I Pa Transcription
I Pa Transcription
I Pa Transcription
Transcription
Practice
Class materials
and exercises
for B2.2 classes
taught by Jonathan Lewis
and Konrad Szczeniak
Konrad Szczeniak
Universidade do Porto
Uniwersytet lski
2010/2011
trnskrpn prkts
Charts
Front
i
High
Central
Mid
Back
Low
Bilabial
Plosives
-V
+V
Labiodental
-V
Fricatives
+V
Dental
-V
+V
Alveolar
-V
+V
Affricates
Approximants
Nasals
Liquids
Glides
Palatal
-V
Velar
+V
Glottal
+V
-V
+V
n
l, r
-V
1. 1. Vowel symbols
i
tree
three
feed
fish
dished
finished
cat
mat
rat
car
star
far
clock
lock
stop
horse
fourth
door
book
pull
full
boot
pool
fool
computer
doctor
arrive
bird
third
person
egg
red
very
up
sun
funny
myth
muck
rot
run
bottle
feet
fit
tar
pub
dot
gosh
fun
butcher
shore stop
(A) lard
(B) done
(C) sat
(D) set
(E) sieve
father
gun
Nazi
dead
leave
parent
fall
clap
heat
meat
jar
stub
plaid
bet
Steve
3. Practice. Transcribe the vowels in the following sentences. You may ignore the consonants
(simply write their spelling letters), diphthongs and stresses.
Love thy neighbor as yourself, but choose your neighborhood.
/pt_n_ti z m_st ba mst p_pl bikz ts dr_st n vr_lz n t l_ks lak w_k/
I don't think anyone should write their autobiography until after they're dead.
When the letter u is pronounced as a high-back vowel, it is usually the short //: bull,
u-e
/u/
But when a syllable containing the /u/ sound is followed by the letter e in the spelling,
the sound will be /u/: absolute, cute, crude, dude, exude, immune, include, mute, nuke,
rude, use, etc.
spelled ew
/u/
spelled oo
/u/
spelled oo
//
final
/u/
book, good, foot, hood, hook, look, nook, shook, stood, took, wood, wool
both //&/u/
idiosyncratic
bloom, boom, boost, boot, booth, booze, cool, doom, food, fool, gloom, goof, goose, hoot,
loop, loot, loose, mood, moon, moot, noose, ooze, pool, proof, school, shoot, smooth,
snoop, soon, spook, spoon, stool, swoon, swoop, tool, tooth, troop, zoom
Words usually end in the long /u/: argue, avenue, bamboo, boo, coo, loo, peekaboo,
shoo, taboo, tattoo, too, voodoo, Yahoo, zoo, etc.
broom, groom, roof, room; in AmE also root, soot, whoop
// woman, wolf
/u/ womb, tomb, fruit, group, soup, suit
2. Exercises
Minimal pairs. The words below differ only in one sound (the /u/-//contrast). Complete the table.
wood /wd/- wooed /wud/
____ /fl/- fool
/ful/
loose woman
cool looking dude
Fruit of the Loom
cute Susan
useful fool
groovy music
ee
ea
ie / ei
e-CONSONANT-e
Looks like /i/ but is really pronounced as //: sieve, mischief, counterfeit, foreign
Looks like // but is really pronounced as /i/: liter, kilo, and -ique words antique,
physique, pique, technique
Plus, there are some tricky examples of Irish names: Sean /n/, Sinead /ned/
2. Exercises
2.1 Match and transcribe homophones
(words with different meanings and
spellings, but pronounced the same). Not all
the words have a match!
piece
see
beat
beech
meat
week
heel
sweet
pick
mitt
pique
peak
sea
weak
beet
beach
bit
meet
suite
hill
heal
peace
peek
2.2 What problem do the words sheet, beach, and piece pose? Which words should they not be
confused with?
2.3 Transcribe the following
speed limit
feeling of bliss
/bin/ /bn/
/rim/ /rm/
/lik/ /lk/
/dim/ /dm/
Central
Back
High
Mid
Low
2. Patterns
// (the schwa) is the most frequent vowel in English. It usually appears in unstressed syllables, but
never in stressed syllables: about, afraid, confuse, etc. It is not associated with any specific letter in the
spelling (in fact, it can be spelled with any vowel letter: ability, seven, dinosaur, suppose), but there are
some useful patterns to remember. For example, if a word ends in -er or -or, this ending is 99% of the
time a schwa: mother, cooler, builder, editor, color (colour), etc. The indefinite article a/an is pronounced
with the schwa: / bed/, /n pl/.
