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English for Science Pronouncing Polysyllables

English for Science Pronouncing Polysyllables. Long words, stress patterns and clues for saying the right thing. What's going on here? What's stress?. Stress, stress marks and clues to where words are stressed; In words with 2 or more syllables.

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English for Science Pronouncing Polysyllables

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  1. English for SciencePronouncing Polysyllables Long words, stress patterns and clues for saying the right thing.

  2. What's going on here? What's stress? • Stress, stress marks and clues to where words are stressed; • In words with 2 or more syllables. • In English as in German, some syllables in polysyllabic words receive more emphasis than others. • Stressed vowels have a more distinct, unstressed a less distinct sound.

  3. Stress in the wrong place, stress marks • Stress on the wrong syllable may result in unintentional mirth. • Try this with a foreigner: Give him a list of past participles beginning with umge- and then ask him/her to pronounce the word Umgebung. • (S)he will probably say: 'Umge'bung instead of Um'gebung because the past participles (e.g. 'umge'fahren) are pronounced that way. • A stress mark (') indicates where the stress is.

  4. Stress Marks: bisyllables/Stress Clues • Sometimes stress may be on either syllable, changing the function of the word, e.g.: • 'produce, n. (Erzeugnis) • pro'duce, v.t. (erzeugen) Clues • In words with > 2 syllables look for: • endings like –ic; • the CIA group (sh!); • or the third last syllable.

  5. -ic Rules and Examples • -ic, -ical, -ically: • are all stressed on the syllable before the –ic. • 'practical 'practically; • 'skeptic 'skeptical 'skeptically; • 'basic 'basically; • 'physical 'physically. • At least one exception: 'rhetoric.

  6. CIA (sh!) Rules and Examples • Common to this group are: CSTG • the sounds ʃ,ʧ,ʒ or ʤ; • the i is indistinct; • the final vowel is minimalised (ə). OA I facialspatialAsia stationtensionregion

  7. More CIA (sh!) • Keep an eye open for the CIA group which has a number of different spellings including those with other initial letters including: • tu (ʧ), su(ʃ, ʒ): 'nature, 'lesion, 'leisure; • ni, nu: 'onion, 'tenure; • ri: me'morial. • And, unfortunately, CIA spellings which do not indicate stress, e.g. associ'ation.

  8. Third Last Syllable Rule and Examples • If the –ic or CIA rules do not apply then a word of Latin or Greek origin may be stessed on the third last, or antepenultimate syllable. • 'ultimate = last • pe'nultimate = second (nearly) last • antepe'nultimate = third last

  9. Conflict? • 'photograph • pho'tographerbut • photo'graphic • In the last example the –ic rule prevails.

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