Word accent in english word stress system is

I. Word accent. Word accent in English.

1.
In
the English language the word accent is the constitutive function of
a word as of lexical and morphological element of a language in its
absolute form. The word accent can be observed both in monosyllabic
and polysyllabic words. For the latter it is typical to single out
one or more syllables by increasing the degree of their prominence.
Thus, the word accent organizes a word as complex auditory unit and
at the same time gives prominence to separate syllables. Such
syllables are considered to be singled out accentually (accented) or
stressed.

It is a
common knowledge that stress
or accent

means greater degree of prominence to certain syllable or syllables.
Such prominence is achieved through the greater force of exhalation
and higher level of voice pitch and slight change in the direction of
voice.

The
nature of an accent

— still represents a ground for disputes.

Gimson
believes
that the effect of prominence
is
achieved through the combination of 4 major factors: degree of
tenseness, tone, intensity and length of a vowel. The prominence of a
syllable in the languages with the rhythmic tendency is achieved by
higher muscular tension while pronouncing the given syllable.

In the European languages,
such as English, German, French, Russian the dynamic tendency in a
word accent prevails. In the Scandinavian languages the accent is
considered to be dynamic and musical. Musical character of a word
accent may be observed in Chinese, Japanese and Vietnamese languages.

So, passing
directly to the English language, it is necessary to mention, that
word accent in the English language is
dynamic
.
It is accepted practically by all the linguists. However,
experimental researches testify, and such linguists as Gimson
and
Crystal point out as well, that the word accents in English is a
complex and complicated phenomenon marked by changes in the energy,
in the voice height, characterized by qualitative and quantitative
changes. Dynamic and tonal features of the English word accent
prevail over the other characteristics.

Qualitative
and

quantitative
aspects of a stress or accent

are
important components of a word accent. In this case we deal with the
qualitative or quantitative changes of a vowel in the unstressed
syllables in comparison with the stressed ones. It is natural, that
in a stressed syllable a vowel is longer and of full quality
(possesses all the qualitative characteristics). The qualitative
aspect of an accent is revealed through the change of a colour or
quality of a vowel in the stressed position while quantitative aspect
— with the change in the length of a vowel sound.

The nature
of Russian

stress differs from
English
.
The qualitative component of an accent plays bigger role in the
system of Russian word accent as Russian vowels in the unstressed
position always undergo a qualitative reduction. While in the English
language we may find vowels of full quality in the unstressed
position (we spoke about it at our last lecture).

One more
fact that deserves our attention here is the
position

of a stress in different languages. So, according to this aspect we
may single out languages that have
fixed

stress and those whose word accent has free
character.

In the
languages with
the fixed accent
,
the position of a word accent is fixed on a concrete syllable. Thus,
for example, in the French language it is the last syllable in a word
(Paris, a cachenez, an orchestra
),
in the Finnish and Czech languages — on the first syllable
(Helsinki, the Sauna,
Карловы
Вары,
Gold Prague)
,
and in Polish — on the last but one.

In
languages with a free
stress
,
the word accent is not fixed on any concrete syllable. For example,
appetite, beginning, balloon

and
lake, weather, milk
.

It is
necessary to note, that in the English language the accent is not
only free, but even has a shifting character, i.e. carries out
semantic function, distinguishing lexical units, parts of speech,
grammar forms.

The phonologic status of a
word accent also doesn’t possess any stability in the world of
linguistics. Anyway, all the linguists are of the same opinion — the
analysis of a word accent should be carried out from the point of
view of its degree.

Thus, it is
accepted, that the English word stress has three degrees:
primary, secondary

and
weak stress
.
These ideas are reflected in the works of Jones, Gimson, Kingdon,
Torsuev, Vasiliev. Some phoneticians distinguish four degrees of a
word accent:
primary, secondary, tertiary

and
weak
stress.

Primary
accent
falls either on the third or on the second syllable from the end.

In the
majority of words
the secondary

stress falls on the syllable separated from a stressed (nuclear)
syllable by one unstressed syllable. Something like in the following
words,
pro’nunci
ֽaton,
ֽ
occupation,
governmental, patriotic
.

In many
derivative nouns the secondary accent falls on the same syllable
which has a primary accent in the initial word, i.e. in the word from
which the noun is derived:
o
rganize

o
rganization,
pec
uliar

pec
uliarity.

