"The Sounds of English: Pronunciation, Intonation, and Phonetics Explained"
PRONUNCIATION
1: Vowels Intro
Overview:
In English, vowels are the building blocks of pronunciation. They can be short, long, or diphthongs (combinations of two vowel sounds).
Example:
The sound in "cat" (/æ/) is a short vowel, while "cart" (/ɑ:/) has a long vowel.
More information
2: Schwa
Overview:
The schwa (/ə/) is the most common vowel sound in English. It appears in unstressed syllables and is pronounced as a relaxed, short sound.
Example:
In the word "banana," the middle 'a' is pronounced as a schwa: /bəˈnænə/.
More information
3: Short Vowels
Overview:
Short vowels in English include sounds like /æ/ in "cat," /ɪ/ in "sit," and /ʌ/ in "cup."
Example:
The vowel in "dog" (/ɒ/) is short, compared to the long vowel in "door" (/ɔ:/).
Exercise:
Write 5 sentences using only words with short vowels. Pronounce each sentence, focusing on clear, crisp vowel sounds.
4: Long Vowels
Overview:
Long vowels are held for a longer duration, such as /i:/ in "see" or /u:/ in "food."
Example:
The vowel in "beat" (/i:/) is long, while in "bit" (/ɪ/), it is short.
Exercise:
Match short vowel words to their long vowel counterparts:
e.g., "ship" - "sheep," "hit" - "heat." Practice saying them aloud.
5: Diphthongs
Overview:
Diphthongs are a combination of two vowel sounds within the same syllable, like /aɪ/ in "kite" or /eɪ/ in "cake."
Example:
The word "coin" contains the diphthong /ɔɪ/.
Exercise:
Write a list of 5 words containing diphthongs. Practice saying each word slowly, emphasizing the glide between the vowel sounds.
1: Consonants
Overview:
English consonants include sounds produced by blocking airflow, such as /p/, /b/, /t/, and /k/.
Example:
The consonant /k/ in "cat" is a voiceless sound, while /g/ in "goat" is voiced.
Exercise:
Read a list of 10 words with different consonants (e.g., "pat," "bat," "cap," "gap"). Practice pronouncing the consonants with clear articulation.
2: Fricatives
Overview:
Fricatives are sounds produced by forcing air through a narrow space, like /f/, /v/, /s/, and /z/.
Example:
In "fish" (/fɪʃ/), /f/ is a voiceless fricative, while in "vision" (/vɪʒən/), /v/ is voiced.
Exercise:
Repeat pairs of words that contrast fricatives, like "fine" vs. "vine," "sip" vs. "zip." Focus on the difference in airflow.
3: Plosives
Overview:
Plosives involve a complete stop of airflow, followed by a release, like /p/, /b/, /t/, and /d/.
Example:
The /p/ in "pat" is a voiceless plosive, while the /b/ in "bat" is voiced.
Exercise:
Practice saying minimal pairs that include plosives, such as "tap" vs. "tab" or "coat" vs. "code."
4: Approximants
Overview:
Approximants are sounds where two articulators approach each other but don't completely block airflow, like /r/, /l/, /w/, and /j/.
Example:
The /r/ in "run" and the /w/ in "water" are approximants.
Exercise:
Practice repeating words with initial approximants, such as "red," "yellow," and "white."
5: Nasals
Overview:
Nasals are sounds produced by releasing air through the nose, like /m/, /n/, and /ŋ/.
Example:
The /n/ in "nose" and the /m/ in "man" are nasal sounds.
Exercise:
Pronounce words like "song," "man," and "ring," focusing on the nasal quality of the consonants.
INTONATION
1: Stressing
Overview:
Stressing refers to emphasizing certain syllables or words in a sentence.
Example:
In "I didn't say she stole the money," stress can change the meaning depending on which word is emphasized.
Exercise:
Read the sentence "I never said he stole your book" five times, stressing a different word each time. Notice how the meaning changes.
2: Sentence Stress
Overview:
Sentence stress focuses on stressing key content words (nouns, verbs, adjectives) while de-stressing function words (prepositions, articles).
Example:
In "She bought a new car," the verbs and nouns are stressed, while "a" and "new" are unstressed.
