English, asked by sujithole99, 11 months ago

If there is a sound of laughter made not by the speaker but by other people, should, if at all, it be included in the transcription? Full Verbatim.

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
13

Answer:

Verbatim

Explanation:

In Verbatim, sounds of laughter and other kinds of background sounds which are not the parts of speech are called Background sounds.

When background noise occurs, use brackets around a short description of explanation of the sound. This can include silence or a specific tone. Try to be as descriptive as possible in 1-3 words. For example:

Background noise - When there is background noise that is not speech, indicate it with a note.

[laughter], [applause], [phone ringing] and [music] are all acceptable tags that indicate what is happening in the speaker's environment.

Silence - In the case of a jarring or prolonged silence, leave a [silence] note.

If a speaker cuts off or stops and is notable, use [cuts off] or an ellipsis with no spaces. For example:

"I really think... She is mad at me.”

Tone indicators - If a speaker is angry or is using a joking tone, include an [angry] or [joking] note before the word/phrase.

If the speaker must stop because of a sound event, then include the bracketed note in its own paragraph. Then, continue with the speaker in a new paragraph.

Answered by lakhanbhil223
6

Answer:

sketch the character of the salt inspector. this qweshan ka answer chahiye please

Similar questions