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Word Stress in English

CONTENTS

1. The nature of Word Stress in
English

.1 Origins of the Word Stress
and the notion of Accent

.2 Types of English Word
Stress2. Place of Word Stress in English

.1 Functions of Word Stress

.2 English accentuation
tendencies

word stress accent vowel

INTRODUCTION

«major part of second language
learners seem to reach adequate proficiency in the spheres of morphology and
syntax, still they have difficulty reaching the same proficiency level in the
fields of phonology and phonetics. Native speakers who are competent users of
the language absolutely know in what way to say a word, know how to pronounce
it. The difficulty attaining the same level as native speakers is found within
the results of interference of the mother tongue with English. The interference
of native Russian as the mother tongue is obscure in learners of English, but
not just in grammar aspect, also in pronunciation and it can be shown in the
comparative display of the word stress that this paper is partly about.this
course paper our attention will be focused on the accentual patterns of English
words. The sequence of syllables in the word is pronounced not even close or
identically. One syllable or syllables that are uttered with some prominence
than the other syllables in the very word, are meant to be stressed or in other
words accented. The correlation of prominences of different syllables in a word
is totally understood as the accentual (stress) structure of the word or its
(accentual) stress pattern.English and Russian linguists worked over the
question of word stress in English as the unique phenomenon. According to D.
Crystal the terms «… heaviness, sound pressure, force, power, strength,
intensity, amplitude, prominence, emphasis, accent, stress» tend to be used
synonymously by most writers. According to G.P. Torsuev the notions
«stressed» and «prominent» should not be used as the
synonyms. The effect of prominence, states the linguist, is made by some
phonetic features of sounds, which have nothing to do with the actual word or
sentence stress.

The actuality
of the investigation may be argued by the fact that nowadays the great
attention is paid to the research of accentual structure of English words.
Because stress or accent fulfill enormous functions of formation words and
compound words. The main aim of the course paper is to clarify types of
stress, places and degrees of word stress, factors and functions of word
stress.

The practical value
of this course paper is that the practical results and conclusions can be used
at the seminars on theoretical and practical phonetics and
lexicology.conclusion all important deductions both of theoretical and of
practical character conformably to the studying sphere of phonetics have been
summed up and formulated.contains of English, Russian and American phoneticians
and linguists, and information from the Internet» devoted to the theory of
phonology, phonetics and intonation as such.

CHAPTER 1. The nature of Word stress
in English

1.1 Origins of the
Word Stress and the notion of Accent

spoken language has a unique
division into segments like vowels and consonants. As we utter them, we make
use of wide range of tones of voice. The speech features that are higher than
the sound segments are length, stress, pitch, intonation, rhythm and juncture.
Here we are describing the nature of word stress.sequence of syllables in the
word is not pronounced identically. The syllable or syllables which are uttered
with more prominence than the other syllables of the word are said to be
stressed or accented. Stress in the isolated word is termed word stress; stress
in connected speech is termed sentence stress.first we have to find out the
meaning of the notions: word stress, intonation, accent. «Different
authors define stress differently. B.A. Bogoroditsky, for instance, defined stress
as an increase of energy, accompanied by an increase of expiratory and
articulatory activity. D. Jones defined word stress as the degree
of force, which is accompanied by a strong force of exhalation and gives an
impression of loudness. H. Sweet also stated that stress, is connected
with the force of breath. According to A.C. Gimson, any or all of four factors
achieve the effect of prominence: force, tone, length and vowel color.native
English listeners, the most important syllable in a word is the stressed
syllable, the primary cue for identifying the word. This makes stress the most
important pronunciation topic. In addition, the characteristics of stressed and
unstressed syllables in single words are mirrored in rhythm. Word stress
is described as a communicatively important pronunciation topic, bridging the
continuum between segmentals (consonants and vowels) and suprasegmentals
(rhythm and intonation)» [20; 17].A.M. suggested another description. He
states that «the word stress can be defined as the singling out of
one or more syllables in а word, which is accompanied by the change of the
force of utterance, pitch of the voice, qualitative and quantitative
characteristics of the vowel sound» [4].the most full and correct
definition can be found in the Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics. «A
term used in phonetics to refer to the degree of force used in producing a
syllable. The usual distinction is between stressed and unstressed syllables,
the former being more prominent than the latter (and marked in transcription
with a raised vertical line, [c]. The prominence is usually due to an increase
in loudness of the stressed syllable, but increases in length and often pitch
may contribute to the overall impression of prominence. In popular usage,
‘stress’ is usually equated with an undifferentiated notion of ‘emphasis’ or
‘strength’» [13; 454].notion of stress is supposed to close enough to the
meaning of intonation. Still there exists a huge difference. The difference
between stress and intonation is that » …stress is the relative loudness
of parts of speech where intonation is the variation in the pitch of different
parts of speech. Linguists generally believe that there are about 3 to 4 levels
of stress in the English language. In most cases, stress does not really change
the meaning of words and is more or less associated with the dialect or accent
being used» [8; 138]. There are some cases where this assumption is not
valid — see the table 1.1.

