The replacement tests for bs, hr, and sr are no longer marked as
broken as they work using the old code. The mk tests keep the
broken annotation, as they don't work in the old code either.
This reverts commit 801a8d197c.
This reverts commit 64d5701e5e.
This reverts commit 3b51ebf617.
This reverts commit 1fd235d2c0.
This reverts commit 9f0667de86.
Z-SAMPA is a more complex specification than Kirshenbaum, X-SAMPA,
and CXS. Additionally, it specifies phonemes such as palatal and
velar trills that are not defined by IPA and in the context of the
velar trill is marked as being impossible.
As such, Z-SAMPA will not be supported in eSpeak NG for now. That
may change in the future once support for the other transcription
schemes has been implemented.
Use correct BCP47 variant subtag for X-Sampa; shorten other variants
According to page 5 of [RFC5645](https://tools.ietf.org/html/bcp47#page-1-5),
variant subtags must have 5 to 8 characters. A 9-character subtag is
sytactically ill-formed and should be rejected by conforming parsers.
Technically, BCP47 does not allow the use of unregistered variant subtags.
For `fonkirsh`, I’ve filed a
[language variant subtag registration request](https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/ietf-languages/1IrLl3n4wJ4Fr1xXV34QquJn8Bc)
with the IETF. If IETF rejects my request, we could probably add
Kirshenbaum to Unicode’s registry for [RFC6497](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6497).
Not sure what to do about the other non-registered variants. If they’re
commonly used, it might be an option to register them as well, but
they seem to be even more exotic than Kirshenbaum, and we wouldn’t to
bloat the BCP47 registry too much. If espeak-ng really wants to handle these
alphabets, it would probably make sense to use BCP47 private-use extensions,
such as `x-fonzsamp`. According to IETF BCP47, private-use subtags can have
up to (but not more than) 8 characters, so I’m shortening these too.