Is there such a thing as “pangram for phonemes”? The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are In Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Is there a spoken version of “the quick brown fox…”?Is there a sentence that contains every English phoneme?Why is “lucked out” such a good thing to be?Which does English “l” and “r” sound come under, an allophone or different phonemes?How many phonemes are in the word “queen”?/ɪə/, /eə/, /ʊə/ as phonemes?What source explains the different pronunciations of “hol” in “alcohol” and “hollow”?Are R-colored diphthongs phonemes or not?enough better, better enough, sufficiently better, sufficiently well, or well enough?What is the relative frequency of English graphemes and/or phonemes in printed UK English texts/spoken English?How many speech sounds (phonemes) are there in English?

Does Parliament hold absolute power in the UK?

Is there a way to generate uniformly distributed points on a sphere from a fixed amount of random real numbers per point?

Word for: a synonym with a positive connotation?

How to support a colleague who finds meetings extremely tiring?

how can a perfect fourth interval be considered either consonant or dissonant?

Python - Fishing Simulator

Simulating Exploding Dice

Does Parliament need to approve the new Brexit delay to 31 October 2019?

Can withdrawing asylum be illegal?

"... to apply for a visa" or "... and applied for a visa"?

Deal with toxic manager when you can't quit

Button changing its text & action. Good or terrible?

Are spiders unable to hurt humans, especially very small spiders?

Is 'stolen' appropriate word?

Presidential Pardon

Make it rain characters

Do I have Disadvantage attacking with an off-hand weapon?

Keeping a retro style to sci-fi spaceships?

What happens to a Warlock's expended Spell Slots when they gain a Level?

should truth entail possible truth

Loose spokes after only a few rides

Mortgage adviser recommends a longer term than necessary combined with overpayments

For what reasons would an animal species NOT cross a *horizontal* land bridge?

What is the padding with red substance inside of steak packaging?



Is there such a thing as “pangram for phonemes”?



The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are In
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Is there a spoken version of “the quick brown fox…”?Is there a sentence that contains every English phoneme?Why is “lucked out” such a good thing to be?Which does English “l” and “r” sound come under, an allophone or different phonemes?How many phonemes are in the word “queen”?/ɪə/, /eə/, /ʊə/ as phonemes?What source explains the different pronunciations of “hol” in “alcohol” and “hollow”?Are R-colored diphthongs phonemes or not?enough better, better enough, sufficiently better, sufficiently well, or well enough?What is the relative frequency of English graphemes and/or phonemes in printed UK English texts/spoken English?How many speech sounds (phonemes) are there in English?



.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








7















English has a lot of pangrams, which are short sentences that use every letter of the alphabet at least once. This website has several examples. But is there a similar thing that is designed to use (almost) every phoneme of the English language?



I know it would be nearly impossible to come up with something that uses all of them (and it is mostly likely going to be a paragraph, and not a sentence, given the amount of phonemes), but still, my question remains: is there such a thing? (And what is it called?)










share|improve this question

















  • 1





    I don't know the name for it, but "Comma Gets a Cure" is one fairly well-known story along these lines.

    – sumelic
    Apr 18 '17 at 17:21











  • Google "phonetic pangrams" (in quotes) for many such sites including liquisearch.com/list_of_pangrams/english_phonetic_pangrams

    – barrycarter
    Apr 18 '17 at 18:32

















7















English has a lot of pangrams, which are short sentences that use every letter of the alphabet at least once. This website has several examples. But is there a similar thing that is designed to use (almost) every phoneme of the English language?



I know it would be nearly impossible to come up with something that uses all of them (and it is mostly likely going to be a paragraph, and not a sentence, given the amount of phonemes), but still, my question remains: is there such a thing? (And what is it called?)










share|improve this question

















  • 1





    I don't know the name for it, but "Comma Gets a Cure" is one fairly well-known story along these lines.

    – sumelic
    Apr 18 '17 at 17:21











  • Google "phonetic pangrams" (in quotes) for many such sites including liquisearch.com/list_of_pangrams/english_phonetic_pangrams

    – barrycarter
    Apr 18 '17 at 18:32













7












7








7


1






English has a lot of pangrams, which are short sentences that use every letter of the alphabet at least once. This website has several examples. But is there a similar thing that is designed to use (almost) every phoneme of the English language?



I know it would be nearly impossible to come up with something that uses all of them (and it is mostly likely going to be a paragraph, and not a sentence, given the amount of phonemes), but still, my question remains: is there such a thing? (And what is it called?)










share|improve this question














English has a lot of pangrams, which are short sentences that use every letter of the alphabet at least once. This website has several examples. But is there a similar thing that is designed to use (almost) every phoneme of the English language?



