Am 24.10.2011 um 00:57 schrieb Daniel Greenhoe:

> I am talking about these for example ...
>   T  ==> theta ('124)
>   A  ==> script A ('101)
>   @ ==> schwa ('100)
>   2  ==> turned V ('062)
>   D  ==> Eth ('104)
>   E  ==> epsilon ('105)
>   N  ==> right-tail n ('357)
>   S  ==> Esh ('123)
>   U  ==> upsilon ('125)
>   "   ==> vertical stroke superior ('042)

Something like this mapping can be achieved. Normal text could be set with an 
"unmodified" version of GNU Freefont, while you could create \textipa{} as 
using the same font with the ASCII2tipa mapping. So your document would use 
kind of two fonts. A "textipaEnvironment" seems not useful. When inside it only 
IPA characters would be used you could switch to the mapped font, when normal 
and mapped characters are used there is no means to distinguish between them, 
so you would need to use \textipa{}.

--
Greetings

  Pete

Well begun is half done.
                        – Optimist.
Half done is well begun.
                        – Realist.
Half begun is well done.
                        – Australian.





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