Search references for UNIFON. Phrases containing UNIFON
See searches and references containing UNIFON!UNIFON
Latin-based phonemic orthography for American English
Unifon is a defunct Latin-based phonemic orthography for American English designed in the mid-1950s by John R. Malone, a Chicago economist and newspaper
Unifon
Telecommunication provider
cycling under the name of Movistar Team. Argentina (formerly Telefónica Unifón and Movicom BellSouth) Chile (formerly Telefónica Móvil and BellSouth) Colombia
Movistar
Letter of the Latin alphabet
pronounce SENĆOŦEN". saanich.montler.net. Retrieved 2022-07-20. "The Unifon Alphabet". unifon.org. 2000. Archived from the original on 10 March 2026. Retrieved
C_with_stroke
Argentina communications company
Group. It previously operated under the trade name “Miniphone”, then as “Unifón”, and after merging with “Movicom BellSouth” in 2005, it began to be called
Movistar_Argentina
Additional letter of the Latin alphabet
Cyrillic letter Che. This letter was also used in the first version of Unifon. Sinological phonetic notation uses two derived forms, turned h with fishhook
Turned_h
Letter of the Latin script
Ollantay published in 1878. It is also used in the Landsmålsalfabetet. The Unifon alphabet uses a capital form of closed U. This letter has not yet been encoded
Closed_U
Phonemic, featural alphabet for English
Quikscript Esperanto Pitman shorthand Gregg shorthand Deseret alphabet Unifon alphabet English-language spelling reform Wells, John C. (2000). Longman
Shavian_alphabet
Writing system specifically created by an individual or group
letters, and numerous diacritics. Other scripts, such as John Malone's Unifon, Sir James Pitman's Initial Teaching Alphabet, and Alexander Melville Bell's
Constructed_writing_system
Moribund Algic language of California
Yurok was written in the Yurok Unifon; some books cited in the Yurok Language Project contain Yurok written in the Unifon script, though due to practicality
Yurok_language
Encoding of artificial scripts
and UTC. Archived from the original on 2015-07-29. Retrieved 2015-07-20. "Unifon Extended: U+E6F0 - U+E73F". KreativeKorp. Retrieved 2024-01-14. Bettencourt
ConScript_Unicode_Registry
Letter of the Latin alphabet
Fourth variant Fifth variant, almost resembles Cyrillic "и" and used in Unifon Sixth variant, completely resembles Cyrillic "и" Wikimedia Commons has media
Eng_(letter)
19th century phonetic alphabet for the English language
Pronounced (1 ed.). Frankfurt: Outlook. p. 73. ISBN 978-3-368-81052-8. Unifon Third Revised Proposal to encode characters for the English Phonotypic Alphabet
English_Phonotypic_Alphabet
Latin letter variant
Latin alphabet used in the Metelko alphabet in the 19th century and in Unifon to represent vowel sounds. The letter is not to be confused with the slashed
Vertically_barred_O
language Todhri – Albanian Tolong Siki, Kurukh Banna – Kurukh Toto – Toto Unifon – proposed for English, never adopted Vah – Bassa Vellara – Albanian Vithkuqi
List_of_writing_systems
Letter of the Latin alphabet
1931 variant of the Karelian alphabet for the Tver dialect. It is used in Unifon, being the last letter representing the voiced alveolar fricative (IPA:
Z_with_stroke
Ideographic writing system
Pictorial languagePages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Unifon – Latin-based phonemic orthography for American English "Language Subtag
Blissymbols
spelling, and was intended to allow easy transition to the latter. (See also Unifon, which had similar structure and intent.) The extra letters in fact had
List of abandoned education methods
List_of_abandoned_education_methods
Machine-readable pronunciations
following is a table of phonemes used by CMU Pronouncing Dictionary. The Unifon converter is based on the CMU Pronouncing Dictionary. The Natural Language
CMU_Pronouncing_Dictionary
IPA /ɪ/ IPA near-close near-front unrounded vowel, capital form used in Unifon and for Gabonese orthographies ꟾ Epigraphic letter I Longa Latin long i
List_of_Latin-script_letters
English spelling reform
Initial Teaching Alphabet, i.t.a., ITA". www.itafoundation.org. "Unifon.org". www.unifon.org. "Nue Spelling". Archived from the original on 2007-05-13.
