English Hyphenation Dictionary
I have lost contact with Philip but the original purpose was to enable automatic hyphenation of lyrics for vocal/choral works. The resultant text could then be assigned to music as per the “Click to text” method of lyric entry within Finale.
The hyphenation in this dictionary is based upon how singers sing syllables and text. The general rule is that each syllable should start with a consonant. In singing relating to Western art music practice, vowels take up the majority of the sung note, meaning that consonants occur as late as possible, i.e. at the start of the next word or syllable. For example:
•“hyphenation” = hy-phe-na-tion (not hy-phen-a-tion, which makes more sense when read, but not when sung)
Double letters or consonants are broken up between syllables, particularly when they have a different sound. For example:
•“syllable” = syl-la-ble (the le in “ble” is in essence a vowel, so is not broken up).
•“hyphenation” = hy-phe-na-tion (the “ph” is one sound and functions as such, so it is not broken up).
•“exception” = ex-cep-tion
There are some exceptions to the rules given above. I have left “ing” at the end of words as a standalone unit e.g. “des-crib-ing”. This is ugly but there are so many exceptions that require fixing by hand, it will take a long time! The issue of the letter “x” is also an interesting one, particularly because there are two consonants in the one letter (ks). In the majority of cases I have left the “x” with the preceding syllable. For example:
•“lexicon” = lex-i-con (not le-xi-con)
This is very much a work in progress. You can scroll to any section and find a myriad of corrections that are required. However, out of 380 000 words, it’s pretty good in general.
Matthew Hindson.
v.1.00 - initial release
v.1.08 - Nov 2006 - 2nd release