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ELLIS (originally SHARPE), ALEXANDER ...

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Originally appearing in Volume V09, Page 293 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ELLIS (originally SHARPE), ALEXANDER JOHN (1814-189o)  ,
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English philologist, mathematician, musician and writer on phonetics, was born at Hoxton on the 14th of
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June 1814 . He was educated at Shrewsbury,
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Eton, and Trinity College, Cam-
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bridge, and took his degree in high mathematical honours . He was connected with many learned societies as member or president, and was governor of University College,
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London . He was the first in England to reduce the study of phonetics to a science . His most important
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work, to which the greater
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part of his
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life was devoted, is On Early English Pronunciation, with
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special reference to Shakespeare and Chaucer (1869-1889), in five parts, which he intended to supplement by a
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sixth, containing an abstract of the whole, an account of the views and criticisms of other inquirers in the same field, and a
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complete
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index, but
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ill-
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health prevented him from carrying out his intention . He had long been associated with Isaac
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Pitman in his attempts to reform English spelling, and published A Plea for Phonotypy and Phonography (1845) and A Plea for Phonetic Spelling (1848); and contributed the articles on " Phonetics " and " Speech-sounds " to the 9th edition of the Ency . Brit . He translated (with considerable additions) Helmholtz's Sensations of Tone as a physiological Basis for the Theory of
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Music (2nd ed., 1885); and was the author of several smaller
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works on music, chiefly in connexion with his favourite subject phonetics . He died in London on the 28th of
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October 189o .

End of Article: ELLIS (originally SHARPE), ALEXANDER JOHN (1814-189o)
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