Ppt, read alone

26
Hanadi Mirza hanadym@ho tmail.com

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Transcript of Ppt, read alone

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Hanadi Mirza [email protected]

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Hanadi Mirza [email protected]

ENGLISH

A GERMANIC LANGUAGE

English is a West Germanic language related to Dutch,

Frisian and German with a significant amount of

vocabulary from French, Latin, Greek and many other

languages.

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EVOLUTION OF ENGLISH

English evolved from the Germanic languages brought

to Britain by the Angles, Saxons, Jutes and other

Germanic tribes, which are known collectively as

Anglo-Saxon.

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ENGLISH PERIODS

Old English

Middle English

Early Modern English

Modern English

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OLD ENGLISH

The invaders' Germanic language displaced the

indigenous Brythonic languages of what became

England. The original Celtic languages remained in

Scotland, Wales and Cornwall. Old English began to

appear in writing during the early 8th century AD.

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MIDDLE ENGLISH

For about 300 years following the Norman

Conquest in 1066, the Norman kings and their

high nobility spoke only one of the langues d'oïl

called Anglo-Norman.

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EARLY MODERN ENGLISH

Modern English is often dated from the Great Vowel Shift, which took place mainly during the 15th century. English was further transformed by thespread of a standardized London-based dialect in government and administration and by the standardizing effect of printing.

The Great Vowel Shift was a massive sound change affecting the long vowels of English during the 15th to 18th centuries. Basically, the long vowels shifted upwards; that is, a vowel that used to be pronounced in one place in the mouth would be pronounced in a different place, higher up in the mouth. The change was not overnight; the GVS happened in eight steps. http://facweb.furman.edu/~mmenzer/gvs/what.htm

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LOANWORDS

Latin: cheese, kitchen, pepper, butter

Greek: drama, metaphor, dilemma, cycleCeltic: slogan, whiskey

Scandinavian: sky, scrub, skin, skill, skirt, score

Spanish & Portuguese: cargo, negro, palmetto, cocoa, potato, tomato, margarita, siesta

Italian: concerto, forte, crescendo, piano, incognito, mafioso, casino, macaroni, spaghetti, cartoon, replica

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LOANWORDS (continued)

French: prince, Duke, lieutenant, captain, army, soldier, letter, literature, music, male, fruit, question, étiquette, fiance’(e), liaison, laissez faire, savoir vivre, répertoire, vignette, tête-a-tête, coup d’état, police

German: split, yacht, cookie, cranberry, hamburger

Eastern Sources: amber, zenith, harem, caliber, carat, henna, jinn, giraffe, magazine, kohl, algebra, musk, taffeta, tiger, ginger, bamboo, geisha Other Sources: banana, voodoo, coffee, vodka

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WHO SPEAKS ENGLISH?

Approximately 341 million people speak English as a

native anguage and a further 267 million speak it as a

second anguage in over 104 countries including the UK,

Ireland, USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South

Africa, American Samoa, Andorra, Anguilla, Antigua

and Barbuda, Aruba, Bahamas, Barbados, Belize,

Bermuda, Botswana, British Indian Ocean Territory,

British Virgin Islands, Brunei, Cameroon, Canada,

Cayman Islands, Cook Islands and Denmark.

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PHONETICS

THE SOUNDS OF LANGUAGE

How do humans produce different sounds? (Oral Cavity)

Kinds of English Sounds (Table of English Sounds)

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Oral

Cavity

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ENGLISH SOUNDS

PLACE OF ARTICULATION

LABIAL DENTAL PALATOVELAR

Bilabial Labiodental Interdental Aleveolar Aleveolopalatal Palatal Velar

Stopsvoiceless p     t    

voiced b     d    

Fricatesvoiceless   f ө (thigh) s š (shun)  

voiced   v ð (thy) z ž (vision)  

Affricates

voiceless         č (chum)  

voiced         ĵ (gem)  

Nasals   m     n   ŋ (sing)

liquids:

lateral       l    

retroflex       r    

Semivowels             y w

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Schwa

[ ə ]

[euh] sound or Arabic “hamza”

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Spelling vs. [Pronunciation]

Psychology (ps--) [saykolədjy] Pneumonia (pn--) [nəmonia]Climbing, comb, lamb, bomb (--mb) [klayming], [kom], [lèm], [bám]Calm, Palm (--l m) [kám] , [pám]Folk , Folktale (-- l k) [fok] , [fokteyl]Vegetable [ve dj təbl] Comfortable [kámftəbl]Government (nm) [gavərmənt]Suggest, Suggestion [sag djəst], [sagdjəstshən]People, Apple [pypəl], [ápəl]Sensual , Sensuality [sənshəwəl] , [sənshəwality] Nation, Nationality [neyshən], [nashənality]Social , Beautiful [soshəl] , [byurəfəl]Original but Originally [oridjinəl] but [oridjənly]Actually [aktshəly] Say but Says [sey] but [sèz]

