English orthoepy
The present treatise - in parallel to the finesse of accurate pronunciation that considers different sounds and their juxtaposition in words - propounds a concept of orthoepy that englobes the intertwining correlations between word-accent, enunciation, orthography, and etymology.
In consonance with the above, and in connate definientia, orthoepy, as a forthrightly literal designator, in an involute vernacular, is a model that associates spelling and pronunciation, by dint of word-accent, devoid of semasiological content, onto a discrete whole of idiosyncratic inherent continua that convey a tangible dichotomy between linguality and orthography, within the confines of a stipulatory recountal that yokes written letters, or groups of letters, and verbal sounds, or groups of sounds, into an assemblage, likened to a reciprocal speculum and synchronised polarizable reflector, comprising euphonically harmonious components that account for relevant intrinsic properties having a bearing on the matter at hand, whereby a locutor extrapolates illatively, without let or hindrance, the combinatorial phonemic arrangements and ingrained enunciable alignments.