On 12 August 2011 01:10, Иванов Вячеслав <v.ivanov(a)amikeco.ru> wrote:
Latin script may be so bewildering you know.
Reading a Hungarian or a Polish name in Latin may require knowing the orthography rules
of those languages; and for reading an English name one may need to ask the bearer for the
pronunciation :) And probably just IPA would be easier, though, yes, awkward too.
For someone that knows IPA, IPA is definitely best. I don't think
anyone will argue with that. For everyone else, though, the Latin
alphabet at least gives us a fighting chance of getting close to the
right pronunciation. You can always ask "did I say that right?" and
get corrected. I would ask someone their name and, because it's an
unfamiliar name to me, I would struggle to make out exactly what they
said. If I could see it written down and hear it said, I could
probably get it right.
The other big problem with having names in IPA is that it requires
attendees to know their name in IPA in order to put it on the name
badge in the first place. That means it's only going to work when both
the person whose name it is and the person reading it know IPA. That's
going to be a pretty small proportion of pairings.