1.1. Examples in
English, where the stress changes the meaning of the word

Loudness has an inherent pitch
component, stress, as the relative loudness, sometimes has an added pitch
variation. This extra pitch variation is called a pitch accent. An
example of a language, which contains a pronounced level of pitch accent is
Turkish. Pitch variations are used to change the stress level of a word mostly
due to rhythmic constraints imposed by the language.long as we are discussing
the notion of accent, it is reasonable to define its meaning. Accent was
originally a loan translation from Greek into Latin (a loan translation is when
each constituent of a compound in one language is translated into its
equivalent in another, and then reassembled into a new compound). » … Greek
prosōidíā (whence English
prosody) was formed from pros ‘to’ and
ōidé ‘song’ (whence English ode);
these elements were translated into Latin ad ‘to’ and cantus ‘song’ (whence
English chant, cant, cantata, canticle), giving accentus. The notion
underlying this combination of ‘to’ and ‘song’ was of a song added to speech —
that is, the intonation of spoken language. The sense of a particular mode of
pronunciation did not arise in English until the 16th century» [6; 4].the
Britannica Encyclopedia exists the following meaning of the accent notion.
» … in phonetics, that property of a syllable which makes it stand out in
an utterance relative to its neighboring syllables. The emphasis on the
accented syllable, relative to the unaccented syllables may be realized through
greater length, higher or lower pitch, a changing pitch contour, greater
loudness or a combination of these characteristics» [10;54].

«The emphasis which makes a
particular word or syllable stand out in a stream of speech — one talks
especially of an accented sound/word/syllable, or the accent(ual) pattern of a
phrase/sentence. The term is usually found in a discussion of metre (metrics),
where it refers to the ‘beats’ in a line of poetry — the accented syllables, as
opposed to the unaccented ones. But any style of spoken language could be
described with reference to the relative weight (accentuation) of its
syllables: one might talk of the ‘strongly accented’ speech of a politician,
for instance., accent is not solely a matter of loudness, but also of pitch and
duration, especially pitch: comparing the verb record (as in I’m
going to record the
tune) and the noun (I’ve got a record),
the contrast in word accent between re`cord and `record is made by the
syllables differing in loudness, length and pitch movement. The notion of pitch
accent as also been used in the phonological analysis of these languages,
referring to cases where there is a restricted distribution of tone within
words (as in Japanese). A similar use of these variables is found in the notion
of sentence accent (also called ‘contrastive accent’). This is an
important aspect of linguistic analysis, especially of intonation, because it
can affect the acceptability, the meaning, or the presuppositions of a
sentence, e.g. He was wearing a red hat could be heard as a response to
Was he wearing a red coat?
; whereas He was wearing a red hat would
respond to Was he wearing a green hat? The term stress, however,
is often used for contrasts of this kind (as in the phrases ‘word stress’
and ‘contrastive stress’). An analysis in terms of pitch accent is also
possible.total system of accents in a language is sometimes called the
accentual system, and would be part of the study of phonology. The coinage
accentology for the study of accents is sometimes found in European
linguistics. (3) In graphology, an accent is a mark placed above a letter,
showing how that letter is to be pronounced. French accents, for example,
include a distinction between é,
è and ê.
Accents are a type of diacritic» [13; 4].linguists believe that syllabic
and lexical accents do not change the meaning of words in English. However, we
know that syllabic and lexical accents are also components of linguistic
stress
along with other concepts such as syllabic and lexical sonority
variations and metrical variations. In those regards, since syllabic stress
does change the meaning of words in English, then so do accent.

1.2 Types of
English Word Stress

has various domains: the word, the
phrase, the sentence. Word accent (also called word stress or lexical stress)
is a part of the characteristic way in which a language is pronounced. Given to
a particular language system, word accent may be:

.        Fixed (like in Welsh);

.        Predictable (e.g. in
French, where it occurs regularly at the end of words, or in Czech, where it
occurs initially);

.        Movable, as in English,
which then leaves accent free to function to distinguish one word from another
that is identical segmentally (e.g. the noun permit versus the verb to
permit
).types of word stress are distinguished not only according to its
physical (acoustic) nature and degree, but also according to its position in
different words of the language. «From this point of view two types of
word stress are distinguished: fixed and free.)        In languages with fixed
word stress
the position of stress is the same in all the words. For
instance, in Czech and Lettish the main stress falls on the first syllable of
each word and grammatical form of а word; in French, stress is tied to the last
syllable of each word; in Polish, it falls on the prefinal syllable of all
words and their grammatical forms.)        In languages with free word
stress
the primary stress may fall in different words on any syllable. For
example in Russian: к`омната,
раб`ота,
матем`атика,
преподав`атель,
машиностро`ение,
окн`о; in English: `mother, ig`nore, соn`sideÐration,
ciga`rette.

