Peter Ladefoged facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Peter Ladefoged
|
|
---|---|
Peter Ladefoged, 2004, Duncanville, Texas
|
|
Born | Sutton, England
|
17 September 1925
Died | 24 January 2006 London, England
|
(aged 80)
Alma mater |
Peter Nielsen Ladefoged ( LAD-if-OH-ghid 17 September 1925 – 24 January 2006) was a British linguist and phonetician.
He was Professor of Phonetics at University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), where he taught from 1962 to 1991. His book A Course in Phonetics is a common introductory text in phonetics, and The Sounds of the World's Languages (co-authored with Ian Maddieson) is widely regarded as a standard phonetics reference. Ladefoged also wrote several books on the phonetics of African languages. Prior to UCLA, he was a lecturer at the universities of Edinburgh, Scotland (1953–59, 1960–1) and Ibadan, Nigeria (1959–60).
Contents
Early life
Peter Ladefoged was born on 17 September 1925, in Sutton (then in Surrey, now in Greater London), England. He attended Haileybury College from 1938–43, and Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, Cambridge University from 1943–44. He received an MA (1951) and a PhD (1959) in Phonetics from the University of Edinburgh in 1959.
Career
Ladefoged was involved with the phonetics laboratory at UCLA, which he established in 1962. He also was interested in listening to and describing every sound used in spoken human language, which he estimated at 900 consonants and 200 vowels. This research formed the basis of much of The Sounds of the World's Languages. In 1966 Ladefoged moved from the UCLA English Department to join the newly established Linguistics Department.
While at UCLA, Ladefoged was hired as a consultant on the movie My Fair Lady. He wrote the transcriptions that can be seen in Professor Higgins's notebook, and his voice was used in the scenes where Higgins describes vowel pronunciation.
Ladefoged was also a member of the International Phonetic Association for a long time, and was President of the Association from 1986 to 1991. He was deeply involved in maintaining its International Phonetic Alphabet, and was the principal mover of the 1989 International Phonetic Association Kiel Convention. He was also editor of the Journal of the International Phonetic Association. Ladefoged served on the board of directors of the Endangered Language Fund since its inception.
Ladefoged was a founding member of the Association for Laboratory Phonology.
Personal life
Ladefoged married Jenny MacDonald in 1953, a marriage which lasted over 50 years. They had three children: Lise Friedman, a bookseller; Thegn Ladefoged, archaeologist and professor of anthropology at University of Auckland; and Katie Weiss, attorney and public defender, residing in Nashville, Tennessee. He also had five grandchildren Zelda Ladefoged, Ethan Friedman, Amy Friedman, Joseph Weiss, and Catherine Weiss.
On May 5, 1970, Ladefoged was arrested and suffered injuries from police while participating in an anti–Vietnam War protest at UCLA. He was initially charged with failure to disperse, but the charge was later changed to assault on a police officer. He was acquitted in the first trial.
Death
Ladefoged died on 24 January 2006 at the age of 80 in hospital in London, England after a research trip to India. He was on his way home to Los Angeles, California from his research trip.
Academic timeline
- 1953–55: Assistant Lecturer in Phonetics, University of Edinburgh
- 1955–59: Lecturer in Phonetics, University of Edinburgh
- 1959–60: Lecturer in Phonetics, University of Ibadan, Nigeria
- 1960–61: Lecturer in Phonetics, University of Edinburgh
- 1961–62: Field fellow, Linguistic Survey of West Africa, Nigeria
- Summer 1960: University of Michigan
- Summer 1961: Royal Institute of Technology, [Kungliga Tekniska högskolan or KTH], (Stockholm, Sweden)
- 1962–63: Assistant Professor of Phonetics, Department of English, UCLA
- 1962: Established, and directed until 1991, the UCLA Phonetics Laboratory
- 1963–65: Associate Professor of Phonetics, Department of Linguistics], UCLA
- 1965–91: Professor of Phonetics, Department of Linguistics, UCLA
- 1977–80: Chair, Department of Linguistics, UCLA
- 1991: "retired" to become UCLA Research Linguist, Distinguished Professor of Phonetics Emeritus
- 2005: Leverhulme Professor, University of Edinburgh
- 2005–06: Adjunct professor at the University of Southern California (USC)
Academic honours
- Fellow of the Acoustical Society of America
- Fellow of the American Speech and Hearing Association
- Distinguished Teaching Award, UCLA 1972
- President, Linguistic Society of America, 1978
- President of the Permanent Council for the Organization of International Congresses of Phonetic Sciences, 1983–1991
- President, International Phonetic Association, 1987–1991
- UCLA Research Lecturer 1989
- Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 1990
- UCLA College of Letters and Science Faculty Research Lecturer 1991
- Gold medal, XIIth International Congress of Phonetic Sciences 1991
- Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy 1992
- Honorary D.Litt., University of Edinburgh, 1993
- Foreign Member, Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters, 1993
- Silver medal, Acoustical Society of America 1994
- Corresponding Fellow, Royal Society of Edinburgh, 2001
- Honorary D.Sc. Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh, 2002
Selected publications
Monograph supplement to Revista do Laboratório de Fonética Experimental da Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Coimbra
(Journal of Experimental Phonetics Laboratory of the Faculty of Arts, University of Coimbra). Paperback edition 1971. Translation into Japanese, Taishukan Publishing Company, 1976. Second edition, with added chapters on computational phonetics 1996. Reprinted 1968.
2nd ed 1982, 3rd ed. 1993, 4th ed. 2001, 5th ed. Boston: Thomson/Wadsworth 2006, 6th ed. 2011 (co-author Keith Johnson) Boston: Wadsworth/Cengage Learning. Japanese translation 2000.
- Ladefoged, Peter; Maddieson, Ian (1996). The Sounds of the World's Languages. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-19814-8.
2001, 2nd ed. 2004.
Works involved in or about
- George Cukor (director), Alan Jay Lerner (lyricist): My Fair Lady. Motion picture film. (1964).