
Syllable Stress
Presentation
•
English
•
University
•
Hard
Joseph Anderson
FREE Resource
15 Slides • 7 Questions
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Stress Patterns
By KHO CHUNG WEI
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In this lecture, you will:
Indicate the stress in simple words
Indicate complex word stress
Analyse the stress timing in sentences
TSLB3043
English Phonetics and Phonology
3
Stress in simple words
Listen to this nonsensical word.
Which syllable is stressed? Why?
Stress = the combination of features which makes certain syllables seem more prominent than others
TSLB3043
English Phonetics and Phonology
4
Stress in simple words
TSLB3043
English Phonetics and Phonology
5
Stress in simple words
Levels of stress
two-level analysis: stressed & unstressed
three-level analysis:
primary stress = the strongest type of stress - results from pitch movement, i.e. tone, e.g. əˈraʊnd
secondary stress = weaker than primary stress but stronger than unstressed, e.g.ˌfəʊ.təˈɡræf.ɪk
unstressed = absence of any recognisable amount of prominence
TSLB3043
English Phonetics and Phonology
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Stress in simple words
Stress placement
property of individual words?
a highly complex matter - all the rules have exceptions
Stress placement rules depend on:
whether the word is morphologically simple or complex
grammatical category of the word (content words or function words)
number of syllables in the word
phonological structure of the syllables
TSLB3043
English Phonetics and Phonology
7
Multiple Choice
For monosyllabic words, when pronounced in isolation, they are said with...
primary stress
secondary stress
unstressed
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Open Ended
Two-syllable verbs & adjectives
əˈplaɪ, əˈraɪv, dəʊˈneɪt, dɪˈvaɪn, əˈtrækt, kəˈrekt
For verbs and adjectives, the second syllable is stressed when the second syllable contains...
9
Open Ended
Two-syllable verbs & adjectives
ˈentə, ˈenvi, ˈlʌvli, ˈəʊpn̩, ˈiːvn̩, ˈfɒləʊ, ˈhɒləʊ
For verbs and adjectives, the second syllable is unstressed when the second syllable contains...
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Open Ended
Two-syllable nouns
ˈmʌni, ˈprɒdʌkt, ˈlærɪŋks, ɪˈsteɪt, bəˈluːn, dɪˈzaɪn
For nouns, the second syllable is unstressed when the second syllable contains...
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Stress in simple words
Stress placement guidelines
Words consisting of two or three syllables
Rough guide: primary stress on first syllable, e.g. ˈkʌl.tʃə, ˈhezɪtn̩t, ˈməʊtɪveɪt
Longer words (four or more syllables)
Rough guide: there is a tendency for the antepenultimate syllable to have primary stress, i.e. the last but two, e.g. ˌkredəˈbɪləti, kəˈmjuːnɪkeɪt,
ˌmeθədl̩ˈɒdʒɪkl̩
TSLB3043
English Phonetics and Phonology
12
Complex word stress
Prefix words
Rough guide: in shorter words beginning with a prefix, the primary stress typically falls on the syllable following the prefix: ˌɪntəˈfɪərn̩s, ɪnˈtend, ɪkˈspəʊz, kəˈnekt, ʌnˈveɪl
Exception: a large number of nouns, e.g. ˈaʊtpʊt, ˈɪn.tə.luːd, ˈkɒŋ.ɡres, ˈæbsn̩s
Numerous verbs with prefixes are distinguished from nouns by stress (switch stress). The noun generally has stress on the prefix, while the verb has stress on the syllable following the prefix:
TSLB3043
English Phonetics and Phonology
13
Complex word stress
Stress placement guidelines: Suffix words
Stress on ending itself
ade (nouns), -ain (verbs), -ee (nouns), -eer, -esque (adjs/nouns), -esce (verbs), -ess (verbs), -ette (nouns), -ique (nouns/adjs), -oon, -self/-selves, e.g. pəˈreɪd, æbˈsteɪn, ˌɪn.tə.vjuˈiː, ˌen.dʒɪˈnɪə, ɡrəʊˈtesk, ˌkɒn.vəˈles, əˈses, ˌstætʃ.uˈet, krɪˈtiːk, læmˈpuːn, hɜːˈself
Stress on syllable preceding ending
-ative, -itive, -cient, -ciency, -eous, -ety, -ian, -ial, -ic, -ical, -ident, -inal, -ion, -ital, -itous, -itude, -ity, -ive, -ual, -ular, -uous, -wards /wedz/, e.g. ɒlˈtɜː.nə.tɪv, ˈpɒz.ə.tɪv, ˈeɪn.ʃn̩t, dɪˈfɪʃ.n̩.si, ˌaʊtˈreɪ.dʒəs, prəˈpraɪə.ti, pəˈdes.tri.ən, ˌsuː.pəˈfɪʃ.l̩, ˌmel.əŋˈkɒl.ɪk, ˈræd.ɪ.kl̩, ˈæk.sɪ.dn̩t, ˈkrɪm.ɪ.nl̩, əˈkeɪ.ʒn̩, kənˈdʒen.ɪ.tl̩, ˌɪn.fəˈlɪs.ɪ.təs, ˈmʌl.tɪ.tʃuːd, ˌɪn.krəˈdʒuː.lə.ti, əˈten.tɪv, pəˈpetʃ.u.əl, ˈsek.jə.lə, kənˈspɪk.ju.əs, ˈaʊt.wədz.