Within frее word stress two subtypes
are distinguished on morphological grounds: constant and shifting.

a.      А constant stress
is one which remains on the same morpheme in different grammatical forms of а
word or in different derivatives from one and the same root. For example:
«wonder — `wondering — `wonderful — `wonderfully.

b.      А shifting stress
is one which falls on different morphemes in different grammatical forms of а
word or in different derivatives from one and the same root,is also shifted
under the influence of rhythm. For instance, Ber`lin — `Berlin `streets,
Chi`nese — a `Chinese `lantern; un`known — an `unknown writer — The `writer is
`quite un`known., accent can be used at the phrasal level to distinguish
sequences identical at the segmental level (e.g. ‘light housekeeping’ versus
‘lighthouse keeping’ or ‘blackboard’ versus ‘black board’). Finally, accent can
be used at the sentence level to draw attention to one part of the sentence
rather then another (e.g. ‘What did you sign?’ ‘I signed a contract
to do some light housekeeping.’ versus ‘Who signed a contract?’ ‘I
signed a contract to do some light housekeeping.’)» [10; 54].the auditory
level a stressed syllable is the part of the word which has a special
prominence. It is produced by a greater loudness and length, modifications in
the pitch and quality. The physical correlates are: inten sity, duration,
frequency and the formant structure. All these features can be analyzed on the
acoustic level. «Word stress can be defined as the singling out of one or
more syllables in a word, which is accompanied by the change of the force of
utterance, pitch of the voice, qualitative and quantitative characteristics of
the sound, which is usually a vowel. In different languages one of the factors
constituting word stress is usually more significant than the others. According
to the most important feature different types, of word stress are distinguished
in different languages.

) If special prominence in a
stressed syllable or syllables is achieved mainly through the intensity of
articulation, such type of stress is called dynamic, or force stress.

) If special prominence in a
stressed syllable is achieved mainly through the change of pitch, or musical
tone, such accent is called musical, or tonic. It is characteristic of the
Japanese, Korean and other oriental languages.

) If special prominence in a
stressed syllable is achieved through the changes in the quantity of the
vowels, which are longer in the stressed syllables than in the unstressed ones,
such type of stress is called quantitative.

) Qualitative type of stress is
achieved through the changes in the quality of the vowel under stress» [4;
51].word stress is traditionally defined as dynamic, but in fact, the special
prominence of the stressed syllables is manifested in the English language not
only through the increase of intensity, but also through the changes in the
vowel quantity, consonant and vowel quality and pitch of the voice.the
viewpoint of phonology, the main function of stress is to provide a
means of distinguishing degrees of emphasis
or contrast in sentences (sentence stress),
as in The big man looks angry; the term contrastive stress is often used
for this function. Many pairs of words and word
sequences can also be distinguished using stress variation (lexical stress or
word stress), as in the contrast between
An increase in pay is needed and I’m going to increase his pay or
the distinction between `black `bird and `black-bird.analytical question here,
which attracted a great deal of attention in the middle decades of the
twentieth century, is how many degrees of stress need to be recognized in order
to account for all such contrasts, and to show the interrelationships between
words derived from a common root, such as `telegraph, tele`graphic and
te`legraphy.а purely phonetic point of view polysyllabic word has as many
degrees of prominence as there are syllables in it. А. С. Gimson gives the
following distribution of the degrees of stress in the word
«ехаmination»:most prominent syllable is marked by figure 1, the
second degree of prominence — by figure 2, then goes 3, and so on. However, not
all these degrees of prominence are linguistically relevant.majority of British
phoneticians distinguish three degrees of word stress in English:

.        primary (the strongest
stress),

.        secondary (the second
strongest) and

.        weak stress (аll the other
degrees of stress).syllables bearing either primary or secondary stress are
termed stressed, while syllables with weak stress are саlled, somewhat
inaccurately, unstressed.the American structuralist tradition, four such
degrees
are usually distinguished, and analyzed as stress phonemes,
namely (from strongest to weakest):

(1) ‘primary’,

(2) ‘secondary’,

(3) ‘tertiary’ and

(4) ‘weak’.contrasts are, however,
demonstrable only on words in isolation, as in the compound elevator operator —
one of several such phrases originally cited to justify analyses of this kind.views
recognized different kinds and degrees of stress, the simplest
postulating a straight stressed v. unstressed contrast, referring to other
factors (such as intonation and vowel quality) to explain such sequences as
elevator operator. «In distinctive feature theories of phonology, the
various degrees of stress are assigned to the syllables of words by means of
the repeated application of rules (such as ‘lexical’, ‘compound’ and ‘nuclear’ stress
rules
). Some analysts maintain there is a distinction to be made between
linguistic contrasts involving loudness (which they refer to as ‘stress’) and
those additionally involving pitch (which they refer to as «accent»).
All the examples given above, they would argue, are matters of accent, not stress,
because contrasts in pitch variation are normally involved. Similar problems
arise in the analysis of tone languages.the context of rhythm studies, the
notion of a stress-timed language is often cited, i.e. one where the stresses
fall at roughly regular intervals within an utterance. In analyzing such a
language in this way, the notion of silent stress is sometimes invoked. The
reason is to handle cases where the omission of a stressed syllable in
colloquial speech can none the less be ‘felt’; a regularly cited case in the
abbreviated version of thank you, which is said to be the unstressed
residue of an unspoken stressed + unstressed combination. A sequence of
syllables constituting a rhythmical unit, containing one primary stress, is
known as a stress group. In metrical phonology a stress-foot is a
string containing as its first element a
stressed syllable, followed by zero or more unstressed syllables symbolized by
Σ. The most prominent element in the stress foot is called the head. It
should be noted that ‘foot’, in this context, refers to an underlying
unit, whose phonetic interpretation varies according to the theoretical
approach., in this approach, is a rule, which eliminates stresses produced by
foot construction. When two stressed syllables are immediately adjacent, the
situation is described as stress clash. Speakers have a tendency to avoid
stress clash; for example, the word thirteen is normally stressed on the
second syllable, but in the phrase thirteen men, the stress shifts to
the first syllable» [13; 456].languages, stressed and unstressed syllables
differences can be distinguished by differences in length, pitch, loudness, or
vowel quality. As the chart below shows, English makes use of all these
distinctions. See table 1.2.

