
- •16. Word-building
- •17. Modern English phraseology
- •Structure of word-groups
- •Meaning of word-groups
- •Motivation in word-groups
- •Structural class-ion
- •Etimological class-ion
- •Proverbs
- •18.Lexico-semantic grouping in Modern English lexicone
- •19. The Latin borrowings of different periods.
- •20.French as the most important foreign influence on the English language
- •21.The Noun
- •Category of number
- •The category of case
- •Category of Animateness - Inanumateness
- •22.The Verb
- •The category of aspect
- •23. The Phrase
- •Classification of predicative word-groups
- •Absolute Predicative Word Groups
- •Syntactical Relations between the Components of Phrase
- •The Theory of Phrase
- •24. The Sentence
- •Classification of Sentences
- •Types of Sentences According to Structure
- •Types of One-member Sentences in English
- •Types of Sentences According to their Completeness
- •25. Categorial structure of the word
- •26.The theory of phoneme
- •27. Lexical stylistic devices. Lexico-syntactical stylistic devices.
- •Lexico-syntactical stylistic devices
- •28.The theory of intonation.
- •29. Phonetic and Graphical stylistic devices Phonetic stylistic devices
- •Pure Graphical Stylistic Devices
- •30. Syntactical stylistic devices
28.The theory of intonation.
Every concrete utterance together with its phonemic and syllabic structure has its prosodic structures (or intonation).
A syntagm is a word or a group of words organized syntactically and phonetically to express a thought unit.
A syntagm may coincide with a sentence or may be part of the sentence.
He‘s got a lot of things with him. (syntagm=sentence)
. ¯ ` ..
Yes, || books, | magazines, | vocabulary | and many other things. (4 syntagms).
A syntagm has some structural characteristics:
nucleus (nuclear tone) ( ) it’s a mostly semantically important word, it’s a terminal tone. It has pitch variations. The boundaries between the syntagms are marked by a tonal junctures and pauses. The syntagm is a meaningful unit. It’s most general meaning is either completeness, finality or incompleteness, non-finality. The structure of the syntagm varies depending on the number of syllables and rhythmic units in it. The minimal syntagm consists of 1 stressed syllable – nucleus.
Who did it?
I.– nucleus.
Maximally the syntagm consists of
the pre-head (. ), the head (¯ ` ), the nucleus ( ), the tail (..)
Intonation has a number of definitions now. Some western phoneticians understand under the term of intonation only melody. Others think that intonation includes tone (stress).
Russian phoneticians of later year think that intonation is acomplex unity of several components: melody, stress, rhythm, timbre, pauses, temp.
They enable the speaker to express a dequatly the meaning og sentences, the attitude of the speaker to the content and the emotions of the speaker.
Not all the elements of int-n are equally studied. The most important elements of int-n are melody, stress and rhythm.
Melody (tone, tune)
It is the rise and fall in the pitch of the voice in the process of speech. 6 main tones: low fall - low rise; high fall - high rise; rise fall - fall rise.
The first opposition is the direction of the pitch of the voice. It is used to express finality or non-finality.
Range. The pitch movement is low, high.
Low pitch movement: indifferent, neutral, cool.
High: emphatic, interested.
Simplicity, complexity of a pitch movement:
Fall; fall-rise
Rise; rise-fall.
Direct meaning , implied meaning.
That’s why these 6 main tones are used in English. They may be reduced to 2 main tones: fall and rise.
The falling tone expresses finality and is definite, categoric.
The falling tone has a definite gram-al function. It is usally used in statements, special questions, exclamations, commands, greetings, disjunctive questions, alternative questions.
The rising tone sounds non-final, is complete, it is non-categoric. It is used in general questions, in requests, polite remarks, alternative questions, disjunctive questions, non-final syntagms, enumerations, statements, finished grammatically but not semantically.
The two tones, fall and rise have different variations which depend on the aim of communication, and two phoneticians (Arnold and O’Conner) worked out the system of 10 tone-groups in English in which every tone-group expresses a certain attitude, certain emotions.
Stress.
It is the greater prominent which is given to 1 or more words in an utterance as compared with other words in the same utterance.
Sintagmatic stress.
The stress represents the most important func-al type. Together with the main tones it sinles out the semantic center of the utterance. It is usually on the last stressed syllable.
Syntactic stress
Marks other semantically important words within the syntagm on level pitches.
Logical stress
Is a shifting of the syntagmatic stress from its normal place on the last stressed word in this utterance. In this way a new utterance with a new semantic center is created.
Rhythm
Is the regular recurrence of a stressed syllable in the flow of speech. The English rh. is based on the rh-ic groups. The rh.gr. is a stressed syllable or a stressed syllable with 1 or more unstressed syllables. The center of the rh.gr. is the stressed syllable.
There are certain rules of rhythm:
The stressed syllables occur in the language at more or less equal intervals of time.
Every non-initial rh.gr. begins with a stressed syllable.
The initial rh.gr. may begin with either stressed or unstressed syllable or syllables.
The greater number of unstressed syllable among stressed ones the more rapidly they are pronounced.