TSLB3043
English Phonetics and Phonology
14
Complex word stress
Stress placement guidelines: Compound words
2 types:
Primary stress on the first part of the compound = Initial Element Stress (IES)
Primary stress on the last part of the compound = Final Element Stress (FES)
Word shape: Written as one word nearly always have IES, but those written as two words, or with a hyphen, can be of either stress type.
The Manufactures Rule (FES): If the compound includes a material used
in its manufacture (e.g. an apple pie is a pie made of apples), then FES applies, e.g. ˌæp.əl ˈpaɪ, plʌm ˈbrændi, ˌpeɪ.pə ˈmʌn.i, ˌkɒtn ˈsɒks.
Non-manufactured items take IES, e.g. ˈæpl triː, ˈplʌm stəʊn, ˈpeɪ.pə ˌklɪp,
ˈkɒt.ən ˌdʒɪn
TSLB3043
English Phonetics and Phonology
15
Complex word stress
Stress placement guidelines: Compound words
Location Rule (FES): Strong tendency for a compound to take FES if
location is in some way involved:
FES applies if the first element is the name of a country, region or town: e.g. ˌtɜː.kɪʃ dɪˈlaɪt, ˌrʌʃ.ən ruːˈlet, ˌsaɪ.ə.miːz ˈtwɪnz, bəˌmjuː.də ˈʃɔːts
The vast majority of place-names, geographical features, etc. have FES. This category includes:
regions, towns, suburbs, districts, natural features, e.g. ˌsɪl.ɪ.kən ˈvæl.i
bridges, tunnels, parks, public buildings and sports clubs, e.g. haɪd ˈpɑːk
all street names, except street itself, e.g. trəˌfælgə ˈskweə, trəˈfælgə striːt
Parts of a building tend to have FES, e.g. ˌbɛdrʊm ˈwɪndəʊ. Exceptions: compounds with -room are IES, e.g. ˈlɪv.ɪŋ ˌruːm (but ˌfrʌnt ˈruːm)
TSLB3043
English Phonetics and Phonology
16
Complex word stress
Stress placement guidelines: Compound words
FES applies where positioning of any sort is involved, e.g. ˌleft ˈwɪŋ, ˌʌp.ə ˈklɑːs, ˌbɒtm̩ ˈlaɪn. Time location also tends to FES, e.g. ˌɑːf.tə.nuːn ˈtiː
TSLB3043
English Phonetics and Phonology
17
Stress timing
Sentence stress is basis of rhythm in English
Stressed syllables occur at roughly equal intervals of time
Unstressed syllables are shortened, vowels lose their pure quality to fit this rhythm
TSLB3043
English Phonetics and Phonology
18
Multiple Choice
Try saying a sentence in Malay and/or Chinese.
Are Malay and Mandarin Chinese stress-timed languages?
Both Malay and Mandarin Chinese are stress-timed languages.
Malay is a stress-timed language, but Mandarin Chinese is not.
Mandarin Chinese is a stress-timed language, but Malay is not.
Both Malay and Mandarin Chinese are not stress-timed languages.
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Stress timing
Stress timing is clearly revealed in verse, e.g. poetry written in traditional manner, nursery rhyme
English, German = stress-timed (isochronous)
French, Chinese, Malay = syllable-timed - no strong stress pattern, syllables maintain their length, vowels maintain their quality
TSLB3043
English Phonetics and Phonology
20
Poll
How do you feel about this week's lecture?
21
Open Ended
Q&A / Reflection / Issue
Please ask at least ONE question.
OR Tell us your thoughts on what you have learned these two weeks.
OR State ONE issue/difficulty that you have faced during these two weeks' lectures.
22
Tutorial Task
Transcribe simple words and mark the stress.
Transcribe complex words and mark the stress.
Transcribe sentences and mark the stress.
TSLB3043
English Phonetics and Phonology
Stress Patterns
By KHO CHUNG WEI
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