"Phonotypist" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
A phonotypist is a person who transcribes spoken words into written form using a typewriter or other writing instrument, but particularly using a shorthand or stenotype machine.
Phonophoretic: Causing a sensation or an emotion due to the sound of words. It refers to the power of words to evoke a specific feeling or reaction based on their sound and rhythm, rather than their literal meaning.
The word "phonorganon" is the contraction of the Greek words "φωνή" (phōnē), meaning "voice" or "sound," and "ὀργάνω" (organon), meaning "instrument." In the 17th century, German philosopher Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz used the term "phonorganon" or "ars combinatoria" to refer to an early form of calculus, a symbolic system for calculation that was an early precursor to modern logical algebra.However, in general or other contexts, "phonorganon" could refer to anything that deals with the study or application of voice or sound as an instrument or medium, such as an organ, music, or acoustics.
Phonotypy refers to the physical visible manifestation of speech sounds in a particular language. It is the correlation between the sounds made by the voice and the placement of the articulatory organs (such as the lips, tongue, and vocal cords) in the production of speech.