I know it would be nearly impossible to come up with something that uses all of them (and it is mostly likely going to be a paragraph, and not a sentence, given the amount of phonemes), but still, my question remains: is there such a thing? (And what is it called?)







american-english phonemes






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Apr 18 '17 at 16:45









TomChoTomCho

1383




1383







  • 1





    I don't know the name for it, but "Comma Gets a Cure" is one fairly well-known story along these lines.

    – sumelic
    Apr 18 '17 at 17:21











  • Google "phonetic pangrams" (in quotes) for many such sites including liquisearch.com/list_of_pangrams/english_phonetic_pangrams

    – barrycarter
    Apr 18 '17 at 18:32












  • 1





    I don't know the name for it, but "Comma Gets a Cure" is one fairly well-known story along these lines.

    – sumelic
    Apr 18 '17 at 17:21











  • Google "phonetic pangrams" (in quotes) for many such sites including liquisearch.com/list_of_pangrams/english_phonetic_pangrams

    – barrycarter
    Apr 18 '17 at 18:32







1




1





I don't know the name for it, but "Comma Gets a Cure" is one fairly well-known story along these lines.

– sumelic
Apr 18 '17 at 17:21





I don't know the name for it, but "Comma Gets a Cure" is one fairly well-known story along these lines.

– sumelic
Apr 18 '17 at 17:21













Google "phonetic pangrams" (in quotes) for many such sites including liquisearch.com/list_of_pangrams/english_phonetic_pangrams

– barrycarter
Apr 18 '17 at 18:32





Google "phonetic pangrams" (in quotes) for many such sites including liquisearch.com/list_of_pangrams/english_phonetic_pangrams

– barrycarter
Apr 18 '17 at 18:32










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















4














The following three mnemonics (the first devised by my father in the 1940s and the second and third devised by me in the 1970s) almost do the trick requested.



  1. "We will aim them at some high, far bow--joy long told--full soon. (Cue.)"

  2. Puff thought "Sash--choke! Hey!!"

  3. Woman lawyer(ing).

The first contains all of the vowel phonemes (including the diphthongs) of the dialect of English my father spoke, while the second contains all of the voiceless consonants of that same dialect. Each but the last of the consonants in the second mnemonic has a voiced counterpart (b, v, edth [with thanks to AmI for catching my error], d, z, zh, j, g) while the last (h) can be usefully paired with the glottal stop as its "voiced" counterpart. The third mnemonic contains all of the remaining consonants (w, m, n, l, y, r, ng).



Note also that in all three mnemonics the exemplified phonemes appear in order--from front to back--with regard to their place of articulation.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    Nice, but 'theta' names the unvoiced counterpart. The voiced one is named 'edth'.

    – AmI
    Apr 18 '17 at 20:43











  • Very nice. Do you have a scientific paper in (which those are presented) that I can read? Thanks!

    – TomCho
    Apr 19 '17 at 5:29











  • Sorry, TomCho. I've never published these mnemonics, though I've used them in my teaching over the last 40+ years.

    – H Stephen Straight
    Apr 19 '17 at 22:23


















2














There's a sentence which was used by British singers and contains all the (British) English vowels:




Who would know aught of art must learn and then take his ease.




Some people might object that take and know are diphthongs, and this sentence doesn't include the other diphthongs bough, buy, boy. But maybe singers were supposed to make the vowels of take and know monophthongs.






share|improve this answer























  • Thanks for the great practical mnemonic, though the claim that "of", "must", and "learn" contain three different vowels deserves discussion; the first two may simply be the unstressed versus the stressed phonetic realization of the central ("schwa") vowel, while the third might be treated as a syllabic-r phonetic realization of a phonemic schwa+r sequence (parallel to those in pier, pair, par, pore, poor). As for diphthongs, many American linguists transcribe all four tense close vowels as diphthongs, which would add "ease" (iy) and "who" (uw) to "take" (ey) and "know" (ow).

    – H Stephen Straight
    Apr 19 '17 at 23:09











Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "97"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);













draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fenglish.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f385085%2fis-there-such-a-thing-as-pangram-for-phonemes%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









4














The following three mnemonics (the first devised by my father in the 1940s and the second and third devised by me in the 1970s) almost do the trick requested.



  1. "We will aim them at some high, far bow--joy long told--full soon. (Cue.)"

