English Speech Files

Flat
douglaid-200802.tgz
User: douglaid
Date: 2/2/2008 3:23 am
Views: 1395
Rating: 10
Speaker Characteristics:
        Gender: male;
        Age range: senior;
        Pronunciation dialect: Australian English.
Recording Information:
        Microphone make: Logitech;
        Microphone type: usb headset mic;
        Audio card make: NVidia;
        Audio card type: integrated (or should it be:) usb pod;
        Audio Recording Software: Audacity rel 1.3.3-beta;
        O/S: Mandriva Linux 2008 with "Multimedia" kernel.
 File Info:
        File type: wav;
        Sampling rate: 48kHz;
        Sample rate format: 16bit;
        Number of channels: 1;
        Audio Processing: n.

License:

Copyright (C) 2006 Doug Laidlaw

These files are free software; you can redistribute them and/or modify them under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

These files are distributed in the hope that they will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.

Transcriptions

rp-01 When the sunlight strikes raindrops in the air,
rp-02 they act as a prism and form a rainbow.
rp-03 The rainbow is a division of white light into many beautiful colors.
rp-04 These take the shape of a long round arch, with its path high above,
rp-05 and its two ends apparently beyond the horizon.
rp-06 There is , according to legend, a boiling pot of gold at one end.
rp-07 People look, but no one ever finds it.
rp-08 When a man looks for something beyond his reach,
rp-09 his friends say he is looking for the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.
rp-10 Throughout the centuries people have explained the rainbow in various ways.
rp-11 Some have accepted it as a miracle without physical explanation.
rp-12 To the Hebrews it was a token that there would be no more universal floods.
rp-13 The Greeks used to imagine that it was a sign
rp-14 from the gods to foretell war or heavy rain.
rp-15 The Norsemen considered the rainbow as a bridge
rp-16 over which the gods passed from earth to their home in the sky.
rp-17 Others have tried to explain the phenomenon physically.
rp-18 Aristotle thought that the rainbow was caused by
rp-19 reflection of the sun's rays by the rain.
rp-20 Since then physicists have found that it is not reflection,
rp-21 but refraction by the raindrops which causes the rainbows.
rp-22 Many complicated ideas about the rainbow have been formed.
rp-23 The difference in the rainbow depends considerably upon the size of the drops,
rp-24 and the width of the colored band increases as the size of the drops increases.
rp-25 The actual primary rainbow observed is said to be the effect of
rp-26 super-imposition of a number of bows.
rp-27 If the red of the second bow falls upon the green of the first,
rp-28 the result is to give a bow with an abnormally wide yellow band,
rp-29 since red and green light when mixed form yellow.
rp-30 This is a very common type of bow, one showing mainly red and yellow,
rp-31 with little or no green or blue.

--- (Edited on 2/2/2008 3:24 am [GMT-0600] by douglaid) ---

douglaid-200802.tgz douglaid-200802.tgz

Notice: many prompts in "English Speech Files" were adapted from the prompt files contained in the CMU_ARCTIC speech synthesis database, which were in turn derived from out-of-copyright texts from Project Gutenberg, by the FestVox project at the Language Technologies Institute at Carnegie Mellon University.

Re: douglaid-200802.tgz
User: kmaclean
Date: 2/3/2008 9:51 pm
Views: 338
Rating: 9

Hi douglaid,

Thanks for your submission.

Here is the link to the audio in the VoxForge Speech Corpus: 

 

[   ] douglaid-200802.tgz 03-Feb-2008 03:45 15.2M 

Ken

--- (Edited on 2/3/2008 10:51 pm [GMT-0500] by kmaclean) ---


Notice: many prompts in "English Speech Files" were adapted from the prompt files contained in the CMU_ARCTIC speech synthesis database, which were in turn derived from out-of-copyright texts from Project Gutenberg, by the FestVox project at the Language Technologies Institute at Carnegie Mellon University.

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