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English Pronunciation and Intonation The nature of stress Stress in simple words Complex word stress Stress Shifts Sentence stress The Nature of Stress 1father open camera 2potato apartment relation 3about receive perhaps In speech, stress is the amount of force one puts on a syllable or words to give it prominence. How to pronounce word stresses? When a syllable is stressed, it is pronounced longer in duration, higher in pitch, louder in volume . More muscular energy is used than is done for unstressed syllables. The muscles in our speech organs are more active. How do you say “teacher”? Longer Higher teeeeeeeeeeee cher tea cher Louder TEA cher All three combined TEEEEEEEEEEE cher In words with two or more syllables in English, one of the syllables will receive more stress than the others. Look up these words in the dictionary and you will see a mark indicating stress in front of this syllable. People often have difficulty understanding these words if the stress is wrong because a word is considered mispronounced if the wrong syllable stress is used. Correct stress is, therefore, as important as correct sound. Stress in Simple Words The conventions for marking stress are: an upper vertical bar before primary stress e.g. 'lights 'basket and a lower bar for secondary stress. e.g. inter'fere ' Levels of Stress primary stress—the strong emphasis a speaker puts on the most important syllable of a particular word secondary stress—a less strong emphasis on the next most important syllable zero stress—any syllable that receives no stress e.g. anthro'pology ' Different Types of Weak Syllables The schwa a -- attend, character, barracks, again, ballad, necklace, workaday, workable, elephant ar -- particular, molar, monarchy ate -- intimate, accurate, desolate o -- tomorrow, potato, carrot or -- forget, ambassador, opportunity e -- settlement, violet, postmen er --perhaps, stronger, superman u -- autumn, support, halibut ough -- thorough, borough ous -- gracious, callous Any English vowel letter can be pronounced with the schwa //. allow a firemen e possible i // command o support u Stress Placement How can one select the correct syllable or syllables to stress in an English word? Stress Placement—Two-syllable words Either the first or the second syllable will be stressed—not both. If the second syllable of a verb or an adjective contains a long vowel or diphthong, or it ends with more than one consonant, that second syllable is stressed. apply attract arrive assist alive correct divine Stress Placement—Two-syllable words If the final syllable of a verb or an adjective contains a short vowel and one (or no) final consonant, the first syllable is stressed. enter open envy equal happy social selfish In nouns, if the second syllable contains a short vowel, the stress will usually come on the first syllable. money product larynx Stress Placement—Three-syllable words In verbs, if the last syllable contains a short vowel and ends with not more than one consonant, that syllable will be unstressed, and stress will be placed on the preceding syllable. encounter ' ' determine Stress Placement—Three-syllable words In verbs, if the final syllable contains a long vowel or diphthong, or ends with more than one consonant, that final syllable will be stressed. ' entertain resurrect ' Stress Placement—Three-syllable words In nouns, if the final syllable contains a short vowel or [əʊ], it is unstressed. If the syllable preceding the final syllable contains a long vowel or diphthong, or if it ends with more than one consonant, that middle syllable will be stressed. ' ' ' potato mimosa disaster synopsis ' Stress Placement—Three-syllable words 'quantity 'cinema ' emperor 'custody In nouns, if the final syllable contains a short vowel and the middle syllable contains a short vowel and ends with not more than one consonant, the first syllable will be stressed. Adjectives seem to need the same rule. 'sinister 'insolent 'derelict 'anthropoid But… All the rules have exceptions. The above rules do not cover all English words. You may have to learn the stress for each individual word. Complex Word Stress Two major types of complex words: 1. Words made from a basic stem word with the addition of an affix, like preview and useful 2. Compound words, which are made of two or more independent English words, like ice-cream and armchair Affixes have three possible effects on word stress: The affix itself receives the primary stress(e.g. ' ' semicircle and personality) The word is stressed just as if the affix was not ' there(e.g. unpleasant and 'marketing) The stress remains on the stem, not the affix, but is ' shifted to a different syllable(e.g. magnetic) Compound Words When is primary stress placed on the first word of the compound and when on the second? Stress Placement—Compound Words noun+noun, stress on the first word typewriter, suitcase, car-ferry, tea-cup, sunrise adjective+ed, stress on the second word bad-tempered, half-timbered, heavy-handed number+ , stress on the second word three-wheeler, second-class, five-finger Stress Placement—Compound Words compounds functioning as adverbs, stress on the second word head-first, North-East, downstream compounds which function as verbs and have an adverbial first element, stress on the second word down-grade, back-pedal, ill-treat Word Stress Exercises Stress Shifts It would be wrong to imagine that the stress pattern is always fixed and unchanging in English words. Rhythmical stress Contrasting stress Alternative stress Variable Stress regional differences e.g. G.B. magazine N.Z.'magazine ' individual differences ' e.g. G.B. kilometer ' kilometer Sentence Stress Sentence