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Section IV Consonants in comparison



1. a) Listen and practise the following pairs of words:

so – show

mass – mash

supper – shutter

pressing – pressure

using – usual

loosing – ill usion

pleasant – pleasure

bruise – rouge

invention – invasion

lashes – leisure

seal – zeal

course – cause

1. b). Practise reading the following sentences, lay stresses and tone marks:

  1. Why should she be sure?

  2. She’s an accomplished musician.

  3. Stop shouting and pushing, Sam (Susan).

  4. This isn’t the best way to say it.

  5. The area of the British Isles is about a seventieth of Russia.

1. c). Learn the proverbs, mark the nuclear tones in each intonation group.

  1. Actions speak louder than words.

  2. Friendship in trouble – friendship sure.

  3. Better short of pence than short of sense.

  4. Business before pleasure.

  5. A Jack of all trades is master of none.

  6. Appearances are deceitful.

  7. Early to bed, early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise.

  8. Haste makes waste.

1. d). Use one of the proverbs in your own situations.

2. Choose the appropriate reply for the given context:

Model: a) – You haven’t worked much in a sound-laboratory lately.

(I have. I have)

– I have.

b) – Nobody attended the conference yesterday (I have. I have)

– I have.

  1. I didn’t say you were wrong.

(You didn’t. You didn’t)

  1. I rang you twice last night.

(You didn’t. You didn’t)

  1. Don’t you think she’s lucky?

( I don’t. I don’t)

  1. Everybody thinks she’s lucky.

( Idon’t. I don’t)

  1. I’m afraid you can’t drive a car.

( I can. I can.)

  1. Can all of you drive a car?

( I can. I can.)

Mind that from the semantical point of view the falling-rising tone has an implicatory meaning: utterances with this tone give the impression that the speaker intends the hearer to understand more than the words themselves convey. The implication expressed in an utterance may be that of emphasis, contrast, contradiction, correction, hesitation, doubt, warning, apology, etc. In each сase the exact implication stands out clearly from the context.

E.g.:

  1. – They aren’t in the least alike.

– They are (contradiction)

  1. – I‘ve bought a new dress.

– The dress  is very elegant (emphasis)

  1. – Do you think she’ll manage to do it?

– She may (hesitation)

  1. – Let’s stay a little longer.

– There’s little time (warning)

  1. – Can you help him?

– I’m afraid I can’t. I’m in a hurry (apology)

It must be emphasized that the divided variant of the Fall-Rise is very similar to the falling-rising tone undivided: it also imparts an implicatory meaning to the utterance, but the Fall-Rise makes two ideas prominent instead of one.

E.g.:

  1. He can do it himself. – He can’t.

  2. Then ask Pete to do it. – He can’t.

The rising-falling nuclear tone can be compared with the falling-rising nuclear tone both in form and function. The complex nature of their form leads to a specific functional characteristic which might be called implicatory. But the implications of the two tones are different. The Rise-Fall often gives an impression that the speaker is greatly impressed (whether favourably or not). This tone has an intensifying function, it is sometimes called a quizzical tone.

E.g.:

  • It’s rather difficult.

  • You aren’t trying.

  • Is it a big house?

  • Huge.