When I had first wrote the study a few people asked me for a copy - the problem was that there are quite a few different fonts used in the paper, the IPA in particular was one that was from a specific site that specialized in IPA fonts - rather than have people have to download several fonts and hopefully get them all installed without issue just to view the paper correctly, it was much easier for me to save it as a PDF document, hence the PDF format rather than the Word format.
At the time it was just a study for personal use, i.e. just a "formal" synopsis of my notes for myself to use so.....I was not quite as meticulous as I should have been with references to sources - again, this was just intended for personal use, not a formal thesis or "paper" by any means; just a nice consolidation of notes but I wrote it, as I do for many things, with the idea that I was sitting there teaching someone this (it's just an easier way for me to write, I guess - wierd, I know!).
Some, if not all the main sources are listed on the back page. Unfortunately, I wasn't very specific with the "internet sources" - most of them come from sites referenced here and on other Ancient Egyptian / Coptic forums.
Again this was written some years ago - I think if I were to go back to it, I would do more with the influence of Arabic on the language. I didn;t cover that much as at the time i was more interested in the actual phonology and any rules I could devise/discover that applied to all the variations in pronunciation people were discussing at the time.
Anyway - I do hope that it will be of some use to people, but please remember, it's not a formal thesis, just an analysis of what I was able to study and discover with the aid of many Coptic speakers and sources.
I think most of the "results / findings" will echo what has already been put forth, however, I was not satisfied with the explanation of, "well, this letter gets pronounced this way in one instance and that way in another, there are really no set rules, you just have to learn it."
As I found out, there are indeed rules as to why some of the letters are pronounced the way they are - I think all the phonetic rules I postulated will account for the variations found and apply "across the board" as it were, not just in certain instances.