John C. Wells Explained

John C. Wells
Birth Name:John Christopher Wells
Birth Date:11 March 1939
Birth Place:Bootle, Lancashire, England
Thesis Title:Phonological Adaptation in the Speech of Jamaicans in the London Area
Thesis Url:https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1572351/1/Wells_thesis.pdf
Thesis Year:1971
Doctoral Advisor:Joseph Desmond O'Connor
Discipline:Phonetician
Workplaces:University College London (19622006)

John Christopher Wells (born 11 March 1939) is a British phonetician and Esperantist. Wells is a professor emeritus at University College London, where until his retirement in 2006 he held the departmental chair in phonetics.[1] He is known for his work on the Esperanto language and his invention of the standard lexical sets and the X-SAMPA phonetic script system.

Career

Wells earned his bachelor's degree at Trinity College, Cambridge and his master's degree and his PhD at the University of London.

Wells is known for his book and cassette Accents of English, the book and CD The Sounds of the IPA, Lingvistikaj Aspektoj de Esperanto, and the Longman Pronunciation Dictionary. He is the author of the most widely used English-Esperanto dictionary.

Until his retirement, Wells directed a two-week summer course in phonetics for University College London, focusing on practical and theoretical phonetics, as well as aspects of teaching phonetics. The course ends with written and oral examinations, for which the IPA Certificate of Proficiency in the Phonetics of English is awarded.

From 2003 to 2007 he was president of the International Phonetic Association. He is also a member of the six-man Academic Advisory Committee at Linguaphone.[2]

Wells has long been a pioneer of new technology. He is the inventor of the X-SAMPA ASCII phonetic alphabet for use in digital computers that could not handle IPA symbols. He learned HTML during the mid-1990s, and he created a Web page that compiled media references to Estuary English, although he was sceptical of the concept. After retirement, Wells ran a regular blog on phonetic topics from March 2006 to April 2013. He announced the end of his blog on 22 April 2013 saying, "if I have nothing new to say, then the best plan is to stop talking."[3]

Work on accents of English

See main article: Lexical sets. A considerable part of Wells's research focuses on the phonetic description of varieties of English. In 1982, Cambridge University Press published his three volumes of Accents of English that described accents all over the English-speaking world in phonetic terminology. This applied consistent terminology to accents that had previously been analysed in isolation. Accents of English[4] defined the concept of lexical sets, a concept in wide usage. A lexical set is a set of words (named with a designated element) that share a special characteristic. For example, words belonging to lexical set BATH have the pronounced as //æ// phoneme in the United States and pronounced as //ɑː// phoneme in Received Pronunciation. In addition, Wells is acknowledged as the source of the term rhotic to describe accents where the letter r in spelling is always pronounced phonetically.[5]

Before writing Accents of English, Wells had written a very critical review of the Linguistic Atlas of England, which was the principal output of the Survey of English Dialects.[6] He argued that the methodology was outdated, that the sample was not representative of the population and that it was not possible to "discover with any certainty the synchronic vowel-system in each of the localities investigated".[6] KM Petyt noted in his review of Accents of English that Wells had made abundant use of the data from the Survey of English Dialects in some sections of the work whilst criticising the survey in other parts of the same work.[7]

Wells was part of the committee of the Atlas Linguarum Europae for England and Wales, but never played a large role.[8]

Longman Pronunciation Dictionary

Wells was appointed by Longman to write its pronunciation dictionary, the first edition of which was published in 1990. There had not been a pronunciation dictionary published in the United Kingdom since 1977, when Alfred C. Gimson published his last (the 14th) edition of English Pronouncing Dictionary. The book by Wells had a much greater scope, including American pronunciations as well as RP pronunciations and including non-RP pronunciations widespread in Great Britain (such as use of a short vowel in the words bath, chance, last, etc. and of a long vowel in book, look, etc.). His book also included transcriptions of foreign words in their native languages and local pronunciations of place names in the English-speaking world.