Interspel
Teeline Shorthand Teotihuacan Tikamuli Tironian notes Tocharian script Unifon Vtafi Vtai yo Vtangsa Vatteluttu Veso Bey Western Cham Woleai Zapotec Zou
List of scripts with no ISO 15924 code
List_of_scripts_with_no_ISO_15924_code
Aid for teaching English reading
International Phonetic Alphabet Inventive spelling Phonics Shavian alphabet Unifon Loffhagen, Emma (2025-07-06). "The radical 1960s schools experiment that
Initial_Teaching_Alphabet
Topics referred to by the same term
John Malone, a character in Baby (2000 film) John R. Malone, inventor of Unifon John Joseph Malone, Canadian flying ace John Grover Malone, American football
John_Malone_(disambiguation)
Simplified Spelling Board Basic The Global Alphabet 1944 Robert L. Owen Replaced Unifon 1950s John Malone Extended Regularized Inglish 1959 Axel Wijk Basic Shavian
List of language reforms of English
List_of_language_reforms_of_English
Proposals to phoneticise English spelling
SaypU (Spell As You Pronounce Universally) Simpel-Fonetik Method of Writing Unifon Some speakers of non-Latin script languages occasionally write English phonetically
English-language spelling reform
English-language_spelling_reform
Unicode character block
Preliminary proposal to encode "Unifon" characters L2/12-138 N4262 Everson, Michael (2012-04-29), Proposal to encode "Unifon" and other characters in the
Latin_Extended-D
Abugida probably based on Gupta, a Brahmic script, for writing Tibetan Unifon mid-1950s John R. Malone Phonemic alphabet to write the English language
List_of_constructed_scripts
Athabaskan language spoken in Oregon
Unifon Tolowa alphabet X B C Ↄ D E Ɪ G H J K L M N O P R S T U W Y
Tolowa_language
a system of shorthand in 1747. John R. Malone – American, developed the UNIFON alphabet c. 1955. Mesrop Mashtots – Armenian monk, created the Armenian
List of creators of writing systems
List_of_creators_of_writing_systems
Use of unconventional spellings of words
for the most part, written as they are spoken Dr. John R. Malone invented Unifon in the mid-1950s Sir James Pitman (the grandson of Sir Isaac) in the early
Inventive_spelling
American academic and priest (1928–1993)
proposed a special cable TV channel for children. After 1973, he promoted Unifon, a 40-character phonemic English alphabet, to combat illiteracy. On October
John_M._Culkin
Translations of Lewis Carroll's 1865 novel
ISBN 978-1-78201-036-4 English (Unifon alphabet) 2014 Alice's Adventures in Wonderland: An edition printed in the Unifon Alphabet Lewis Carroll Cathair
Translations of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
Translations_of_Alice's_Adventures_in_Wonderland
Motorcycle race
338 11 9 8 5 Alex Barros Team Telefónica Unifón Honda 27 +26.387 10 8 9 14 Juan Borja Team Telefónica Unifón Honda 27 +31.868 9 7 10 17 Jurgen van den
1999 Argentine motorcycle Grand Prix
1999_Argentine_motorcycle_Grand_Prix
UNIFON
UNIFON
UNIFON
UNIFON
Boy/Male
Gaelic
Of the strange Gauls.
Girl/Female
American, British, English
Graceful; Form of Grace
Boy/Male
Egyptian
Companion of Set.
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim
Abshamiyah's Daughter
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Marathi, Tamil
Glowing; Iridescent
Boy/Male
Tamil
Shelter
Girl/Female
Biblical
Moved, moving.
Girl/Female
Tamil
Drishani | தà¯à®°à¯€à®·à®¾à®¨à¯€
(Daughter of the Sun)
Boy/Male
Hindu
Benevolent, Kind hearted, Kind
Boy/Male
Indian, Tamil
Combination of Lord Krishna / Shiva
UNIFON
UNIFON
UNIFON
UNIFON
UNIFON