Bibliography
- Ayres HM. 1916. The Question of Shakspere’s Pronunciation. New York: Columbia University.
- Blandford FG. 1927. Shakespeare’s Pronunciation: A Transcription of Twelfth Night Act I, Scene V. Cambridge: Heffer.
- British Library. 2012. Shakespeare’s Original Pronunciation. Audio CD. London: British Library.
- Catford JC. 1998. Sixty Years in Linguistics. In: First Person Singular III: Autobiographies by North American Scholars in the Language Sciences, ed. by , Koerner E F K, ed. Amsterdam: Benjamins.
- Cercignani F. 1981. Shakespeare’s Works and Elizabethan Pronunciation. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
- Collins B, Mees IM. 1998. The Real Professor Higgins: The Life and Career of Daniel Jones. Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
- Craik GL. 1857. The English of Shakespeare Illustrated in a Philological Commentary on his Julius Caesar. London: Chapman & Hall.
- Crystal D. 2005. Shakespeare’s Pronunciation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Crystal D. 2010. Just a Phrase I’m Going Through. Abingdon: Routledge.
- Crystal D. 2011. Available at: <http://www.originalpronunciation.com> [last accessed 1 March 2013].
- Current Theater Notes. 1953. Shakespeare Quarterly, 4(1): 61–75.
- Dobson EJ. 1957. English Pronunciation 1500–1700. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
- Ellis AJ. 1869–74. On Early English Pronunciation, With Especial Reference to Shakespeare and Chaucer. Part 3 [1871]: Illustrations of the Pronunciation of the XIVth and XVIth Centuries. London: Philological Society.
- Franz W. 1905. Orthographie, Lautgebung und Wortbildung in den Werken Shakespeares. Heidelberg: Winter.
- Gimson AC. 1962. An Introduction to the Pronunciation of English. London: Arnold.
- Gurr A. 2001. Other Accents: Some Problems in Identifying Elizabethan Pronunciation. Early Modern Literary Studies, 7(1): 1–4.
- JC. 2012. As she is spake. Times Literary Supplement, 6 April.
- Jones D. 1910a. Scenes from Shakespeare in the Original Pronunciation. Supplement to Le Maître phonétique, 24(2): 1–7.
- Jones D. 1910b. The Pronunciation of Early English. Le Maître phonétique, 24(2): 119–23.
- Jones D. 1937a. Pronunciation of Early XVII Century English. London: Linguaphone.
- Jones D. 1937b. Some Notes on the Pronunciation of English at the Time of Shakespeare. In: English Pronunciation Through the Centuries. London: Linguaphone Institute, pp. 38–41.
- Jones D. 1949. The Tongue that Shakespeare Spake … Radio Times, 16 December, p. 15.
- Jones D. 1950. The Pronunciation of English. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Kökeritz H. 1953. Shakespeare’s Pronunciation. New Haven: Yale University Press.
- Marsh GP. 1861. Lectures on the English Language, 1st series [given in 1858–59]. Lecture 22: Orthoepical Change in English. New York: Scribner, pp. 468–98.
- Noël-Armfield G. 2010. Scenes from Shakespeare in the Original Pronunciation, Le Maître Phonétique, 24(2): 117–19.
- Our London Correspondent. 1952a. Guardian, 25 July 1952, p. 6.
- Our London Correspondent. 1952b. Guardian, 13 September 1952, p. 6.
- Passy P. 1905. Cours de vacances, Le Maître Phonétique, 20(2): 109.
- Peirce CS, Noyes JB. 1864. Shakespearian Pronunciation, North American Review, 98: 342–69.
- Salmon V, Burness E. 1987. Reader in the Language of Shakespearean Drama. Amsterdam: Benjamins.
- Sweet H. 1874. A History of English Sounds from the Earliest Period. English Dialect Society 4. London: Trübner.
- Viëtor W. 1906a. A Shakespeare Phonology, with a Rime-index to the Poems as a Pronouncing Vocabulary. Marburg: Elwert; London: Nutt.
- Viëtor W. 1906b. Shakespeare’s Pronunciation: A Shakespeare Reader in the Old Spelling and with a Phonetic Transcription. Marburg: Elwert; London: Nutt; New York: Lemcke & Buechner.
- White RG. 1865. Memorandum on English Pronunciation in the Elizabethan Era. Appendix to Vol. 12 of The Works of William Shakespeare. Boston: Little Brown.