I

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Spelling vs. [Pronunciation] (continued)

• Determine but Mine [ditərmən] but [mayn]• Examine→ [əgzámin]• Seduce but Seduction [sidýous] but [sidakshən] • Appreciate [aprishiyeyt]• Result, Adult → [rizált] , [ədált] • World, Work, Word, War [wərld], [wərk], [wərd], [wor]• July, Major [djoulay] , [meydjər]• Children, Church [tshildrən], [tshərtsh]• Pleasure , Pleasurable bur Leisure [plejər] , [plejrəbl] / [lyjər]• Write/Written, Hide/Hidden [rayt] / [ritən] , [hayd] /[hidən]• Teacher [tytshər]• Doctor, Dollars [daktər] , [dálərz]• Cat, Cup, Color: (c) [k] [Kat] , [Kap] , [kalər]• Circus, Ceremony: (c) [s] [sərkəs] , [sərəmony] • Gallery, Go, Gut: (g) [g] [galəry] , [go] , [gat]• Giraffe, Generous: (g) [dj] [djiraf] , [djənərəs]

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(continued)

• The + any letter EXCEPT (a/e/i/o/u) →[oذ] never [za] • Although , Thunder, Thumb→ [olذ o] , [thándər] , [thám]• Thank You [thánk] Never [sank] You• The +a pple/ e lephant/ i sland/ o range/ u mbrella→ [ذي ] never [oذ] nor

[zi]• The + eu ropean, u nited the+[you] (as 1st sound) [oذ] NOT

[za] • Use the [yous] but I/you [youz]• Process but processes → [prósəs] but [prosəsyz]• Woman but women → [woumən] but [wymin]• Police , Policeman [polys] .[polysmən]• Symptom→ (--m p) [simtəm]• Wanted / Added / Promised / Grinned [wantid] , [ádid] , [promist] , [grind] • Battles, Flags / Groups, Mats Kisses, Churches,—> [bátəlz] , [flágz] / [groups] , [máts] / [kisəz] , [tshərtshəz]

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VOICED & VOICELESS

SOUNDS

Past Tense of Regular Verbs(-ed) [- id] , [-t] , or [-d] ? [-t] & [-d] + [-id] / Vd + [-d] / vl + [-t] Created , Needed / Proved / Fixed

Plural Form of Nouns(-s) [-z] or [-s] or [-əz] ? vd + [-z] / vl + [-s] / -ch, -sh, -ss, -x + [-əz] Boys, girls / cats, lin ks / classes, foxes

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IMPORTANCE OF PHONETICS

Spelling Writing

Pronunciation Speaking

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INTONATION

Stress (eg. Su’bject,/ to subje’ct, pro’ject / to proje’ct, orga’nic adu’lt)

Question OR Statement? (Rising OR Falling Tone?) (You are coming with us tonight)

Breathing Affects Meaning

Stop at Each End Mark (.) (!) (?)

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INTONATION MAKES MEANING

1. Old men and women will be served first.

2. The lamb is too hot to eat.

3. They are moving sidewalks.

4. Mary left directions for Jack to follow.

5. Kissing girls is what John likes best.

6. John loves Richard more than Mary.

7. Women without men are nothing.

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FLUENCY VS. ACCURACY

LANGUAGE PROFICIENCY

Productive Skills

WRITING Spelling, Fluency, Accuracy

SPEAKING Pronunciation, Fluency, Accuracy

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POOR PRONUNCIATION

1. Za boy playid foutbal wiz hiz brazar hwen hi tripd and fel on za flar. Hiz bryzing waz nyzar natshural nor kalm. Hiz sistar cold he’r mazar to fone za polis. Hiz frendz gazer around him bicoz zey ke’r.

2.za ge’rl waz kambing zi he’r of he’r dol and zan shi ryd a folekteyl.

3. Many pypol want to ripe’r ze’r carz and cut ze’r he’r. 4. Its not fe’r not to ke’r.

5. Jon iz nown to be a spashal and fortshunayt pe’rsOn. Actshuwaly, hi haz byn vary orijinal in dyling wiz wiman and shildran.

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PHONETICS ONLINE

• The Sounds of Languagehttp://www.uiowa.edu/~acadtech/phonetics/

• Studying Phonetics on the Nethttp://faculty.washington.edu/dillon/PhonResources/

• Cambridge English Online (British Council)http://www.cambridgeenglishonline.com/Phonetics_Focus/

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When There Is a Will,

You Already Know the Way