- 4) in exclamations
- e.g. That is very interesting!
- 5) in the second part of alternative questions
- e.g. Do you study English or French?
- 6) in the first part of disjunctive questions (sometimes in the second too)
- e.g. The text is easy isn’t it?
- 7) in greetings on meetings
- e.g. Good morning!
THE USE OF THE RISING TONE (Glide Up) - The rising tone in unemphatic speech is uncategoric and expresses incompleteness, indetermination and doubt. It is used:
- in general questions
- e.g. Are you tired?
- 2) in statements which are grammatically finished but the sense of which is not complete
- e.g. She was there.
- 3) in requests
- e.g. Let me go.
4) in the first part of alternative questions - 4) in the first part of alternative questions
- e.g. Shall we go home by busor by train?
- 5) in the second part of disjunctive questions
- e.g. You are a first-year student aren’t you?
- 6) in sentences with enumeration (except for the last enumerated word)
- e.g. This is my family: my wife, my son, my daughter, and I.
- 7) in non-final sense-groups when they are closely connected in meaning with the following sense-groups
- e.g. When angrycount a hundred.
- 8) on saying good-bye (parting)
- e.g. Good bye.Good afternoon.
REDUCTION - Sounds in connected speech can change their quality, quantity or even fall out when unstressed. This phenomenon is called reduction. We distinguish three degrees (types) of reduction:
- Quantitative reduction is a change of the length of a vowel in an unstressed position,
- e.g. [ı:]-[I]-[ı]
- 2) Qualitative reduction is the change of the quality of a vowel in unstressed position,
- e.g. [fo:]-[fə], [kæn]-[kən]
- These two types represent partial reduction.
- Zero (complete) reduction is the falling out of an unstressed vowel,
- e.g. [kæn]-[kn], [æm]-[m]
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