1.2.
Characteristics of levels of stress in words

, wedistinguished the fact: if а
word contains more than one syllable, the relative prominence of those
syllables differs. There may be one prominent syllable in а word as compared
with the rest of the syllables of the same word (im`portant), or two equally
prominent syllables (`misbe`have), or two unequally prominent syllables
(е`xami`nation), or more than two prominent syllables (`unre`lia`bility). Such
syllables are said to be stressed, but in every unique way.

CHAPTER 2. Place of word Stress in
English

.1 Functions of Word Stress

any phonological unit, word stress
performs three functions: constitutive, distinctive and identificatory.

.        «Word stress has а
constitutive function as it arranges syllables into а word by forming its
stress pattern. Without а definite stress pattern а word stops being а word and
becomes just а sequence of syllables.

.        Word stress has а
distinctive function because it helps to differentiate the meaning of words of
the same morphological structure. The opposition of the primary stress and weak
stress can differentiate the parts of speech, like:n — subject vn — object vn —
import vn — insult vn — export vn — progress vn — combine vn — conduct vn —
frequent vn — present voppositions may differentiate the actual meaning of the
some words:

`billow (naval term) — be`low
(down);

`artist — ar`tist.opposition of the
second primary stress
to weak stress is also distinctive:

`re`cover (put a new cover on) —
re`cover (get well again);

`restrain (strain again) — re`strain
(keep in check).primary stress opposed to the secondary stress
can sometimes differentiate the meaning as well:

`recre`ation (creating anew) —
recre`ation (amusement).

А compound noun is differentiated
from а free word combination by the opposition of tertiary stress to primary
stress
:

`black-board — `black `board;

`stong-box — `strong `box;

`goldfish — `gold `fish;

`blackbird — `black `bird., however,
the second component of such compound nouns is considered to have weak stress,
the distinctive function in such minimal pairs will be realized through the
opposition of weak stress (in the `compound) and рrimary stress.

.        Word stress has an
identificatory function because the stress patterns of words enable people to
identify definite combinations of sounds as meaningful linguistic units. А
distortion of the stress patterns may hamper understanding or produce а strange
accent» [4; 57].the terms of our research work it is necessary to mention
that «the accentual structure of English words is liable to instability
due to the different origin of several layers in the Modern English word-stock.
In Germanic languages the word stress originally fell on the initial syllable
or the second syllable, the root syllable in the English words with prefixes.
This tendency was called recessive. Most English words of Anglo-Saxon
origin as well as the French borrowings (dated back to the 15th century) are
subjected to this recessive tendency. Unrestricted recessive tendency is
observed in the native English words having no prefix, e.g. mother,
daughter, brother, swallow, etc
., in assimilated French borrowings, e.g. reason,
colour, restaurant
. Restricted recessive tendency marks English words with
prefixes, e.g. foresee, begin, withdraw, apart. A great number of words
of Anglo-Saxon origin are monosyllabic or disyllabic, both notional words and
form words. They tend to alternate in the flow of speech, e.g. ‘don’t
be’lieve he’s ‘right
.rhythm of alternating stressed and unstressed
syllables gave birth to the rhythmical tendency in the present-day English
which caused the appearance of the secondary stress in the multisyllabic French
borrowings, e.g. revolution, organi’sation, assimilation, etc. It also
explains the placement of primary stress on the third syllable from the end in
three — and four-syllable words, e.g. ‘cinema, ‘situate, ar’ticulate.
The interrelation of both the recessive and the rhythmical tendencies is traced
in the process of accentual assimilation of the French borrowed word personal
on the diachronic level, e.g. perso’nal — ‘perso’nal -‘personal.appearance
of the stress on the first syllable is the result of the recessive tendency and
at the same time adaptation to the rhythmical tendency. The recessive
tendency being stronger, the trisyllabic words like personal gained the only
stress on the third syllable from the end, e.g. ‘family, ‘library, faculty,
‘possible.
accentual patterns of the words territory, dictionary, necessary
in American English with the primary stress on the first syllable and the
tertiary stress on the third are other examples illustrating the correlation of
the recessive and rhythmical tendencies. Nowadays we witness a great number of
variations in the accentual structure of English multisyllabic words as a
result of the interrelation of the tendencies. The stress on the initial
syllable is caused by the diachronical recessive tendency or the stress on the
second syllable under the influence of the strong rhythmical tendency of the
present day, e.g. ‘hospitable — ho’spitable, ‘distribute — dis’tribute,
‘aristocrat — a’ristocrat, ‘laryngoscope — la’ryngoscope
.third tendency was
traced in the instability of the accentual structure of English word stress,
the retentive tendency: a derivative often retains the stress of the
original or parent word, e.g. ‘similar — as’simitate, recom’mend —
recommend’dation
«. Here we recognized three main tendencies in
English: retentive, rhythmical and recessive, which greatly affect the stress
putting and in the end distinct pronunciation.