  2. Puff thought "Sash--choke! Hey!!"

  3. Woman lawyer(ing).

The first contains all of the vowel phonemes (including the diphthongs) of the dialect of English my father spoke, while the second contains all of the voiceless consonants of that same dialect. Each but the last of the consonants in the second mnemonic has a voiced counterpart (b, v, edth [with thanks to AmI for catching my error], d, z, zh, j, g) while the last (h) can be usefully paired with the glottal stop as its "voiced" counterpart. The third mnemonic contains all of the remaining consonants (w, m, n, l, y, r, ng).



Note also that in all three mnemonics the exemplified phonemes appear in order--from front to back--with regard to their place of articulation.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    Nice, but 'theta' names the unvoiced counterpart. The voiced one is named 'edth'.

    – AmI
    Apr 18 '17 at 20:43











  • Very nice. Do you have a scientific paper in (which those are presented) that I can read? Thanks!

    – TomCho
    Apr 19 '17 at 5:29











  • Sorry, TomCho. I've never published these mnemonics, though I've used them in my teaching over the last 40+ years.

    – H Stephen Straight
    Apr 19 '17 at 22:23















4














The following three mnemonics (the first devised by my father in the 1940s and the second and third devised by me in the 1970s) almost do the trick requested.



  1. "We will aim them at some high, far bow--joy long told--full soon. (Cue.)"

  2. Puff thought "Sash--choke! Hey!!"

  3. Woman lawyer(ing).

The first contains all of the vowel phonemes (including the diphthongs) of the dialect of English my father spoke, while the second contains all of the voiceless consonants of that same dialect. Each but the last of the consonants in the second mnemonic has a voiced counterpart (b, v, edth [with thanks to AmI for catching my error], d, z, zh, j, g) while the last (h) can be usefully paired with the glottal stop as its "voiced" counterpart. The third mnemonic contains all of the remaining consonants (w, m, n, l, y, r, ng).



Note also that in all three mnemonics the exemplified phonemes appear in order--from front to back--with regard to their place of articulation.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    Nice, but 'theta' names the unvoiced counterpart. The voiced one is named 'edth'.

    – AmI
    Apr 18 '17 at 20:43











  • Very nice. Do you have a scientific paper in (which those are presented) that I can read? Thanks!

    – TomCho
    Apr 19 '17 at 5:29











  • Sorry, TomCho. I've never published these mnemonics, though I've used them in my teaching over the last 40+ years.

    – H Stephen Straight
    Apr 19 '17 at 22:23













4












4








4







The following three mnemonics (the first devised by my father in the 1940s and the second and third devised by me in the 1970s) almost do the trick requested.



  1. "We will aim them at some high, far bow--joy long told--full soon. (Cue.)"

  2. Puff thought "Sash--choke! Hey!!"

  3. Woman lawyer(ing).

The first contains all of the vowel phonemes (including the diphthongs) of the dialect of English my father spoke, while the second contains all of the voiceless consonants of that same dialect. Each but the last of the consonants in the second mnemonic has a voiced counterpart (b, v, edth [with thanks to AmI for catching my error], d, z, zh, j, g) while the last (h) can be usefully paired with the glottal stop as its "voiced" counterpart. The third mnemonic contains all of the remaining consonants (w, m, n, l, y, r, ng).



Note also that in all three mnemonics the exemplified phonemes appear in order--from front to back--with regard to their place of articulation.






share|improve this answer















The following three mnemonics (the first devised by my father in the 1940s and the second and third devised by me in the 1970s) almost do the trick requested.



  1. "We will aim them at some high, far bow--joy long told--full soon. (Cue.)"

  2. Puff thought "Sash--choke! Hey!!"

  3. Woman lawyer(ing).

The first contains all of the vowel phonemes (including the diphthongs) of the dialect of English my father spoke, while the second contains all of the voiceless consonants of that same dialect. Each but the last of the consonants in the second mnemonic has a voiced counterpart (b, v, edth [with thanks to AmI for catching my error], d, z, zh, j, g) while the last (h) can be usefully paired with the glottal stop as its "voiced" counterpart. The third mnemonic contains all of the remaining consonants (w, m, n, l, y, r, ng).



Note also that in all three mnemonics the exemplified phonemes appear in order--from front to back--with regard to their place of articulation.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 19 '17 at 23:11

























answered Apr 18 '17 at 19:38









H Stephen StraightH Stephen Straight

1,257713




1,257713







  • 1





    Nice, but 'theta' names the unvoiced counterpart. The voiced one is named 'edth'.

    – AmI
    Apr 18 '17 at 20:43











  • Very nice. Do you have a scientific paper in (which those are presented) that I can read? Thanks!

