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Review questions and tasks. 1. What changes do the phonemes [t, d, n, l, s, z] undergo before [θ, ð]?




1. What changes do the phonemes [t, d, n, l, s, z] undergo before [θ, ð]?

2. What consonant in the sentence Call the boy is affected by regressive assimilation?

3. Say what consonant is assimilated in the words train, trifle and what degree of assimilation it is.

4. What mistakes are made in the pronunciation of the following words:

anecdote ['ænıgd∂ut] this book ['ðız 'buk]

birthday ['b:ðdeı] lets go ['letz 'g∂u]

obstinate [' pstınıt] like that ['laıg 'ðæt]

medicine ['metsın] this way ['ðız 'weı]?

Pronounce these words correctly. When does loss of plosion occur? Give your

own examples.

5. Define lateral and nasal plosions. Illustrate them with your own examples

(in English and in Russian).

UNIT 5

Section 1

Make a careful study of the text below and pick out the terms related to phonetics.

Accommodation

Accommodation is considered to be a special case of contact assimilation which occurs under the influence of a vowel on the adjacent consonant and vice versa. The accommodated sound does not change its main phonemic features and is pronounced as a variant of the same phoneme slightly modified under the influence of a neighbouring sound.

In modern English there are three main types of accommodation:

1) at the beginning of the word a consonant may become slightly labialized when followed by a rounded vowel phoneme:

e.g. too [tu:], noon [nu:n], ford [f:d], dog [d g]

2) a fully back variant of a vowel phoneme is replaced by its slightly advanced/fronted variant under the influence of the preceding medio-lingual [j]:

e.g. beauty ['bju:tı], music ['mju:zık]

3) a vowel becomes slightly more open before the dark [ł]:

cf. bell [bεł] bed [bed]

tell [tεł] ten [ten]

4) the spread lip position of consonants next to the front vowels [i:], [ı] may be traced: e.g. sit, leaf, tea.

5) slight nasalization is sometimes traced in vowels under the influence of the neighbouring sonorants [m], [n]: e.g. and, come in, men.

6) next to the backlingual consonants [k], [g], [ŋ] a retracted and raised variant of [∂] is heard (it slightly resembles the Russian []):

e.g. canal [k∂'næl], to go [t∂ 'g∂u], long ago [l ŋ ∂'g∂u ]

Section 2

[ s ]

(constrictive fricative, forelingual, apical alveolar, strong, voiceless)

[ z ]

(onstrictive fricative, forelingual, apical alveolar, weak, voiced)

I. Observe the position of the tongue for the sounds [ s ] and [ z ]. Read the words

in the columns. Observe correct pronunciation of combinations [sw], [zw], [sr],

[zr], [zθ], [zð].

see this sixth sweet miss Rachel

soon tense this thing sweater looks radiant

so miss looks thin swim Dicks room

say pass Alice thinks swallow Jacks rod

 

zebra is busy is thin is this is she is rich

zoo has music was thick was that does she was ready

zone was husband has thought has these has she does right

zenith says possess his thumb sees them was she his room

II. Read the sentences. Follow the tonetic marks.

1. Just fancy! !

 

2. Precisely so. .

 

3. It makes no sense. .

 

4. Its beside the question. .

 

5. Lets get to brass tacks. .

 

6. Im absolutely certain of success. .

 

7. As you please. .

 

8. Easy does it. , .

 

9. His fingers are all thumbs. .

 

10. Is it s easy as that? ?

 

III. Match the following English idioms, proverbs and sayings with their Russian

equivalents. Make up situations to illustrate their usage.

1. scratch the surface a.

2. a snake in the grass b. ,

3. so to say/speak c. /

4. sit on the fence d.

5. to be on a slippery slope e.

6. beside oneself f.

7. a place in the sun g. .

8. Slow and steady wins the race. h.

9. Everybodys business is nobodys business. i.

10. Speech is silver, but silence is gold. j.

11. womans reason k. ,

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12.make smbs hackles rise l.

13. come up roses m. -

14. on the horizon n. .

IV. Practise the pronunciation of the following rhyme and learn it by heart.

City

by Langston Hughs

In the morning the city In the evening the city

Spreads its wings Goes to bed

Making a song Hanging lights

In stone that sings. About its head.

V. Pronounce the tongue twisters in the quickest possible way. Observe the correct

articulation of [ sw ], [ s ] and [ z ].

1. Swan swam over the sea, Swan swam back again,

Swim, swan, swim! Well swum, swan!

2. Sue sees Cecily asleep with a glass of cyder and a nice sixpenny ice by her side.

3. A lazy zebra called Desmond is dozing at the zoo.

4. [ θ ] [ i: ] [ z ] [ s ] Thieves seize skis.

Section 3

I. Listen to the dialogue and learn it by heart.





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