Henry Sweet was born in
St Pancras, London. He was educated at
Bruce Castle School and
King's College School, London. In 1864, he spent a short time studying at
Heidelberg University.
The Oldest English Texts (1885) and ''A Student's Dictionary of Anglo-Saxon'' (1896). In 1877, Sweet published
A Handbook of Phonetics, which attracted international attention among scholars and teachers of English in Europe. His emphasis on spoken language and phonetics made him a pioneer in
language teaching, a subject which he covered in detail in
The Practical Study of Languages (1899).
The Sounds of English (1908) was his last book on English pronunciation.), and a number of other works he edited for the Early English Text Society. Sweet was also closely involved in the early history of the
Oxford English Dictionary. His relationship with the
Oxford University Press was often strained. ==Other interests==