Jack Windsor Lewis


Jack Windsor Lewis is a British phonetician. He is best known for his work on the phonetics of English and the teaching of English pronunciation to foreign learners. His blog postings on English phonetics and phoneticians are prolific and widely read.

Education

Teaching posts

Jack Windsor Lewis has been a guest lecturer at over eighty other universities, at the British Institute of Recorded Sound, for the British Council and other bodies in various countries including Argentina, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Chile, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Israel, Italy, Iran, Iraq, Japan, Latvia, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Norway, Peru, Poland, Romania, the Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and Tunisia

Other professional activities

He has acted in an advisory capacity for the BBC and ITV, for OUP, CUP and other publishers, and for West Yorkshire Playhouse and other theatres.
He has worked with police forces and legal practices on many occasions 1975-86, mainly involving court appearances as "expert witness". He has been an examiner at various times for the College of Speech Therapy and for the International Phonetic Association.

Publications

His publications have included many articles, textbooks and A Concise Pronouncing Dictionary of British and American English. John C Wells has written of this work "in 1972, his best-known work was published: A Concise Pronouncing Dictionary of British and American English. In some countries English as a foreign language means British English, in others American: this was the first pronouncing dictionary to cover both. Like Jack's other books, it is innovative and even daring in its readiness to abandon the outdated and embrace the new".
In 1974 he recast for A. S. Hornby the treatment of pronunciation in the third edition of the Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary of Current English giving, for the first time in any major EFL dictionary, its entries given in American pronunciation as well as British. This lead has been widely followed and is now standard practice in dictionaries that include English pronunciation.
Other publications include: