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Word stress
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Stress Based on loudness/intonation: a stressed syllable is louder than an unstressed syllable We can stress only vowels Degrees of stress: Primary or main stress Secondary stress Zero stress (‘ve(h)icle): reduced vowel (ɪ, ʊ, ǝ) Tertiary (minor) stress: unreduced vowel
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Using these codes where would you put the primary and secondary stress in these words?
Example: 3 3
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Answers 3 3 3 3
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Stress on first syllable
Most 2-syllable nouns (‘present, ‘export, ‘China, ‘table) Most 2-syllable adjectives (‘present, ‘slender, ‘clever, ‘happy)
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Stress on the last syllable
Most 2-syllable verbs (to pre’sent, to ex’port, to de’cide, to be’gin
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‘Refuse (n) (v) ‘Present (n) (v) ‘Minute (n) (adj)
There are many two-syllable words in English whose meaning and class change with a change in stress. ‘Refuse (n) (v) ‘Present (n) (v) ‘Minute (n) (adj) ‘Desert (n) (v) ‘Content (n) (adj) ‘Object (n) (adj) ‘Contract (n) (v)
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Answers re’fuse (v) pre’sent (v) min’ute (adj) de’sert (v)
con’tent (adj) ob’ject (adj) con’tract (v)
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