Exercise:
Underline stressed words in the sentence "He will take the bus to work." Practice reading the sentence aloud, emphasizing the key words.
3: Tone Units
Overview:
Tone units divide speech into small meaningful chunks, with one prominent stressed syllable per unit.
Example:
In "She went to the store," it could be divided into two units: "She went | to the store."
Exercise:
Divide the following sentence into tone units: "I’ll see you tomorrow at the meeting."
4: Choosing Stress
Overview:
Choosing stress involves emphasizing words to convey importance or meaning.
Example:
In the sentence "I’ll call him later," stressing "I" suggests that you, not someone else, will make the call.
Exercise:
Rephrase the sentence "He told her about the problem" with stress on different words, and explain how it changes the meaning.
5: Shifting Stress
Overview:
Stress can shift in a sentence to emphasize different aspects or clarify meaning.
Example:
"I can’t believe she’s coming" shifts meaning when you stress "can’t," "believe," or "she’s."
Exercise:
Read a short passage and shift stress in key phrases. Discuss how the changes affect the tone and clarity.
1: Tone
Overview:
Tone refers to the pitch and intonation patterns used in speech.
Example:
Rising tone can indicate a question, while a falling tone can show a statement.
Exercise:
Practice reading a list of questions and statements, focusing on the rising and falling tones.
2: Patterns
Overview:
English uses four main intonation patterns: rising, falling, rising-falling, and falling-rising.
Example:
Statements usually follow a falling intonation, while yes/no questions use rising.
Exercise:
Read these questions and statements, using appropriate intonation: "Are you coming?" (rising), "I’ll be there tomorrow." (falling).
3: Questions
Overview:
Yes/no questions typically have a rising intonation, while wh-questions often end with a falling tone.
Example:
"Did you eat?" rises at the end, while "Where are you?" falls.
Exercise:
Practice saying both yes/no and wh-questions with correct intonation.
4: Statements
Overview:
Statements in English usually have a falling intonation.
Example:
"I’m going to the store" ends with a fall.
Exercise:
Read the following statements with a falling tone: "It’s raining." "She’s happy."
5: Tone Sequences
Overview:
Tone sequences involve combining intonation patterns to create a natural flow of speech.
Example:
In longer sentences, the tone may rise and fall multiple times: "I don’t know if I’ll go, but I’ll try."
Exercise:
Read longer sentences with complex intonation patterns, focusing on smooth transitions between rising and falling tones.
PHONETICS
1: Vowel Chart
Overview:
The vowel chart organizes vowels based on their position in the mouth and tongue height.
Exercise:
Study the IPA vowel chart and practice pronouncing the sounds in each section.
2: Weak Vowels
Overview:
Weak vowels, like the schwa, occur in unstressed syllables and sound shorter and more relaxed.
Exercise:
Identify weak vowels in a passage and read it aloud.
3: Minimal Pairs
Overview:
Minimal pairs are pairs of words that differ by only one sound, such as "bit" vs. "beat."
Exercise:
Practice saying minimal pairs and focus on the distinct sounds.
4: Vowel Length
Overview:
Vowel length distinguishes words like "ship" (short vowel) and "sheep" (long vowel).
Exercise:
Practice words with short and long vowels.
5: Diphthongs
Overview:
Diphthongs combine two vowel sounds in one syllable, as in "coin."
Exercise:
Practice reading diphthongs in sentences.
6: Consonant Charts
Overview:
Consonant charts organize consonants based on where and how they’re produced.
Exercise:
Study the IPA consonant chart and practice the sounds.
7: Fricative Joining
Overview:
Fricatives join easily with other sounds, especially at word boundaries.
Exercise:
Practice linking fricatives between words in a sentence.
8: Glottal Stop & /t/
Overview:
The glottal stop replaces /t/ in some accents, such as in "butter" becoming "bu’er."
Exercise:
Practice glottal stops in different sentences.
9: Approximant Joining
Overview:
Approximants like /r/ and /w/ smoothly connect with vowels.
Exercise:
Practice reading words where approximants join with other sounds.
10: Nasal Joining
Overview:
Nasals join with other sounds in connected speech, as in "in my" becoming "im my."
Exercise:
Practice nasal joining in phrases.