// is usually spelled as the letter a: ban, cat, dab, hag, stack, tab, etc.
// is usually spelled as the letter u: bun, cut, dub, hug, stuck, tub, etc.
//
2. Exercises
2.1 Homonyms
What homonyms do the words son, won, and none, have?
2.2 Transcribe the following
an ugly cover-up
a ton of /v/ money
a stunning comeback
black color
troubled young lad
bloodbath
happy go // lucky
country cousin
an unloved son
front man
stuck in the // mud
number one
bad blood
funny monkey
son-of-a-gun
/ivn z hu dnt knsd mselvz fnz v led zepln gri t ts wn v gretst bndz
v l tam/
/tli ft ped swtt frm bes t lid gt kriet dul lid gt lanp w def bek/
/fl dptr v bek frm grup n sksti sks jdbdz w tad frm knstnt
tr n rkd n d bgn t wand dan/
/ped wntd t fm supgrup w hmself n bek n gtz n huz rm sekn drm
ki mun n besst dn entwsl/
measure me
judge
mother m
thing
4. Diphthongs
1. Diphthong symbols. Study the following diphthongs symbols. Think of other examples of words
that are pronounced with these diphthongs.
e bay, hey
boy, boil
a now, how
e bear, dare
a bye, lie
(=o) glow, go
ear, cheer
sure, lure
/slmdg mljn___r/
/ grin m___l/
/lst n trnzl___n/
/br___kbk m___ntn/
/eksp____r n lv/
/gldi___t /
/mdnat k___b___/
/d___ndrs lieznz/
3. Practice. Transcribe the following words (each one contains a diphthong), and put them in the
following lines.
make
finds
no
my
lives
close
James
Brown
closer
White
baby
I(x2)
In middle positions, between vowels, usually // (e.g. rather, mother, bother, together,
wither), but of course, there are exceptions (ether). In middle positions, preceded by a
consonant, most often // (anthem, menthol, panther, synthetic, filthy, stealthy, wealthy).
final
In final positions, most often //: (birth, both, breadth, death, wealth, seventh, truth, wealth).
One common exception is smooth. Words like bequeath or betroth are pronounced with // or
// depending on the speaker.
cloth clothe
teeth teethe
writhe
loath - loathe
scathe
ordinal th:
sixth, tenth
ordinal eth:
twentieth, thirtieth
2. Exercises
1. What is the difference (in use) between the two ordinal suffixes?
2. The longest cluster of consonants in the final position in English is found in the words /skss/ and
two . up!
6. Nasals
1. The velar nasal // (ring tailed n symbol, A.K.A. engma)
In which of the words below is the consonant following the // mute?
sing - sink
sting - stink
think - thing
single - twinkle
Washington - plankton ringer - drinker
bunker - hunger
prankster - gangster
angle - ankle
banger - bunker
monger - bonkers
Observation #1: After //, the consonant ____ is often deleted, while ____ never is.
Observation #2: In final positions, ______ after // is always deleted.
What happens when a // is followed by suffixes -er, -ing, -ly, -able?
singer
singing
swimmingly
hanger
hangover
hangout
singable
singe
hinge
ginger
crumb
lamb
chamber
ember
solemn
solemnity
/skt sfrini /
/mpen/
/fr, fr/
/kwa/
In words ending in -pture (eg. capture, sculpture, scripture) and cture (picture, lecture, structure), the t
can be pronounced as either /t/ or //.
Transcribe the following phrases.
