@inbook{10.3366/j.ctt9qdrqz.9, ISBN = {9780748640737}, URL = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.3366/j.ctt9qdrqz.9}, abstract = {In Chapter 1 I described proper phonetic transcription as a technographic form of writing in which the symbols have phonetic definitions supplied by phonetic theory. In this chapter I will look at how writing became available as a means of representing pronunciation and consider the rise of the discipline of phonetics as a means of analysing and describing it. I will then attend to how writing and phonetics have come together to provide the practical and theoretical resources that have enabled proper phonetic notation and transcription to develop. Going back through history it is apparent that these resources have arisen}, bookauthor = {Barry Heselwood}, booktitle = {Phonetic Transcription in Theory and Practice}, pages = {37--72}, publisher = {Edinburgh University Press}, title = {Origins and Development of Phonetic Transcription}, year = {2013} }