“…This is a crucial first step in ''write(ing) pronunciation back into the instructional equation" on a large scale (Morley, 1991, p. 488), in giving pronunciation the credibility and accessibility that it requires in the worlds of pronunciation research, pedagogy, and assessment, and in inspiring aspiring pronunciation proponents to do more work in this area where it is so badly needed. It may weIl be that pronunciation will never again become the "Cinderella oflanguage teaching" (Kelly, 1969, p. 87), but it also needn't any longer be the neglected "orphan in English programs around the world" (Gilbert, 1994, p. 38 Indeed, Catford coined the term "threshold of intelligibility" as early as 1950 (as cited in Nelson, 1992), and Gimson (1980) speaks of "minimal general intelligibility" or the lowest requirement for efficiently conveying a message from a native speaking listener's standpoint. Yet it is not clear why Morley placed the two communicative threshold levels where she did in her index, nor what these designations entait.…”