    – TomCho
    Apr 19 '17 at 5:29











  • Sorry, TomCho. I've never published these mnemonics, though I've used them in my teaching over the last 40+ years.

    – H Stephen Straight
    Apr 19 '17 at 22:23












  • 1





    Nice, but 'theta' names the unvoiced counterpart. The voiced one is named 'edth'.

    – AmI
    Apr 18 '17 at 20:43











  • Very nice. Do you have a scientific paper in (which those are presented) that I can read? Thanks!

    – TomCho
    Apr 19 '17 at 5:29











  • Sorry, TomCho. I've never published these mnemonics, though I've used them in my teaching over the last 40+ years.

    – H Stephen Straight
    Apr 19 '17 at 22:23







1




1





Nice, but 'theta' names the unvoiced counterpart. The voiced one is named 'edth'.

– AmI
Apr 18 '17 at 20:43





Nice, but 'theta' names the unvoiced counterpart. The voiced one is named 'edth'.

– AmI
Apr 18 '17 at 20:43













Very nice. Do you have a scientific paper in (which those are presented) that I can read? Thanks!

– TomCho
Apr 19 '17 at 5:29





Very nice. Do you have a scientific paper in (which those are presented) that I can read? Thanks!

– TomCho
Apr 19 '17 at 5:29













Sorry, TomCho. I've never published these mnemonics, though I've used them in my teaching over the last 40+ years.

– H Stephen Straight
Apr 19 '17 at 22:23





Sorry, TomCho. I've never published these mnemonics, though I've used them in my teaching over the last 40+ years.

– H Stephen Straight
Apr 19 '17 at 22:23













2














There's a sentence which was used by British singers and contains all the (British) English vowels:




Who would know aught of art must learn and then take his ease.




Some people might object that take and know are diphthongs, and this sentence doesn't include the other diphthongs bough, buy, boy. But maybe singers were supposed to make the vowels of take and know monophthongs.






share|improve this answer























  • Thanks for the great practical mnemonic, though the claim that "of", "must", and "learn" contain three different vowels deserves discussion; the first two may simply be the unstressed versus the stressed phonetic realization of the central ("schwa") vowel, while the third might be treated as a syllabic-r phonetic realization of a phonemic schwa+r sequence (parallel to those in pier, pair, par, pore, poor). As for diphthongs, many American linguists transcribe all four tense close vowels as diphthongs, which would add "ease" (iy) and "who" (uw) to "take" (ey) and "know" (ow).

    – H Stephen Straight
    Apr 19 '17 at 23:09















2














There's a sentence which was used by British singers and contains all the (British) English vowels:




Who would know aught of art must learn and then take his ease.




Some people might object that take and know are diphthongs, and this sentence doesn't include the other diphthongs bough, buy, boy. But maybe singers were supposed to make the vowels of take and know monophthongs.






share|improve this answer























  • Thanks for the great practical mnemonic, though the claim that "of", "must", and "learn" contain three different vowels deserves discussion; the first two may simply be the unstressed versus the stressed phonetic realization of the central ("schwa") vowel, while the third might be treated as a syllabic-r phonetic realization of a phonemic schwa+r sequence (parallel to those in pier, pair, par, pore, poor). As for diphthongs, many American linguists transcribe all four tense close vowels as diphthongs, which would add "ease" (iy) and "who" (uw) to "take" (ey) and "know" (ow).

    – H Stephen Straight
    Apr 19 '17 at 23:09













2












2








2







There's a sentence which was used by British singers and contains all the (British) English vowels:




Who would know aught of art must learn and then take his ease.




Some people might object that take and know are diphthongs, and this sentence doesn't include the other diphthongs bough, buy, boy. But maybe singers were supposed to make the vowels of take and know monophthongs.






share|improve this answer













There's a sentence which was used by British singers and contains all the (British) English vowels:




Who would know aught of art must learn and then take his ease.




Some people might object that take and know are diphthongs, and this sentence doesn't include the other diphthongs bough, buy, boy. But maybe singers were supposed to make the vowels of take and know monophthongs.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Apr 18 '17 at 21:06









Peter Shor Peter Shor

63.3k5123229




63.3k5123229












  • Thanks for the great practical mnemonic, though the claim that "of", "must", and "learn" contain three different vowels deserves discussion; the first two may simply be the unstressed versus the stressed phonetic realization of the central ("schwa") vowel, while the third might be treated as a syllabic-r phonetic realization of a phonemic schwa+r sequence (parallel to those in pier, pair, par, pore, poor). As for diphthongs, many American linguists transcribe all four tense close vowels as diphthongs, which would add "ease" (iy) and "who" (uw) to "take" (ey) and "know" (ow).

