Transcription exercises & @ 3: O; V @U S Z D T N w N Ù Í.
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Transcript of Transcription exercises & @ 3: O; V @U S Z D T N w N Ù Í.
Transcription exercises
& @ 3: O; V @US Z D T N w N Ù Í
Phonemic alphabet in English
Only 44 phonemes?
i: I U u: I@ eI
e @ 3: O: U@ OI @U
& V A: Q e@ aI aU
p b t d tS dZ k g
f v T D s z S Z
m n N h l r w j
Matching exercise 1:Match pronunciation terms with their transcription.
pronunciation phonetic transcription phonemic symbols phonemes vowels consonants letters pronounce International Phonemic
Alphabet
/ vaUlz/ /"let@z/ / !Int@"n&S@n@l
f@U"ni;mIk "&lf@bet/ /"kQnts@n@nts/ /pr@"naUnts/ /f@U"ni;mIk "sImb@lz/ /"f@Uni;mz/ /f@U"netIk
tr&n"skrIpS@n/ /pr@%nVntsi"eISn/
Matching exercise 1 :Pronunciation terminology & its transcription
KEY pronunciation phonetic transcription phonemic symbols phonemes vowels consonants letters pronounce International Phonemic
Alphabet
/pr@%nVntsi"eISn/ /f@U"netIk
tr&n"skrIpS@n/ /f@U"ni;mIk "sImb@lz/ /"f@Uni;mz/ /"vaUlz/ /"kQnts@n@nts/ /"let@z/ /pr@"naUnts/ / !Int@"n&S@n@l
f@U"ni;mIk "&lf@bet/
Matching exercise 2: Match pronunciation terms with their transcriptions
slanting brackets square ones aspiration diacritics Roman alphabet animation British English American English features sound sequences minimal pairs vocal cords
/"slA;ntIN/ /"skwe@/ / !v@Uk@l"kO;dz/ /!&sp@"reIS@n/ /"&lf@bet/ /wVnz/ /"si;kw@ntsIz/ /@ !merIk@n/ /saUnd/ /!&nI"meIS@n/ / !brItIS/ /!r@Um@n/ /"INglIS/ /!daI@"krItIks/ /"br&kIts/ /"fi;Í@z/ / !mInIm@l"pe@/
Matching exercise 2:Pronunciation terminology & its transcription
KEY slanting brackets square ones aspiration diacritics Roman alphabet animation British English American English features sound sequences
/"slA;ntIN "br&kIts/ /"skwe@ wVnz/ /!&sp@"reIS@n/ /!daI@"krItIks/ /"r@Um@n"&lf@bet/ /!&nI"meIS@n/ /!brItIS "INglIS/ /@ !merIk@n"INglIS/ /"fi;Í@z/ /"saUnd"si;kw@ntsI
z/
Reading aloud 1From transcription to pronunciation
Can you read these words? /pr@%nVntsi"eISn/ /f@U"netIk
tr&n"skrIpS@n/ /f@U"ni;mIk "sImb@lz/ /"f@Uni;mz/ /"vaUlz/ /"kQnts@n@nts/ /"let@z/ /pr@"naUnts/ / !Int@"n&S@n@l
f@U"ni;mIk "&lf@bet/
/"slA;ntIN "br&kIts/ /"skwe@ wVnz/ /!&sp@"reIS@n/ /!daI@"krItIks/ /"r@Um@n"&lf@bet/ /!&nI"meIS@n/ /!brItIS "INglIS/ /@ !merIk@n"INglIS/ /"fi;Í@z/ /"saUnd"si;kw@ntsI
z/
Reading aloud 2From spelling to pronunciation
Can you read these words? slanting brackets square ones aspiration diacritics Roman alphabet animation British English American English features sound sequences
pronunciation phonetic transcription phonemic symbols phonemes vowels consonants letters pronounce International Phonemic
Alphabet
Writing 1From transcription to spelling.
Can you write these words? /pr@%nVntsi"eISn/ /f@U"netIk
tr&n"skrIpS@n/ /f@U"ni;mIk "sImb@lz/ /"f@Uni;mz/ /"vaUlz/ /"kQnts@n@nts/ /"let@z/ /pr@"naUnts/ / !Int@"n&S@n@l
f@U"ni;mIk "&lf@bet/
/"slA;ntIN "br&kIts/ /"skwe@ wVnz/ /!&sp@"reIS@n/ /!daI@"krItIks/ /"r@Um@n"&lf@bet/ /!&nI"meIS@n/ /!brItIS "INglIS/ /@ !merIk@n"INglIS/ /"fi;Í@z/ /"saUnd"si;kw@ntsI
z/
The schwa /@/Circle all the syllables containig the schwa and then try to
sing the song. Glen Hansard - Broken Hearted Hoover Fixer Sucker Guy Lyrics
ONCE Ten years ago
I fell in love with an Irish girlShe took my heart
But she went and screwed some guy she knewand now I'm in Dublin with a broken heart
Oh broken hearted Hoover fixer sucker guyOh broken hearted Hoover fixer sucker, sucker guy
One day I'll go there and win her once againbut until then I'm just a sucker of a guy
(http://www.stlyrics.com/lyrics/once/brokenheartedhooverfixersuckerguy.htm)
Here are all the schwas /@/in Hansard’s Broken Hearted Hoover Fixer Sucker
Ten years agoI fell in love with an Irish girl
She took my heart
But she went and screwed some guy she knewand now I'm in Dublin with a broken heart
Oh broken hearted Hoover fixer sucker guyOh broken hearted Hoover fixer sucker, sucker guy
One day I'll go there and win her once againbut until then I'm just a sucker of a guy
There is no schwa in THERE and AGO,GO as /@/ is part of two different diphthongs /e@/ and /@U/.
