Sustainable English Phonetics and Phonology of the Green and Greenness in Architecture: An Adjacent Science

Authors

  • Asst. Lect. Ali Ismael Hama al-Jaf دائرة صحة واسط , Wasit Health Directorate

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31185/lark.4599

Keywords:

phonetics, pronunciation, architecture, ecology, comfort, greenness, evolution, adjacent

Abstract

Organisation and evolution are salient in every country, but that importance is limited to their existence and practice.  One of the key-factors to illustrate the comprehensive functions and roles of the green and greenness usages in architecture and design depends thoroughly upon the reality of pronouncing and uttering such things accurately and truthfully.  Natural resources and ecological sources must be invested in highly-qualified innovation, invention, entrepreneurship, revolution, and novelty so that matters of internal and external profoundness are revealed in the appearances and outlooks as the phonetic and phonological features have been displayed within the context of the study. Sustainability is not just a word that stops at its scope, but it has rather exceeded its limitation and coverage, to elaborate the adjacent sciences of the English language branches with multi-disciplinary and interdisciplinary perspectives.  English phonetics and phonology have shown their utmost realities to be employed in such workholistic improvements to achieve beauty, elegance, and integration.  The outcomes are more economic or social, they are interventional in environment and nature with the human needs and desires.  Comfort can be obtained through a practical understanding of valued words that represent green and greenness in their peer-viewed connotations (meanings and associations) and denotations (significances concepts).  The appropriate meanings of shapes must be pronounced with phonetic and phonological intelligibility, acceptability, and unambiguousness.  

References

Bauer, M.; Mosle, P.; & Schwarz, M. (2010). Green building guidelines for sustainable architecture. Springer-Ceriag Berlin Heidelberg-Germany.

DHHD (Department of Health and Human Services). (2001). Healthy people 2010: understanding and improving health, Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office.

Girardet, H. (2004). Cities people and planet. Chichester: Wiley-Academy.

https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/

Saleem, S. Green architecture. Sushant University: School of Art and Architecture. URL: https: www.sushantuniversity.edu.in

Sassi, P. (2006). Strategies for sustainable architecture. New York: Taylor and Francis Group, Inc.

Whitaker, B. (2004). Population boom set to stablise at ABN 2300, The Guardian, 6 November 2004.

WHO (1946). World Health Organisation. Constitution. URL: www.who.int/about/en

Wilson, E. (2002). The future of life. Abacus, London.

Downloads

Published

2025-06-30

Issue

Section

College of Arts Conference, Wasit University (Eighth): Cognitive Pathways for the Humanities and Social Sciences, Reality and Leadership Prospects

How to Cite

Ali Ismael Hama al-Jaf, A. L. . (2025). Sustainable English Phonetics and Phonology of the Green and Greenness in Architecture: An Adjacent Science. Lark, 17(3), 512-494. https://doi.org/10.31185/lark.4599