Section 4 ft ^ddcA .towse .of £ j>ro«ca<- Accentuation and rhythm ; unaccented syllables as .; syllables with strong vowels and secondary accent as •; syllables with strong vowels but with weak accent as ©. (e) In phonetic transcriptions and in ordinary orthography, accents will be shown as follows: 34 Practical course of English pronunciation primary accent: 1 secondary-accent:, unaccented: no mark 4.2 Accentual patterns: 2-sylIaWe words 4.2.1. Patterns:, \, \ . ' Al Listen li'li 'Mi 'Mi li'li li'li 'Mi A2 Identify the accentual patterns given for /Mi/; check in Appendix p. 76. A3 Listen, to the words given; transcribe them, marking the accent; check in Appendix p. 76. annoy armour 'sofa police 'marble be'low A4 Listen and repeat (. \>) alone machine behind (% .) over under husband 4.2.2. Patterns: ■• N, Ve Notes: (a) The patterns resemble those above, but the syllable not carrying the primary accent has a strong vowel. (b) When the syllable containing the strong vowel precedes V a secondary accent may be associated with it (?); when the syllable containing the strong vowel follows %, there is no secondary accent(o). : : ,,-.■■..•.< ■ ■. ... AS .• Listen < ■ ;{-)■■" . / ■■■:,1oi1g: ,la:'la: ,lG:'la: 'la:la: f i , ;..<<• A6 Listen and repeat 7 (• \) unknown idea antique " " A7 Listen and repeat (comparison . > and • %) contain canteen ado undo ilniil untie .48 ; Listen and repeat..... .-. xf, n - : (Vo) female programme window ■■■< Accentuation and rhythm 35 A9 Listen and repeat (comparison % . and % o) never nephew pillar pillow hostel hostile 4.3 Acceataal patterns: 3-syHable words 4.3.1 Patterns: \ ..,.*> . A10 Listen 'lcdsb Mails k'kli 'Mrb All Identify the accentual patterns of the nonsense items given; check in Appendix p. 76. A12 Listen to the word* giyenf-transcribe them, marking the accent; check in Appendix p. 76. 'quality enormous container solution "luckily ''character A13 Listen and repeat (S . .) yesterday bachelor quantity ■ (.- N .) important relation eleven ; 4.3.2 Patterns: • . \, >.«,•%.,. % o Note: When a syllable containing a strong vowel immediately follows V there is no secondary accent; in other cases, a syllable containing a strong vowel (but not carrying the primary accent) has a secondary accent A14 Listen • .Icds'la: 'laibjla: ,la:'la:b fe'kula: A15 Identify the accentual patterns of the nonsense items given; check in Appendix p. 76. A16 Listen and repeat Rj^fVvt] (•-.**) understand 'cigarette afternoon (\ »- *) appetite photograph telephone (• -V,,) uncertain re-entry substandard (. % o) tobacco- .tomato ru;;projectile 36 Practica! course of English pronunciation 4.4 Distinctive accentual patterns: 2-syllabIe words Note: Certain 2-syllabIe words distinguish their noun/adjective form from their verb' form by a difference of accentual pattern, the noun/adj. form having \> . (or N> o) and the verb . %. 4.4.1 Distinction by stress/pitch alone: All Listen and repeat, 'import («.) im'port (vb) in'sult (vb.) 'insult («.) 4.4.2 Distinction by stress/pitch + changes of quality: AI8 Listen n.jaclj. vb. 'frequent fre'quent 'object ob'ject 'present pre'sent 'rebel re'bel 'conduct con'duct ' A19 Identify *> fikon'tdskt/ for the verb dispute has . for both noun and verb, but increasingly % o /'dispjuit/ is used for the noun. 4.5 Distinctive accentual patterns: 3- or 4-syl!able words Note: Some words of 3 or more syllables also show distinctive accentual patterns in their noun/adjective and verb forms: Accentuation and rhythm 37 (a) with a shift of the primary accent and associated sound changes (b) with the primary accent constant, but with sound changes. A21 Listen and repeat J------- n.jadj. vb. (a) alternate /.orl'tsinst ""oilteinert/ envelope /'enva.laup in'vebp/ attribute /'stn.bjuit a'tnbjuit/ (b) associate /©'ssujrat 3's3u|i,eit/ compUment /'kDmphmant 'kompk,ment/ separate /'sepsret 'sep3,reit/ prophesy /'profssi 'prDft.sai/ 4.6 Accentual patterns: 4-sylIab!e words A22 Identify the accentual patterns of the nonsense items given; check in Appendix p. 76. A23 Listen and repeat (. % . ■.) remarkable s impossible photography A24 Listen and repeat (• % . .) unfortunate rhinoceros subliminal A25 Listen and repeat (• . \ .) unimportant photographic circulation A26 Listen and repeat (. \ . •) acclimatize negotiate solidify A27 Listen and repeat (%...) caterpillar criticism melancholy A28 Listen and repeat ~ (. « .) educated helicopter prophesying A29 Listen and repeat (V . . «) capitalize counterattack A30 Listen and repeat (« . . %) superimpose aquamarine 38 Practical course of English pronunciation 4.7 Recapitulation; ?,- to i-^umie words A3I Listen and repeat (transcriptions