Patterns of Spoken English: An Introduction to English PhoneticsLongman, 1987 - Počet stran: 262 First published in 1987. Most introductory textbooks in phonetics are designed to turn the people who use them into phoneticians. People who take phonetics courses, on the other hand, do not in general wish to become specialists, but rather need to know what the study of phonetics has to offer in some other field. This book is intended for those involved in any way with the study of the English language: for students of linguistics or literature, teachers of English, and those involved with the study of literacy, or the analysis of dis course or conversation. |
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Výsledky 1-3 z 29
Strana 157
... reason it is placed after the word or phrase it is expected to lead to . In For whom ?, for is in the leading position to whom and consequently reduced ; but if for is shifted to the end , i.e. Who for ?, it is no longer leading , and ...
... reason it is placed after the word or phrase it is expected to lead to . In For whom ?, for is in the leading position to whom and consequently reduced ; but if for is shifted to the end , i.e. Who for ?, it is no longer leading , and ...
Strana 163
... reason , and here is an example from Norton and Sackville's Gorboduc , Act II . Accented syllables are capitalized , and unaccented syllables left in lower case ; unaccented syllables in the ictus position are put in square brackets ...
... reason , and here is an example from Norton and Sackville's Gorboduc , Act II . Accented syllables are capitalized , and unaccented syllables left in lower case ; unaccented syllables in the ictus position are put in square brackets ...
Strana 193
... reason for asking the question , and therefore a reason for using the rise . Thus Have you got a light ? is a request , and Do you like ice - cream ? is probably an invitation . On the other hand , in questions which present ...
... reason for asking the question , and therefore a reason for using the rise . Thus Have you got a light ? is a request , and Do you like ice - cream ? is probably an invitation . On the other hand , in questions which present ...
Obsah
The Formation of Sounds | 24 |
The English Sound System | 43 |
The Syllable | 66 |
Autorská práva | |
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Patterns of Spoken English: An Introduction to English Phonetics Gerald Knowles Zobrazení fragmentů - 1987 |
Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
accent group accented syllable addressee allophone aloud alveolar alveolar consonants alveolar ridge American English articulation becomes boundary CALIFORNIA/SANTA CRUZ cardinal vowels Chapter chunks close comma comma marks consonant CRUZ The University de-dum deaccented dialects digraph diphthong duration England example Exercise expect fall fall-rise fricative instance intermediate accent rule interpretation intonation kind labial larynx leading syllable lengthened letter long vowels long-i loudness marked meaning metre morpheme nasal non-final normal Northern English noun nucleus onomatopoeia onset open vowel painted the mona palate paralinguistic parallelism pattern phonaesthemes phonemes phrase pitch place of articulation position pronounced pronunciation punctuation refer rhyme rhythm rhythmical rise sentence sequence short vowels shwa sound speaker speech spelling spelt spoken stop symbol tongue trailing syllable Transcribe transcription University Library UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA varieties of English velar velum verb verse vocal folds voice voiceless weak-forms writing