childish selfishness
charming and chivalrous
watch the show
cash a check
English teacher
cherries in a dish
national chess championships
just a conjecture
Winchester College Chapel Choir
social age structure
8. Suffixes
1. Nominal suffixes.
1.1 What words are transcribed next to each suffix?
-age d /bgd/
-al l /wdrl/
-ance ns /ksep tns/
-ant nt /p l knt/
-ee i /n t vjui/
-er r /titr/
-ism zm / ktvzm/
-ess1 s / la ns/
-sion n /sen n/
-ure r /klo r/
-tion n /gn n/
n /kohi n/
1.2 Transcribe these words by consulting the above list of nominal suffixes.
childhood
departure
divorcee
creature
refusal
livelihood
erasure
capitalism
evacuee
absentee
management
judgment
adjustment
nationhood
marriage
senescence
denture
highness
servant
fluorescence
firmness
marker
princess
worker
actress
1.3 Transcribe a few other nouns with some of the above suffixes.
2. Adjectival suffixes.
2.1 What words are transcribed next to each suffix?
-able bl /lek t bl/
-al l /n ml/
-er r /nitr/
-ese iz /mltiz/
-ette et /koket/
-ic k /runk/
-ous s /d s/
is /mltis/
-ish /tal d/
-est st /klinst/
-ful fl /jus fl/
-ive v /rpres v/
-worthy w i /trstw i/
2.2 Transcribe these words by consulting the above list of nominal suffixes.
likeable
natural
ruthless
biggish
compatible
Portuguese
starlet
fastest
careless
tasteful
abysmal
countless
ironic
handsome
awesome
awful
droplet
impressive
foolish
brunette
cautious
Usage note on -ess. Since at least the 14th century, English has borrowed nouns with this feminine suffix from French (French esse) and also applied that ending to existing words, most frequently agent nouns in -or or -er. Some of the earliest borrowings noble or religious titles - still flourish, as princess, duchess, abbess, and prioress. The use of -ESS words has declined sharply in
the latter half of the 20th century.
Among those words that are rarely used or are either rejected or discouraged in modern American English are ambassadress,
ancestress, authoress, poetess, sculptress, and stewardess. Jewess and Negress are rarely used today and are generally considered
offensive.
Some nouns in -ESS are still current: actress (but some women prefer actor); adventuress; enchantress; governess (only in its
child-care sense); heiress (largely in journalistic writing); hostess (but women who conduct radio and television programs are
hosts); millionairess; mistress (except in the sense of expert); murderess; postmistress (not in official U.S. government use);
seamstress; seductress; sorceress; temptress; and waitress. (Random House Websters College Dictionary)
9. Stress
1. Factors responsible for stress. Can you arrange the factors below in terms of
importance?
loudness
pitch
length
quality
hybridize
biographic
hybridizable
biographical
hybridity
biographer
hybridization
4. Weak Forms
nt bi strit bt ts ha a rl mrfkr
Used by permission of Phil Selby (Dec. 2010)
http://bigeyedeer.wordpress.com/
word
a
strong
e
weak
word
from
strong
frm
weak
frm
word
that
strong
t
weak
t
am
()m
have
hv
(h)v,
the
____
i,
an
()n
he
and
are
them
h____
nd
()n(d)
him, his
(r)
(r)
is
em
()m
hm hz (h)m -z
there
e(r)
(r)
to
tu
tu, t
as
me
mi
at
____t
must
mst
be
bi
because
bkz
bi
not
nt
(b)kz
of
(h)i
zs
mi
us
ms(t)
was
wz
wz
nt
we
wi
v, v,
were
w(r)
w(r)
wi
been
bin
bn
shall
who
hu
but
bt
bt
she
will
wl
()l
can
k____n
kn
should
____d
would
w____d
(w)d, d
could
kd
k____d
so
do
du
du, d
some
sm
hu,
you
ju
ju, j
sm
your
j____(r)
j(r)
does
d____z
dz
such
s____t
st
for
f(r)
f____(r)
than
()n
Notes
1. The pronoun that is pronounced in its strong form, except when used as a relative pronoun (this is the
kind of thing that I meant) or a conjunction (I thought that you knew).
2. Some is pronounced in its strong form when it is a pronoun meaning unidentified persons (Some
prefer it on the rocks) or a quantifying determiner with the meaning some, but not all (Only some
members voted for him). Weak form is pronounced in the unspecified quantity sense (Would you like
some candy?).
3. The weak forms of he, his, her, have, has, and had often drop the initial /h/, except at the beginning of a
sentence.
4. The weak forms of do, the, and to behave similarly. Before a consonant, they are pronounced with a
schwa, and before a vowel as /du/, /i/, and /tu/ respectively (Do I?, the apple, and to and fro)
Exercise 3
Can you explain why of is written (instead of have) in the following line?