    – H Stephen Straight
    Apr 19 '17 at 23:09

















  • Thanks for the great practical mnemonic, though the claim that "of", "must", and "learn" contain three different vowels deserves discussion; the first two may simply be the unstressed versus the stressed phonetic realization of the central ("schwa") vowel, while the third might be treated as a syllabic-r phonetic realization of a phonemic schwa+r sequence (parallel to those in pier, pair, par, pore, poor). As for diphthongs, many American linguists transcribe all four tense close vowels as diphthongs, which would add "ease" (iy) and "who" (uw) to "take" (ey) and "know" (ow).

    – H Stephen Straight
    Apr 19 '17 at 23:09
















Thanks for the great practical mnemonic, though the claim that "of", "must", and "learn" contain three different vowels deserves discussion; the first two may simply be the unstressed versus the stressed phonetic realization of the central ("schwa") vowel, while the third might be treated as a syllabic-r phonetic realization of a phonemic schwa+r sequence (parallel to those in pier, pair, par, pore, poor). As for diphthongs, many American linguists transcribe all four tense close vowels as diphthongs, which would add "ease" (iy) and "who" (uw) to "take" (ey) and "know" (ow).

– H Stephen Straight
Apr 19 '17 at 23:09





Thanks for the great practical mnemonic, though the claim that "of", "must", and "learn" contain three different vowels deserves discussion; the first two may simply be the unstressed versus the stressed phonetic realization of the central ("schwa") vowel, while the third might be treated as a syllabic-r phonetic realization of a phonemic schwa+r sequence (parallel to those in pier, pair, par, pore, poor). As for diphthongs, many American linguists transcribe all four tense close vowels as diphthongs, which would add "ease" (iy) and "who" (uw) to "take" (ey) and "know" (ow).

– H Stephen Straight
Apr 19 '17 at 23:09

















draft saved

draft discarded
















































Thanks for contributing an answer to English Language & Usage Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fenglish.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f385085%2fis-there-such-a-thing-as-pangram-for-phonemes%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

How to create a command for the “strange m” symbol in latex? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)How do you make your own symbol when Detexify fails?Writing bold small caps with mathpazo packageplus-minus symbol with parenthesis around the minus signGreek character in Beamer document titleHow to create dashed right arrow over symbol?Currency symbol: Turkish LiraDouble prec as a single symbol?Plus Sign Too Big; How to Call adfbullet?Is there a TeX macro for three-legged pi?How do I get my integral-like symbol to align like the integral?How to selectively substitute a letter with another symbol representing the same letterHow do I generate a less than symbol and vertical bar that are the same height?

Българска екзархия Съдържание История | Български екзарси | Вижте също | Външни препратки | Литература | Бележки | НавигацияУстав за управлението на българската екзархия. Цариград, 1870Слово на Ловешкия митрополит Иларион при откриването на Българския народен събор в Цариград на 23. II. 1870 г.Българската правда и гръцката кривда. От С. М. (= Софийски Мелетий). Цариград, 1872Предстоятели на Българската екзархияПодмененият ВеликденИнформационна агенция „Фокус“Димитър Ризов. Българите в техните исторически, етнографически и политически граници (Атлас съдържащ 40 карти). Berlin, Königliche Hoflithographie, Hof-Buch- und -Steindruckerei Wilhelm Greve, 1917Report of the International Commission to Inquire into the Causes and Conduct of the Balkan Wars

Чепеларе Съдържание География | История | Население | Спортни и природни забележителности | Културни и исторически обекти | Религии | Обществени институции | Известни личности | Редовни събития | Галерия | Източници | Литература | Външни препратки | Навигация41°43′23.99″ с. ш. 24°41′09.99″ и. д. / 41.723333° с. ш. 24.686111° и. д.*ЧепелареЧепеларски Linux fest 2002Начало на Зимен сезон 2005/06Национални хайдушки празници „Капитан Петко Войвода“Град ЧепелареЧепеларе – народният ски курортbgrod.orgwww.terranatura.hit.bgСправка за населението на гр. Исперих, общ. Исперих, обл. РазградМузей на родопския карстМузей на спорта и скитеЧепеларебългарскибългарскианглийскитукИстория на градаСки писти в ЧепелареВремето в ЧепелареРадио и телевизия в ЧепелареЧепеларе мами с родопски чар и добри пистиЕвтин туризъм и снежни атракции в ЧепелареМестоположениеИнформация и снимки от музея на родопския карст3D панорами от ЧепелареЧепелареррр