2.2 English
accentuation tendencies

stress in English is free, but the
«freedom» of its position is regulated by four accentuation
tendencies as а result of its historical development. The first and the oldest
of them is the recessive tendency, according to which, stress falls on
the first syllable of а word which is generally the root syllable (`father,
`sister, `husband, `water, `window,` ready, `clever), or on the second syllable
in words which have а prefix of nо special meaning (bе`fore, bе`come, а`mong,
for`get, mis`take).recessive tendency is characteristic of words of
Germanic origin. It has also influenced many disyllabic and trisyllabic words
borrowed from French, (`colour, `marriage, `excellent, `garage, `ballet,
ab`stain, de`pend, ob`tain, sur`prise, re`main, pro`duce, com`pose). But:
ma`сhinе, tech`nique, ро`lice.second tendency is the result of the mutual
influence of Germanic and French accentual patterns. It is known as the rhythmic
tendency,
which manifests itself in stressing the third syllable from the
end, (`family, `unity, in`tensity, ро`litical, а`bility, а`cademy, de`mocracy,
in`finitive, com`parison, i`dentify).stress is especially common for verbs with
the suffixes -аtе, -fy,

ize, (`situate, ar`ticulate,
`qualify, `organize).accentuation of words ending in the suffix —ion
with its variants —sion, -tion, -ation, is also rhythmical in its
origin. Nowadays stress falls on the prefinal syllable, but it used to be on
the third syllable from the end as the spelling still shows, (`nation,
ос`casion, о`pinion).in three and four syllable words is called historically,
or diachronically, rhythmical (`radical, ос`casion, i`dentity).words with more
than four syllables we often find the secondary stress, which falls on the
first or second syllable. It mау be called synchronically rhythmical stress
(ad`mini`stration, re`sposi`bility, `popu`larity, `physic`ology, `indi`visible,
etc).long polysyllabic words like `indi`visi`bility, `inter`conti`nental, `unfa`mili`arity,
`inter`com`muni`cation, the stress on the 3rd (2nd)
syllable from the end is diachronically rhythmical while the other two stresses
are synchronically rhythmical. There has been а constant struggle between the
recessive and the rhythmic tendencies, the outcome being threefold:

·        an accentual
compromise in words like enemy, cinema, recognize, diction(a)ry;

·        аdefinite victory,
in the great majority of words, for the rhythmic tendency, articulate, аcademy,
аbility, еÐхаmination,
visibility, Ðесоnomical;

·        аdefinite victory
for the recessive tendency in аsmall number of four- and five- syllable words,
(advocacy, candidature, cannibalism, rationalism, characterize).third, retentive,
tendency
consists in the retention of the primary stress of the parent word
in the derivatives, person — personal. More commonly, it is retained in the
derivative as а secondary stress, possible — possibility, арpreciate —
ар`рrесiation, nation — `nationality.is one more tendency in English that
determines the place and the degree of word stress — the semantic tendency.
It consists in stressing the most important elements of compound words.
Compounds are words composed of two separable roots, which may be spelled as
one word, with а hyphen, or two separate words. Compound nouns usually have а
single stress on the first element, `birthday, `blacksmith, `apple tree,
`suitcase, `booking оffiсе, `Newcastle, `music-hall, gui`tar player (but not
`banjo player), `make up, etc.

In English there are words with two
primary stresses, because both of their elements are semantically
important. Неrе belong:

.        words with separable
(«strong») prefixes, (`re-`write, `vice-`president, `anti-`fascist,
`ex-`minister, `sub-`editor, `under`estimate, `over`burden); negative prefixes
(`disap`pear, `un`known, `irres`ponsible, `il`literate, `inar`tistic,
`non-`smoker, `misunder`stand. But: mis`take, im`possible, dis`courage;

.        numerals from
«`thir`teen» to «`nine`teen»;

.        compound numerals
(`twenty-`one, `ffty-`three, etc);

.        compound verbs, (to `give
`in, `get `uр, `take `оff, etc);

.        compound adjectives
(`well-`known, `blue-`eyed, `red-`hot; `first-`class, `good-`looking, etc).
But: `childlike;

.        а small number оf compound
nouns (`gas-`stove, `ice-`cream, `absent-`mindedness); But: `note-book, man`kind,
etc.nouns of three elements have а single primary stress on the second element
due to the rhythmic tendency (`hot`water`bottle, `waste`рареr`basket,
`lost`property`оffiсе, etc)., all the above-mentioned double-stressed words
lose one of the primary stresses in word соmbinations and sentences under the
influence of Еnglish rhythm:

(an `аbsent-minded `man — `sо absent
-ˎminded;`went up ˎstairs — I met her ˎupstairs;

`rооm sixˎteen — sixteen ˎbooks).is
worth noting that stress alone, unaccompanied by any other differentiating
factor, does not seem to provide a very effective means of distinguishing
words. And this is, probably, the reason why oppositions of this kind are
neither regular nor productive.