Somebody should of gone with him, said Mack. (John Steinbeck, Cannery Row)
narrow transcription
kilt /klt/
kilt [k t ]
In which of the following words will the clear [l] and dark [] be realized? clean, belt, hell, ruled, lilt,
kit
[k]t
get
[g]et
skit
tick
[t]k
deck
[d]ek
stick s[t]k
pit
[p]t
bit
[b]t
spit
s[k]t
s[p]t
Aspiration occurs even if the stops are followed by some consonants. Consult the table of English
consonants at the beginning to find out what these consonants have in common.
In Table 2, why are the last examples in each column not aspirated?
chot, chut
atthack
phort
h
h
p lay
c ream
thrick
h
h
h
p rint
q ueen, eq uip
thick
h
h
P uerto Rico
c lean
thwin
Table 1. Aspirated stops
sport
splay
sprint
deeper
Table 2. Non-aspirated stops
Scott
scream
squint
sector,Tucker
stack
strap
motor
congress / congressional
economy / economic
suppose / supposition
apply / application
progress / progression
politics / political
acclaim / acclamation
accuse / accusation
photograph / photography
parent / parental
4. Shortening of vowels
Vowels can be shortened if they are followed by voiceless consonants. Compare the following pairs.
feed / feet
dug / duck
cob / cop
bed / bet
rig / Rick
robe / rope
belt
harsh
harp
warp
The shortening of vowels is marked in narrow transcription with two symbols. The single dot [] is used
for long vowels, e.g. , which becomes [ ]. Short vowels get shortened with [ ] , so for example,
becomes [ ] :
cart [kt]
leak [lik]
rack [r k]
card [k d]
league [li g]
rag [rg]
5. Exercise
Transcribe the following words. Use the diacritic symbols for aspiration, shorter vowels and the two
variants of the phoneme /l/.
Lisbon
lisp
crab
crap
feed
feet
pull
bull
roll
rope
robe
code
god
got
cot
clot
because
beacon
wilt
willed
The following words come from Gerard Nolst Trenits poem The Chaos.
2. Suffix able
How are these two words stressed? desirable - admirable
What happens to verbs ending in -ate when they take the suffix able? alienable, alternable, articulable,
discriminable, duplicable, violable,
3. Homographs
Same spelling; different pronunciation and different meaning. What are the two meanings in each case?
bass
number
bow
row
close
sow
dove
tear
invalid
wound
lead
wind
d. heathen slaves
d. lichen shirt
d. Trafalgar Square plinth
d. chalet bullet
d. popes bier
cide
(ec)tomy
iac
cyte
itis
gram
graph
graphy
osis
________/baldi/
state or condition ________
/hpnss/
pathy
philia
________/kdik/
something written or drawn
________/kdigrm/
phobia
in, ine
fear of ________ /k rf bi /
(in some substance names)
________ /meltnn/
________ /digrfi/
rrhoea
2. Stress
/ba + ldi/ > /baldi/
In which of the following suffixes does a similar effect occur? Transcribe the following patterns.
lobe + tomy
geo + graphy
national + ism
discipline + ary
amnesia + ac
insect + cide
3. More examples. Decipher the following expressions.
/wez t kntrkt gnri/
/tu dke n hltss/
/ksdn msk/
/smpi kd/
/strldi n l k mi/
4. Transcription practice
antipathy
psychopathy
lymphocyte
thrombocyte
hereditary
biography
analysis
paralysis
laryngitis
meningitis
estrogen
diarrhea
fungicide
neurectomy
insomniac
amnesiac
telepathy
binary
topography
necrophilia
antigen
penicillin
cirrhosis
5. Transcription practice
Early diagnosis of acute bronchitis may help reduce the risk of long-term problems.
Lobotomy was at first used as a primary procedure for a range of psychiatric conditions.
Oxytocin is important for cervical dilation and contractions of the uterus during labor.
Oxytocin is also used in veterinary medicine to induce birth and stimulate milk release.
An individual analysis of the speech of aphasiacs suggests that obscene vocabulary is stored differently
and separately from other vocabulary in the brain.
Astronomy is not to be confused with astrology.
here
hair
h
he
done
den
dn
colour
collar
kl
click
clique
klik
den
kl
klk
bear
beer
when
one
wn
wonder
wander
wnd
bean
been
bin
be
wen
wnd
bn
kro
kr
dare
dear
ton
ten
tn
luck
lock
chick
cheak
de
ten
lk
lk
tik
tk
2. Homophones. In each group, cross out the word that does not fit the others. Then
transcribe the two pronunciations for each group.