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Emphatic Nuclear Tones

The emphatic high rising tone is most commonly used in questions to express surprise or a shocked reaction, e.g.:

  • He has failed in his exams.

  • Has he?

  • I told him everything I thought of him.

  • Did you?

The emphatic low rising tone in statements is often preceded by a low head.

This pattern is commonly used to express a feeling of impatience, e.g.:

  • I’m afraid I can’t help him.

  • He can do it alone.

  • What did Mr. White say?

  • He was rather rude.

A similar feeling is conveyed by the emphatic Low Rise in imperatives, e.g.:

  • I’m not going there.

  • Don’t be ridiculous.

The emphatic falling tones are most energetic and decisive in statements, insistent and persuasive in special questions and commands, forceful and strong in exclamations, e.g.:

  • You must have misplaced those papers.

  • I can’t understand what you are talking about.

  • It’s altogether wrong.

  • How do you know it’s wrong?

  • He acted as if he didn’t know me.

  • How strange.

An emphatic falling tone is often associated with a semantic contrast. The effect of contrast is increased when there are no pre-nuclear stresses, i.e. there is no head in an utterance, e.g.:

  • It’s the wrong copy.

  • Go and take the right one.

The contrastive function is reinforced by a nuclear shift, e.g.:

  • I can’t afford the decorations.

  • Get your husband to do it.

3. Act out the following conversations in an emotional manner. Use emphatic variants of both static and kinetic tones in the utterances so as to increase their general prominence and expressiveness:

Model: – Don’t leave your trips around.

  • Haven’t I told you about it be fore?

  • I’m dreadfully disappointed.

  • Don’t let it get you down.

  • When will you let me know?

  • I’ll tell you as soon as I can.

  • What did Mr. Grey say?

  • He was ratherrude.

  1. – Sorry, Charles, the chairman’s called a meeting.

– Do you mean I’ve got to go to another meeting?

  1. – They say they will help us.

– Do they really mean that?

  1. – Aren’t you going out for a walk?

– But I’m absolutely frozen.

  1. – How much is the fair?

– I’ve no idea.

  1. – He is not coming. He has an appointment.

– You ought to have informed me before.

  1. – You know Peter very well, I expect.

– No, I’ve never met him in my life.

  1. – Come at six on Sunday.

– Do you really want me to?

Laboratory Work

1. Pick out utterances with an emotional colouring from the following contexts. Note that both the static and kinetic tones in these utterances are emphatic and the voice range is widened. Reproduce the utterances:

  1. – Why are you so much against Nora Brown?

– Well, she’s perfectly hopeless. She’s got no idea of how to run a party.

  1. – You should have had more to eat.

– That’s a nother thing. There wasn’t anything fit to eat.

  1. – Thinking that if I went for help, the fellow would get away, I decided to catch him myself.

– How very brave of you.

  1. – I have a country house with, of course, some land attached to it.

– A country house?

  1. – What are you going to do about presents? It’s only three weeks now to New Year.

– I haven’t time to think about it. I haven’t time for  anything.

  1. – There’s nobody in. I’m alone in the house.

– All a lone? Where are they all?