CONCLUSION

·        Stress refers to
the relative perceived prominence of a unit of spoken language;

·        stress has
distinctive function in English (`produce — pro`duce);

·        the production of a
stressed syllable usually involves several aspects:

.        an increase of articulatory
force, increased rate of airflow, greater muscular tension in the articulators;

.        greater intensity, higher
pitch, and longer duration are typically involved;

·        we recognize
several degrees of stress — primary stress, secondary stress, and unstress;

·        When determining
the stress of a word, we have to consider several aspects: if the word is
simple or complex, its word class, the number of syllables, and the structure
of the syllable.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

1.       Арнольд И.В. Лексикология
современного английского языка, — М., Высшая школа., — 1986.

.        Борискина
О.О.
Theoretical phonetics: study guide for second year students, — Воронеж,
— 2007.

3.       Леонтьева С. Ф.
Теоретическая фонетика английского языка: Учеб. для студентов вечер. и заоч.
отд. педвузов.2-е изд. испр. и доп. — М.:Высш. школа, 1988 — 271 c.

.        Стрельников А.М.
Теоретическая фонетика английского языка: Учебно-методическое пособие, — Нижний
Тагил., 2008.

5.       Теоретическая фонетика
английского языка: Учебник для студ. ин-тов ииностр. яз./М. А. Соколова, К. П.
Гiнтовт, И. С. Тихонова, Р. М. Тихонова. — Гуманит. изд. центр ВЛАДОС, 1996. —
247-256 c.

6.       Ayto, John Word
origins. The hidden histories of English words from A to Z, — London, — 2005.

7.       Aitchison, Jean
Language change: progress or decay?, — Edinburg: Cambridge university press. —
2004.

8.       Beigi, Homayoon
Fundamentals of speaker recognition New York, 2011.

.        Brinton,
Laurel J. The linguistic structure of modern
English / Laurel J. Brinton, Donna M. Brinton. — Philadelphia, 2010.

10.     Britannica Encyclopedia
volume 1, — London, 1773.

11.     Brown G. Principles of
Language Learning and Teaching / G. Brown. — San Francisco: S. Fr. State
University, 1987.

12.     Burlak T. F.
Stylistics: lexical, syntactical and text levels / T. F. Burlak, A. P. Devkin,
L. S. Krokhakeva. — Minsk, 1996.

13.     Crystal, David A
dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics, 6th edition, — London,
2008.

14.     Crystal, David The
Cambridge encyclopedia of the English language, — London: BCA, — 1996.

15.     Dean, Geoff Improving
learning in secondary English / G. Dean. — London, 2004.

16.     Dale, Paulette English
pronunciation made simple, NY: Longman, — 2005.

17.     Esposito, Anna
Cross-modal analysis of speech, gestures, gaze and facial expressions, — NY:
Springer, — 2008.

18.     Hymes Dell H. Essays in
the History of linguistique anthropology / H. Dell Hymes. — Amsterdam:
Philadelphia Benjamin’s, 1983.

19.     Galperin I. R. Stylistics
/ I. R. Galperin. — Moscow, 1981.

20.     Lane, Linda
Pronunciation. A practical approach. Tips for teaching, — London: Pearson,
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James The
Rutledge
handbook
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stylistics / J.
Simpson. — London, 2011.

Emphasis is an emphasis on one of the syllables in a word. It can also fall on a whole word, phrase, word in the sentence to amplify the semantic load.

Stress in English

Accents. What for?

In every language there are different rulesstatement of stresses. English is not an exception. And each language is different from the other in the rules for stating the accents. For example, in French stress always falls on the last syllable, and, for example, in Latin it is put on the second or third from the end. In Polish it falls on the penultimate syllable. This is called fixed stress. But it is important to know that there are also non-fixed accents in words. A vivid example of this is our native Russian language, which has a number of special features of styling. Therefore, it is very difficult for foreigners to study. After all, our native language is complex in its grammar statement of stresses.

Let’s return to accentology in Russian. Accents can fall absolutely on any syllable in the word. A special rule for stating the accents in words in Russian does not exist, as, for example, in Latin. But there are some points that you can rely on when studying. A stress in Russian can distinguish one word from another, it can be the same in one-root words, but at the same time it can differ. Russian is so complex that even native speakers do not always know how to pronounce a particular word correctly.