In DUBLIN it is a minority pronunciation: /"dVbl@n/.There is /e/ in THEN.(http://www.stlyrics.com/lyrics/once/brokenheartedhooverfixersuckerguy.htm)
Practice makes perfect.It’s not a piece of cake, is it? Now you deserve one. Or a cup of tea or coffee?
Frequently asked questions
1. Why is there /@/ and /@/ in the word / !Int@"n&S@n@l/ ?
2. How do I know when to use a dotted /i/ or undotted /I/?
3. Why are some words (e.g./wVnz/) without stress marks?
4. Why is the grammatical ending transcribed sometimes as /s/, /z/, or /Iz/ in /"br&kIts/, /"fi;Í@z/, and /"si;kw@ntsIz/?
5. Why are stresses in /@ !merIk@n"INglIS/ like this when the dictionary tells us it should be /@"merIk@n/ /"INglIS/?
6. Why do they say /pr@"naUnts/ and not /pr@"naUns/?
1. Why is there /@/ and /@/ in the word / !Int@"n&S@n@l/ ?
Because the second and the third schwa in the word / !Int@"n&S@n@l/ may be pronounced, or may be ommited.
It is called a superscript schwa and it is a non-phonemic symbol.
2. How do I know when to use a dotted /i/ or undotted /I/?Can you spot any regularities stemming from these examples?
/i/ /i;/ /I/
/"praIm@ri//"3;li/
/f@U"ni;mIk//"si;kw@nts//"fi;Í@z/
/"slA;ntIN/ or /"br&kIts/
/"f&mIliz//"f&kt@riz/
/ !i;k@"nOmIk/
/ !Int@"n&S@n@l//"INglIS/
/greI/ or /seI/
/pr@%nVntsi"eISn//"h&pi@/, /ve@ri@s/
/!i;k@"nOmIk/ /!&nI"meIS@n/
/i/ or /i;/ or /I/ ?
/i/ is used at the end of words when it is not part of the diphthong (e.g. /leIdi/) and in plural endings (e.g. /leIdiz/).
/i;/ occurs at the beginning and in the middle of a word to mark the long vowel. It never occurs at the end of a word (e.g. / !i;k@"nOmIk/, /ri;d/).
/I/ can be found only at the beginning or in the middle of a word. It also occurs at the end of a word when it is part of a diphthong (e.g. / !I"regj@l@, /bIt/, /bOI/).
/i/ can sometimes be in the middle of the word when it is in front of a stressed suffix, for example,
/pr@%nVntsi"eISn/, or in front of a vowel which is part of a suffix /"ve@ri@s/ or grammatical ending /"h&pi@/.
3. Why are some words (e.g./wVnz/) without stress marks?
Because no one-syllable words are marked with stress marks in dictionaries.
4. Why is the grammatical ending –s transcribed sometimes as /s/, /z/, or /Iz/?
/s/ /z/ /Iz/
/"br&kIts/ /"fi;Í@z/ /"si;kw@ntsIz/
/"kQnts@n@nts/
/wVnz/ /"bVsIz/
/k&ps/ /"sImb@lz/ /"m&ÍIz/
/s/, /z/, or /Iz/? Unvoiced, voiced or sibilant?
What matters is what type of a consonant comes before the grammatical ending in pronunciation of a word.
When there is an unvoiced consonant, the grammatical ending –s is pronounced as /s/, e. g. /k&ps/.
When there is a voiced consonant or any vowel, the grammatical ending –s is pronounced as /z/, e. g. /"fi;Í@z/, /wVnz/.
When there is a sibilant consonant /s, z, S, Z, Í, Ù, the grammatical ending –s is pronounced as /Iz/, e. g. /"bVsIz/, /"m&ÍIz/
5. Why does primary stress become secondary when two words meet?
The primary stress becomes secondary in /@ !merIk@n"INglIS/ because when two words meet in
speech, they influence each other in many different
ways in English even if the dictionary tells us it
should be /@"merIk@n/ and /"INglIS/. Have you spotted any other cases like thisin the exercises
above?
But it can be also the other way round:
/"fIfti;n !egz/ but /fIf"ti;n/ /egz/.
6. Why do they say /pr@"naUnts/ and not /pr@"naUns/?
Because this is the trend in current development of RP.
Have a look at words such as pronunciation,
occurrence, difference, fence, or answer in the
3rd edition of LPD.
Great. Well done. You’re the winner.