making English Pronouncing Dictionary (EPD 1917) by Daniel Jones, is only matched by that of the (desk-size) general learner's dictionaries of English released by such respectable publishers as Longman, Oxford or-indeed-Cambridge.

Pronouncing dictionaries are not only teaching/learning resources par excellence in the world of English as a Foreign Language (EFL), but are also regarded as being among the most often used and highly regarded aids at the advanced levels of EFL proficiency and pedagogy. See for further information on Unicode and IPA symbols.) On the Macintosh platform please use either Safari or Firefox. To read the phonetic symbols in this article, your browser requires a Unicode font containing the IPA subset. GBP 19.73 from .uk (book+CD), $375.00 USD Network Version Windows 95, 166 MHz Pentium, 32 MB RAM, 140 MB available disk space, sound card, speakers or headphones, microphone Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary (CEPD) on CD-ROMĬambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary CD-ROM (CEPD), 2003ĭaniel Jones, Peter Roach, James Hartman & Jane SetterĮlectronic pronouncing dictionary on CD-ROM