But the question arises: «Why do you need this stress?» Everything is extremely simple! After all, it allows a person to understand and distinguish words in a violent stream of speech.

Phrase accent in English

Stress in English

As for stress in the words of the English language,then there are also a number of rules and features. For a competent statement of stresses in the English language, one must clearly understand the system of splitting words into syllables. It is important to note that in this regard, English is very similar to the Russian language, because they both have a free stress. This can be quite difficult for the foreigner.

To make it easier for you to learn English, a person should know:

  • stress;
  • type of syllable (closed or open).

As in Russian, English words haveopen and closed syllables, and to define them is a fairly easy task. After all, open syllables end with a vowel sound, and closed ones with a consonant.

In general, there are two most important rules:

  1. One word can contain only one main thingstress! Of course, you can find more than one accent in the English word. But it will always contain the main stress and only then secondary, which are weaker than the first and occur in very long words.
  2. The stress in English, like in any other, falls on a vowel or a vowel! Of course, there are exceptions to the rules, but their number is very small.

It is important to note that in English someThe elements of a vocabulary can be hit more often or less often. For example, such a part of a word as a prefix in the noun is under stress much more often than the prefix in the verb. There are also suffixes, which, as a rule, are percussion. We offer their list:

  • -ate;
  • -ete;
  • -ite;
  • -ute.

The rules of stress in English

The rules of stress in English

Learning the grammar, it should be remembered that thisThe section is important in colloquial speech and less significant when working with texts. There are a number of rules for stating the stresses in English. By sticking to them, you can correctly put emphasis on words. This is incredibly important in mastering a foreign language. So, the rules are:

  1. On the letter, the stress is placed on the third from the end of the syllable. Here is an example of a word: abIlity, university, socIology, and so on.
  2. In words of French origin, the stress will remain unchanged. For example, the words: hotEl, guitAr. These words retain their French accent.
  3. Stress can be placed after the prefixes. For example, a-lone, be-fore, o-mit, under-stand.

It is important to note that some suffixes canto exert some influence on the statement of stresses. For example, -ry has the property of pushing the stress on the fourth syllable from the end of the word. Vivid examples are the words: ORdinary voCAbulary.

Or the suffix -ic usually contains an accent. For example, draMAtic symBOlic.

Accents in derivative words

In derived words, stress can remainthe same as in the original word, but at the same time it may change. For example, in the case of creating a noun from a verb or vice versa, the stress often remains unchanged. For example, the noun «deNIal», transformed into the verb «deNY», retains its initial stress. But in derivative words, it is still possible that the stress shifts. For example, the noun «OBject», transformed into the verb «obJEct», shifts the stress on the second syllable from the end of the word.

Logical stress in English

Focus on the first, second syllables

In English, the stress falls on the first syllable in the following cases:

  • Almost all nouns and adjectives that have two syllables are given an accent on the first.
  • The emphasis on the second syllable is almost all verbs, which include in the total sum all the same two.

Verbal stress

The verbal accent in English is the emphasis on the syllable in the vocabulary. Long units can contain two stresses: the main and the secondary (it is often called an incidental one).

When learning new words, it is important to remember the basicaccent. And you need to realize that even in single-root words stresses can change. From how you learn this topic, depends on the perception of your speech by other people, because accentology helps to separate a set of letters into understandable word combinations.

Verbal accent in English

About phrasal stress

Phrase accent in English is the pronunciation of individual words more emotionally than others, which are called unstressed.

As a rule, in English, the shock words are:

  • nouns;
  • verbs (semantic);
  • adjectives;
  • demonstrative pronouns;
  • interrogative pronouns;
  • adverbs;
  • numerals.

Usually unaccented are: personal pronouns, articles, unions, auxiliary verbs, prepositions.

You can say that the phrase accent is in the same functions as the verbal one. It is divided into two types: centralized and decentralized.

The centralized view isas the center of the word or many words on which the speaker makes an accent. With a decentralized type, the speaker focuses on the whole sentence. This separates not the concrete word, but the entire phrase.

The degree of phrase accent in words

In English, it is customary to distinguish three degrees of phrasal stress, which include the following:

  • The main thing. Gets the greatest accent.
  • Secondary. Gets less stress.
  • Weak. Gets even less strong emphasis.

As a rule, the more important a word is, the stronger the speaker should sing it out during oral speech.

Stress in the words of English

On the logical stress

But it is important to note that, if necessary, the speaker, of course, has the right to give accent to any word, even if it is included in the list of unaccented.

First, it must be said that a huge rolein English speech plays intonation. The function of intonation is the transmission of a hue of the said speaking phrase. This is the main difference between Russian and English. After all, Russian intonation is perceived as boring and flat. And English contains the pace of speech, logical pauses and, of course, the tone.

As already mentioned, the logical stress inEnglish — these are intentionally selected words for emotional coloring. In speech there is an increase and a lowering of intonation. It is important to note that there are also mixed for making oral speech of special brightness and saturation.

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