Esperanto

Wells was the president of the World Esperanto Association (UEA) from 1989 to 1995. He has also been the president of the Esperanto Academy (2007–2013) and the Esperanto Association of Britain (2011–2013).[9]

Work for spelling reform

Wells was president of the Spelling Society, which advocates spelling reform, from 2003 to 2013. He was criticised in a speech by David Cameron for advocating tolerance of text spelling.[10]

Personal life

His father was originally from South Africa, and his mother was English; he has two younger brothers. Wells grew up in Up Holland, Lancashire, born to the vicar of the parish, Philip Wells.[11] [12] He has commented on the accent of the area and how it contrasted with the Received Pronunciation that was spoken in his home in his book Accents of English; vol. 2: the British Isles.

He attended St John's School, Leatherhead, studied languages and taught himself Gregg shorthand. Having learned Welsh, he was interviewed in Welsh on radio; according to his CV, he has a reasonable knowledge of ten languages.[13] He was apparently approached by the Home Office to work on speaker identification but turned down the offer as it was still considered unacceptable to be gay at the time, and he feared that the security check would make his sexual orientation public.[14] In September 2006 he signed a civil partnership with Gabriel Parsons, a native of Montserrat and his partner since 1968.[14] [15]

Music

Wells is a member of London Gay Men's Chorus and was featured in their It Gets Better video.[16] He is also a player of the melodeon[14] and has uploaded videos of his playing to YouTube.

Works

Essays

Monographs

Books

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: www.yek.me.uk . On the Retirement of Emeritus Professor John Christopher Wells . 12 April 2014.
  2. Web site: Linguaphone Academic Advisory Committee . Linguaphone Group . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131102185418/http://www.linguaphonegroup.com/englishlanguagetraining/academicadvisorycommittee.cfm . 2 November 2013 . 2 November 2013.
  3. Web site: click farewell . John Wells's phonetic blog . 22 April 2013.
  4. Wells (1982)
  5. The Oxford English Dictionary documentation of the word's first use is as follows: "rhotic ... 1968 in Progress Rep. Phonetics Lab. Univ. Coll. London (unpublished) June 56 It was possible to divide respondents into three categories: A. (non-rhotic) Those who had nonprevocalic r-colouring neither for ‑er nor for ‑a; B. (rhotic) Those who had nonprevocalic r-colouring for ‑er but not for ‑a; C. (hyperrhotic)." Cf. Wells's Twitter account at https://twitter.com/jcwells_phon/status/1136687808503062529.
  6. Review of the Linguistic Atlas of England . John C Wells . The Times Higher Education Supplement . 1 December 1978 . Placed on the web 7 April 1999 . UCL Psychology & Language Sciences.
  7. Petyt . K. M. . 1982 . Reviews: J. C. Wells: Accents of English. Journal of the International Phonetic Association . 12 . 2 . 104–112 . Cambridge . 10.1017/S0025100300002516 . 146349564 . 6 January 2013.
  8. Aveyard. Edward. 2023. The Atlas Linguarum Europae in Great Britain and the Republic of Ireland. Transactions of the Yorkshire Dialect Society. 3–11.
  9. Web site: Presidents of the Association. esperanto.org.uk. Esperanto Asocio de Britio.
  10. News: David Cameron's speech in full . The Guardian . 1 October 2008.
  11. Web site: J C Wells - personal history . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20081205051419/http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/wells/philsoc-bio.htm . 5 December 2008 . 14 August 2008 . dmy-all.
  12. Web site: Wells . John . 16 March 2012 . John Wells's phonetic blog: English places .
  13. Web site: Professor J. C. Wells: brief curriculum vitae . UCL Psychology & Language Sciences.
  14. Web site: My personal history . UCL Psychology & Language Sciences . 9 August 2008 . 5 December 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081205051419/http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/wells/philsoc-bio.htm . dead .
  15. Web site: John and Gabriel . UCL Psychology & Language Sciences.
  16. Web site: London Gay Men's Chorus - 'It Gets Better' Episode 2. London Gay Men's Chorus. 25 November 2010. 29 May 2022.