with accentual patterns are given in Appendix p. 76). enumerate thirteen constipated alone invitation paragraph under automobile Morocco sub-normal searchlight superintend 4.8 Accentual patterns: 5- to 8-syJlable words (a selection) A32 (5 syllables) Listen and repeat A33 A34 ( ( ( ( ( . .) capitalism . .) administrative % -) consideration . .) objectivity . •) incapacitate cannibalism Catholicism apotheosis aristocracy inexactitude V .) counterproductive interdependence (6 syllables') Listeft and repeat (■ (• (• s .) .)' .) .) .) inferiority variability ceremoniously onomatopeic personification impossibility meteorological indistinguishable palatalization electrification (7, 8 syllables) Listen and repeat (.« . .) (• . N . . . .) (. . . . . % .) intelligibility unilateralism industrialization internationalization i • 4.9 Saffixatioa and accentuation Note: The word accentual pattern is determined by the type of certain suffixes. The following is a selection of common types of suffix which attract the primary accent of the base word, with frequent qualitative changes. Accentuation and rhythm 39 4.9.1 Attracting the primary accent to the penultimate: A35 (Suffix -ial/-id[) !f Listen and repeat \ proverb proverbial j ''colony coWial tutor tutorial A36 {Suffix -ian /-ran/) Listen and repeat civil civilian comedy comedian grammar grammarian Canada Canadian A37 (Suffix-icl-±f) Listen and repeat atom atomic drama dramatic strategy strategic A38 (Suffix -ion /-(a)n/) Listen and repeat communicate communication operate operation supervise supervision execute execution 4.9.2 Attracting the primary accent to the antepenultimate: A39 -(Suffix -ity /-sti/) , Listen and repeat captive captivity curious curiosity final finality inferior inferiority 4.10 Comp'oHaa words (IPE 9.03) Note: The accentual patterning of compounds is as significant as that of simple words. The most common type of compound accentuation has a primary accent on the first element. 4.10.1 2-syllable compounds: (1) In a few words, the weaker element undergoes an obscuration of vowel quality giving a pattern N A40 Listen and repeat ■ (S .) postman chairman saucepan 40 Practical course of English pronunciation (2) More frequently, the vowel of the second element remains strong, giving a pattern % o . A41 Listen and repeat (% o) cardboard earthquake windscreen teapot (3) Other, less numerous 2-sylIabIe compounds carry the primary accent on the second element, the first element having a secondary accent. A42 Listen and repeat (• \) downstairs full-grown mince-pie first-class \ 4.10.2 3-syllable compounds: Again, either the_fixsLor the second element may carry the primary accent.1 A43 Listen and repeat (V • .) grasshopper grandfather newspaper A44 Listen and repeat (Ns . «) buttonhole chambermaid honeymoon A45 Listen and. repeat (« v* .) archbishop blackcurrant field-marshal A46 Listen and repeat (* . country-house gingerbecr second-hand |' 4.10.3 4- or Ssyllable compounds: i (1) 4-syllcbles j , A47 Listen and repeat | (% . « .) booking-office 'season-ticket I (%..•) musical-box catherine-wheel : ,;■ ( . % • .) despatch-rider machine-minder ( o . % .) easy-going indiarubber •-(•**..) vice-chancellor postgraduate 1 When the second element of a compound is a polysyllable, it may carry a full secondary accent even though it immediately follows the primary accent. Accentuation and rhythm 41 (2) 5-syllables A48 Listen and repeat (N . • . .) fire-extinguisher (S . . « .) cabinet-maker (•%.».) hotAvater-bottle A49 Listen and repeat (a selection of different compound patterns) chatterbox shop-window free-wheel washstand power-station mass-production waiting-room 4.11 Compounds and noun phrases Note: The accentual patterns of compounds must be distinguished from those of noun phrases (adj.+n. or «.+«.), which have typically a secondary accents primary accent. A50 Listen and repeat (comparison: noun phrase and compound) noun phrase compound a black bird (. e N) a blackbird (.No) a light ship (. o N) ahghtship (. No) a cross word (. « N) a crossword (.No) a grand father (. * N .) a grandfather (. N • .) Note: In place names, such words as Road, Square (e.g. Euston Road) carry a primary accent; Street is either unaccented with a strong vowel (e.g. North Street— V o) or carries a secondary accent (e.g. Oxford Street—- N . «). 4.12 Variation of word accentual patterns (JPE 11.03) Note: Words carrying more than one accent may exhibit a weakening of the primary accent when used attributively (i.e. they are affected by the larger accentual/rhythmic context). A51 Listen and repeat thirteen (• N) thirteen pounds (• o N) afternoon (• . V) afternoon tea (• . • N)