Provided by: liblingua-en-syllable-perl_0.251-1_all bug

NAME

       Lingua::EN::Syllable - Routine for estimating syllable count in words.

SYNOPSIS

         use Lingua::EN::Syllable;

         $count = syllable('supercalifragilisticexpialidocious'); # 14

DESCRIPTION

       Lingua::EN::Syllable::syllable() estimates the number of syllables in the word passed to
       it.

       Note that it isn't entirely accurate...  it fails (by one syllable) for about 10-15% of my
       /usr/dict/words.  The only way to get a 100% accurate count is to do a dictionary lookup,
       so this is a small and fast alternative where more-or-less accurate results will suffice,
       such as estimating the reading level of a document.

       I welcome pointers to more accurate algorithms, since this one is pretty quick-and-dirty.
       This was designed for English (well, American at least) words, but sometimes guesses well
       for other languages.

KNOWN LIMITATIONS

       Accuracy for words with non-alpha characters is somewhat undefined.  In general,
       punctuation characters, et al, should be trimmed off before handing the word to
       syllable(), and hyphenated compounds should be broken into their separate parts.

       Syllables for all-digit words (eg, "1998";  some call them "numbers") are often counted as
       the number of digits.  A cooler solution would be converting "1998" to "nineteen eighty
       eight" (or "one thousand nine hundred eighty eight", or...), but that is left as an
       exercise for the reader.

       Contractions are not well supported.

       Compound words (like "lifeboat"), where the first word ends in a silent 'e' are counted
       with an extra syllable.

COPYRIGHT

       Distributed under the same terms as Perl.  Contact the author with any questions.

AUTHOR

       Greg Fast (gdf@imsa.edu)