
- •Teacher’s book unit one
- •Interdental
- •Interdental
- •Intonation
- •Intonation group
- •Sound Practice
- •Intonation Practice
- •Comprehension Practice
- •Written Practice
- •Unit two
- •Sound Practice
- •Intonation Practice
- •Comprehension Practice
- •Written Practice
- •Unit three
- •Intonation
- •Intonation group
- •The raven and the jug
- •Sound Practice
- •Intonation Practice
- •Comprehension Practice
- •Written Practice
- •Unit four
- •The fox and the grapes
- •Sound Practice
- •Intonation Practice
- •Comprehension Practice
- •Written Practice
- •Unit five
- •Sound Practice
- •Intonation Practice
- •Comprehension Practice
- •Written Practice
- •The ant and the dove
- •Unit six
- •Sound Practice
- •Intonation Practice
- •Comprehension Practice
- •Written Practice
- •Unit seven
- •Sound Practice
- •Intonation Practice
- •Comprehension Practice
- •Written Practice
- •Unit eight
- •Sound Practice
- •Intonation Practice
- •Comprehension Practice
- •Written Practice
- •Unit nine
- •Sound Practice
- •Intonation Practice
- •Comprehension Practice
- •Written Practice
- •Rumpelstiltskin
- •Unit ten
- •Sound Practice
- •Intonation practice
- •Comprehension Practice
- •Written Practice
- •Cinderella
- •Unit eleven
- •Sound Practice
- •Intonation practice
- •Comprehension Practice
- •Written Practice
- •The princess and the pea
- •Unit twelve
- •Sound Practice
- •Intonation practice
- •Little red riding hood
- •Comprehension Practice
- •Written Practice
- •The gingerbread man
- •Unit thirteen
- •Sound Practice
- •Intonation practice
- •Comprehension Practice
- •Written Practice
- •The elves and the shoemaker
- •Unit fourteen
- •Goldilocks
- •Sound Practice
- •Intonation practice
- •Comprehension Practice
- •Written Practice
- •The hare and the tortoise
- •Unit fiftteen
- •Sleeping beauty
- •The three wishes
- •Sound Practice
- •Intonation Practice
- •Comprehension Practice
- •Written Practice
Unit fourteen
Task 1. Listen to the recorded words and word combinations. Write them down in transcription. Practise their pronunciation.
Supermarket
Boutique
Haberdashery
Confectionery
Delicatessen
Fishmonger’s
Florist’s
Millinery
Furrier’s
Hardware
Underwear
Ribbon
Textiles
Exorbitant
Sky-high
Expensive
Expansive
Precious
Valueless
Shoddy
Tawdry
Purchase
Bargain
Scanty
Protectionism
Encourage
Haggle
Broach
Dangling
Turquoise
Pearl
Ruby
Amber
Aquamarine
Scarecrow
Fright
Wallet
Perfumery
Corduroy
Scents
Chamois
Suede
Task 2. Listen to the words in Task 1. Write down the words consisting of two and more syllables. Analyse the words accentual structure and group them according to their stress patterns. Note: the symbol – | stands for a stressed syllable; the symbol stands for an unstressed syllable (disyllabic words: | – , | – ; three-syllable words: | – , | – , etc.).
Task 3. Read the following sentences that contain a word having the same spelling but different pronunciation. Define the part of speech the word belongs to. Transcribe the sentences observing the placement of stress in the analysed words. Practice reading the sentences. Record your reading.
a) It was a terrible conflict.
b) His views conflict with mine.
c) We gave her a present.
d) They plan to present an award.
e) The author wants to contrast good and evil.
f) There is a contrast between dark and light.
Task 4. Read the following sentences. Provide an appropriate context for each of the utterances in accordance with its intonation pattern. Record your situations.
a) \Why,| -he's |got a \sore |throat.
b) To/morrow?
c) |Sit /down, .please.║ |What .seems to be the /matter?
Task 5. Listen to the following proverbs and sayings. Lay stress-and-tone marks. Transcribe them. Give their tonograms. Explain the prosodic means of expressing semantic contrasts, advice, encouragement. Practice reading them. Record your reading.
a) If a |man de.ceives me /once, | \shame on him; || if he de|ceives me /twice, | |shame on \me. (semantic contrast )
b) \Sit in your /place |, and |none can |make you \rise.
c) |When you are /well, | \hold yourself |so.
d) You |never .know \what you can /do | till you \try.
e) There’s |no \love |lost be/tween them (they hate each other).
f) There’s |no .love \lost be/tween them (they love each other).
Task 6. Read the text given below. Make sure you understand what it is about. Divide each sentence into syntagms, lay stresses and tone marks, practise your reading technique. Record your reading.
Henry Higgins is the best-known fictional phonetician, the central male character of Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion and of the musical My Fair Lady. Higgins is given more extreme views about the importance of correct pronunciation in the latter, and most phoneticians are rather embarrassed at the idea that the general public might think of their subject as being capable of being used in the way Higgins used it. Phoneticians like to guess at who the real-life original of Higgins was: the generally accepted theory is that this was the great phonetician Henry Sweet. Though there is some evidence to suggest that B.Shaw might have had his own contemporary, Daniel Jones, in mind, who was, with the possible exception of Henry Sweet, the most influential figure in the development of present-day Phonetics in Britain. Daniel Jones was born in 1881 and died in 1967; he was for many years Professor of Phonetics at University College, London. He worked on many of the world's languages and on the theory of the phoneme and of Phonetics, but is probably best remembered internationally for his works on the Phonetics of English, particularly his Outline of English Phonetics and English Pronouncing Dictionary.
Task 7. Spelling dictation. Listen to the following fairy tale. Write it down.
In case a student makes more than three mistakes he is asked to learn the text of the fairy tale by heart imitating the speaker’s intonation.