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EP Notes

The document provides an overview of various consonant sounds, specifically focusing on fricatives, affricates, and voiced consonants, along with their phonetic representations and examples. It also discusses the concept of stress in pronunciation, outlining rules for syllable emphasis in different types of words. Additionally, it includes specific rules for stress placement in adjectives, adverbs, nouns, and verbs.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
13 views3 pages

EP Notes

The document provides an overview of various consonant sounds, specifically focusing on fricatives, affricates, and voiced consonants, along with their phonetic representations and examples. It also discusses the concept of stress in pronunciation, outlining rules for syllable emphasis in different types of words. Additionally, it includes specific rules for stress placement in adjectives, adverbs, nouns, and verbs.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Fricatives - consonant sounds produced /θ/ and /ð/

hissing sounds like the sound of a snake. Also


called friction sounds in speech. /θ/ (voiceless 'th') as in "think"
think, three, truth, or healthy
/s/ and /z/
The /θ/ sound is always represented by the
/s/ = ssss, voiceless combination of the letters 'TH.'
seal, song, sun, sing, season

If there is the letter ‘c’ it is immediately /s/


when compared with /z/. ‘C’ can be /s/ or /k/

Notes:

Bus, Loss, y before s “ys” is always /s/, If it


starts with ‘S’ then it is /s/, delicious

/z/ = zzzz, voiced


zeal, please, words, zinc, fingers

Take note of the letter ‘s’, it can be /z/. /ð/ (voiced 'th') as in "this"
If there is a vowel before and after ‘s’, it is /z/ they, other, mother, or breathe
If the spelling ‘se’ is after a vowel, it is /z/
The /ð/ sound is always represented by the
crAzy, bUsy, coUsIn, caUsE, viEs, please combination of the letters 'TH.'

/ʃ/ and /ʒ/

/ʃ/ = shhhh, voiceless


she, shoe, shell, shilly

Affricates - it is the combination of Stops,


Plosives, and Fricatives.

/tʃ/ and /dʒ/

The /ʃ/ sound is most frequently represented by /tʃ/ as in "chair" voiceless


the letter 'T', and not the 'SH' letter much, check, catch, or question
combination.
The /tʃ/ sound is most frequently represented
/ʒ/ = tongue back n forth, voiced by the letter combination 'CH', but remember
loge, measure, leisure, corsage, beige, Asia, that there are a few other letters and letter
pleasure combinations! cello, cappuccino

A lot ending in "sion"


conclusion - confusion - decision - division -
occasion - provision - television - vision

the /ʒ/ sound is most frequently represented by


the letter 'S', not 'G'
/dʒ/ as in "job" /ŋk/
job, change, judge, or age rink (as in "ice rink") sink, think, pink
bank, rank, sunk (past participle of “sink")
The /dʒ/ sound is most frequently represented
by the letters 'G' and 'J'. is two sounds ending with a final release of air
with the /k/ sound

/j/ as in "yes"
yes, use, million, or view

The letter 'Y' is not the most frequent spelling


for the /j/ sound.

Voiced consonant - /ŋ/ , /ŋ/ , and /ŋk/

/ŋ/ as in "thing"
thing, thank, doing, or long
STRESS
Typically, the /ŋ/ sound is represented by the It is one of the important things we consider in
'NG' letter combination or the letter 'N.' pronunciation.

The letters ‘ng’ is pronounced /ŋ/ without a - It is an emphasis of the syllables in a


following /g/ sound at the end of words. word in a particular utterance.
- It is a term used to designate the
speaker's way of giving prominence
or loudness to a particular syllable or
word, either as a part of a sentence or
as a separate word.
- It refers to the loudness and softness
with which the vowel, or a diphthong, or
a syllable is pronounced.

When a syllable is stressed, There are three


things that happen to our voice:
a. The Duration Is Long
(these examples include /ŋg/ and /ŋk/.) b. The Pitch Is High
c. The Volume Is Loud
/ŋ/
hunger, England, Hungary, tango 18 Rules (Adjective - Adj; Adverb - Adv)

Words that contain ‘ng’ followed by more R1:


letters that have not been added as R2: If a Noun has 2 syl. = 1st syl. is stressed.
an ending will be pronounced /ŋg/.
R3: If an Adj. has 2 syl. = 1st syl. is stressed.
Adjectives ending <ng> made into R4: If a Verb has 2 syl. = 2nd syl. is stressed.
comparatives or superlatives (-er/est)
stronger, longest R5: If a Adv. has 3 syl. (ending with -ly) = 1st
syl. is stressed.
If the word has ‘ng’ in the MIDDLE it is /ŋg/.
R6: Suffix - syl before the suffix is stressed.
anger - angle - angry - language - languid - R7: Suffix - Left ← Right, 3rd syl. is
tangle
stressed.
fungus - linger - single- mongrel R8: Suffix - (-ade, -ee, -eer, -ese, -que, -oon)
R9: Compound Nouns - 1st syl. Is stressed
R10: Reflexive Pron. - 2nd syl. Is stressed.
R11: Idiom Verbs are stressed on the 2nd
component. (UP, ON, OUT)
R12: Compound Verbs - are stressed on the
2nd component. Preposition before word.
R13: In 2 nouns where the 1st noun is a
modifier (it functions as an adjective), it
receives the primary stress.
R14: If “To have” forms as the principal verb
or the only verb in the sentence, it is stressed.
(Have, Has). If it becomes auxiliary, it is
unstressed.
R15: Demonstratives are stressed. (THAT,
THESE, THIS, THOSE).
R16: Interrogatives are stressed. (W words
and HOW),
R17: Negative prefixes are stressed. (UNdo,
ILlegal, DISrobe, IMproper, MIScalculate).
R18: If a word is used as both a noun and as
a verb; if noun = 1st. syl.; if verb = 2nd syl.
(OBject = noun, obJECT = verb)

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