English Speech Files

Flat
ColinBeckingham-20100126-xwq
User: speechsubmission
Date: 2/14/2010 5:27 am
Views: 629
Rating: 0
User Name:ColinBeckingham

Speaker Characteristics:

Gender: Male
Age Range: Senior
Language: EN
Pronunciation dialect: British English

Recording Information:

Microphone make: n/a
Microphone type: Headset mic
Audio card make: unknown
Audio card type: unknown
Audio Recording Software: VoxForge Speech Submission Application
O/S:

File Info:

File type: wav
Sampling Rate: 48000
Sample rate format: 16
Number of channels: 1

Prompts:

a0300 From my earliest recollection my sleep was a period of terror.
a0301 But all my dreams violated this law.
a0302 It is very plausible to such people, a most convincing hypothesis.
a0303 But they make the mistake of ignoring their own duality.
a0304 I graduated last of my class.
a0305 They had no fixed values, to be altered by adjectives and adverbs.
a0306 He was pressing beyond the limits of his vocabulary.
a0307 Very early in my life, I separated from my mother.
a0308 His infernal chattering worries me even now as I think of it.
a0309 White Leghorns, said Mrs Mortimer.

License:

Copyright 2010 Free Software Foundation

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 3 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.

You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with these files. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.


ColinBeckingham-20100126-xwq.tgz

--- (Edited on 2/14/2010 5:27 am [GMT-0600] by speechsubmission) ---


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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