stress refers to the word or words in a sentence that receive a strong accent. In most sentences, you will find a series of both stressed and unstressed words. Stressed syllables are long, have a pitch change and have full vowel sounds while unstressed syllables are short and often have reduced vowel sound. What to stress in a sentence? Word or words that are semantically important in a sentence. Content words are usually stressed. They are nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs. Function words are usually not stressed. They are determiners, pronouns, prepositions, auxiliary verbs and conjunctions. To stress all the words? English speakers usually stress all words only when they are impatient or angry. Sentence Stress Exercises Stress with Poetry Read the poem “Hope Is the Thing with Feathers” by Emily Dickinson to know its main idea. Underline the content words. Compare your underlined words with your partner. Listen to the poem and see if there are any changes you want to make in your underlined words. [[ˈfɛðɚ] one of the light soft things that cover a bird’s body Hope Is the Thing with Feathers By Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) Hope is the thing with feathers That perches in the soul, And sings the tune without the words, And never stops at all. [pɚtʃ] to fly down and sit on [ɡeɪl] a very strong wind [sɔ:(r)] ] painful And sweetest in the gale is heard; And sore must be the storm, That could abash the little bird, That kept so many warm. [əˈbæʃ] cause to be embarrassed I’ve heard it in the chillest land, And on the strangest sea; [krʌm] tiny pieces Yet, never, in extremity, that fall from bread, It asked a crumb of me. [ɪkˈstreməti] the degree to which it is severe, unusual, or unacceptable biscuits, or cake Stress with Poetry Read the poem “The Road Not Taken” by Robert Frost. Discuss with your partner what you think the poem means. Which words are the content words? Which words are structure words? Underline the content words. Compare your underlined poem with your partner. Listen to the poem and see if there are any changes you want to make in your underlined words. [dɪˈvə:dʒ, daɪ-] separate and go in different directions The Road Not Taken By Robert Frost rhyming scheme 押韵格式 Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, And sorry I could not travel both And be one traveler, long I stood And looked down one as far as I could To where it bent in the undergrowth; [ˈʌndɚɡrəʊθ ] bushes, small trees, and other plants growing around and under bigger trees Then took the other, as just as fair, And having perhaps the better claim, Because it was grassy and wanted wear; Though as for that the passing there Had worn them really about the same, a b a a b c d c c d ['trɒdn] PP of tread to put your foot on or in something while you are walking And both that morning equally lay In leaves no step had trodden black. Oh, I kept the first for another day! Yet knowing how way leads on to way, I doubted if I should ever come back. e I shall be telling this with a sigh Somewhere ages and ages hence: Two roads diverged in a wood, and I-I took the one less traveled by, And that has made all the difference. g iambic tetrameter 抑扬格四音步 f e e f h g g h Sing a song! Peerless Doctor, actor, lawyer or a singer Why not president, be a dreamer You can be just the one you wanna be Police man, fire fighter or a post man Why not something like your old man You can be just the one you wanna be Driver, actor, lawyer or a singer Why not president, be a dreamer You can be just the one you wanna be I know that we all got one thing That we all share together We got that one nice dream We live for You never know what life could bring Coz nothing last for ever Just hold on to the team you play for I know you could reach the top Make sure that you won"t stop Be the one that you wanna be Now sing this with me We may have different ways to think But it doesn’t really matter We all caught up in the steam of this life Focus on every little thing That’s what does really matter Luxury cars and bling That’s not real life I know you could reach the top Make sure that you won’t stop Be the one that you wanna be Now sing this with me Last year I used to dream about this day Now I’m here I’m singing for you I hope I could inspire you Coz I’ve got all the love Coz I’ve got all love for you DARIN ZANYAR The End Review Word Stress morning, correct, certain, decide, notice, sincere, Chinese, Shanghai, unknown, nineteen, disloyal, mineral, camera, potato, connection, revision, examination, university, possibility, responsibility Word Stress Rule Where is the stress? Examples Nouns on the first syllable center object flower Verbs on the last syllable release admit arrange on the first part desktop pencil case bookshelf greenhouse Word type Two syllables Nouns (N + N) (Adj. + N) Compound Adjectives (Adj. + P.P.) Verbs (prep. + verb) on the last part (the verb part) well-meant hard-headed old-fashioned understand overlook outperform Word type Phrasal Verbs Where is the stress? Examples on the particle turn off buckle up hand out -ic the syllable before the ending Word with added ending economic Geometric -tion, -cian, -sion Technician graduation cohesion -phy, -gy, -try, -cy, -fy, -al photography biology geometry -meter the third from the last syllable parameter thermometer barometer Sentence Stress It’s better to be too early than to be too late. What can I do to help you? All is well that ends well. On the contrary, we often try to avoid that sort of task Learn those idiomatic ways of saying things. There was a sort of curiosity in his voice. After reading a book, put it back on the shelf again. The teacher of the school was kind-hearted.