1. Practise different degrees of aspiration in the following words:
a)
[p] peace, pin, pen, pan, pearl, pool, pull, palm, pun, pore, pond, pay, pine, peer, pair, pound, poll, point, poor, pire, payer, power;
[t] team, tin, ten, tan, turn, tooth, took, tar, touch, tore, Tom, tail, time, tear (n.), tear (v.), town, tone, toy, tour;
[k] key, kiss, Ken, can, curl, cool, could, calm, come, core, cod, came, kind, care, cow, code, coil;
b)
[p] deep, lip, wrap, loop, up, harp, shop, ape, ripe, hope;
[t] beat, lit, met, rat, hurt, boot, soot, art, gut, thought, not, late, night, out, goat;
[k] beak, lick, neck, sack, book, dark, duck, snake, like, soak;
c)
[p] polite, permit, pathetic, perceive, position, police, pollution, potato;
deeper, happy, copy, supper, topic, paper, viper, super;
[t] metre, knitting, better, latter, butter, artist, water, quarter, later, photo;
together, tomorrow, today, tonight, tomato, taverna, taxation, terrific;
[k] leaking, vicar, second, package, furcoat, rocket, naked, broker, fabricate, suffocate;
canteen, concise, conceit, corrupt, conclude, commune, collective, capricious, capacity, capitulate, communicate.
2. Practise the following words observing unaspirated variants of plosives preceding or following [s]. Make sure you pronounce [s] energetically enough to avoid possible mistakes.
Model: | speak —> [sspi:k] |
| peaks —> [pi:kss] |
| speaks —> [sspi:kss] |
a)
speed, spill, spell, span, spark, sport, spot, spoon, spade, spider, spare, spoil, special, speculate, sparrow;
weeps, lips, wraps, loops, cups, shops, apes, hopes;
steal, stick, stem, stand, star, storm, stood, steak, style, steer, stare, stone, upstairs, downstairs;
meets, bits, pets, rats, hurts, boots, putts, arts, knots, dates, nights, boats;
scheme, skin, sketch, scan, skirt, scar, score, scale, sky, scare, scout, scope, scraper, scoundrel, scepticism, skeleton;
peaks, licks, necks, sacks, books, parks, ducks, lakes, likes, oaks.
b) | peak – speak keen – skean team – steam pit – spit tick – stick kill – skill pan – span tack – stack can – scan peck – speck teller – Stella purr – spur turn – stern curl – skirl poon – spoon tool – stool cool – school park – spark tart – start car – scar pot – spot top – stop port – sport tore – store core – score | paid – spade take – steak Kate – skate pike – spike tile – style tear (n.) – steer tear (v.) – stare pair – spare care – scare poke – spoke tone – stone cope - scope |
c)
peak – speak – peaks – speaks
tick – stick – ticks – sticks
pit – spit – pits – spits
top – stop – tops – stops
pot – spot – pots – spots
port – sport – ports – sports
park – spark – parks – sparks
tart – start – tarts – starts
pike – spike – pikes – spikes
cope – scope – copes - scopes
d)
tight – `appetite – style peace – `masterpiece – speed case – `staircase – skate tale – `detail – stale | test – `protest – step pot – `teapot – spot cup – `teacup – scull tip – city – stick |
3. Practise different degrees of aspiration in connected speech:
a) set expressions, proverbs and sayings
a) a wasp waist
b) a last straw
c) to one’s heart’s content
d) calm before the storm
e) on an empty stomach
f) to be thick-skinned
g) to kill with kindness
h) to call a spade a spade
i) to bye a pig in a poke
j) to sit between two stools
k) to carry coals to Newcastle
l) to pick the plums out of the pudding
1. The proof of the pudding is in the eating.
2. It is the first step that costs.
3. Patience is a plaster for all sores.
4. A storm in a teacup.
5. East or West – home is best.
6. Honesty is the best policy.
7. The tongue is not steel, yet it cuts.
8. Curiosity killed a cat.
9. The pot calls the kettle black.
10. Cut your coat according to your cloth.
11. Who has never tasted bitter, knows not what is sweet.
b) conversational exchanges
1.
– Hallo. Kitty here. Could I speak to Peter, please?
– Sorry, but he’s out.
2.
– Hallo. Patrick Cowel speaking. Could I talk to Stella, please?
– I’m afraid she’s not here. Can you call later?
3.
– They have no time to complete the project.
– That’s no reason for not starting it.
4.
– You will stay a bit longer, won’t you?
– I’m sorry, I can’t. I promised my baby-sitter to come back at ten at the latest.
5.
– What do you think of the place?
– Oh, it’s a delightful spot!
6.
– I think I’ve lost the passports, Poppy.
– How stupid of you, Peter. Didn’t you put them in your pocket?
7.
– I want some tins of tomato paste.
– Try the supermarket in the basement.
8.
– Could you tell us the time, please?
– Yes. It’s exactly twenty-two minutes to ten.
9.
– Would you like some cream in your coffee, Mrs. Clark?
– No, thank you. But I’d like a little milk.
10.
– I must apologize for all the trouble we’ve caused.
– Oh, it’s no trouble at all.
c) tongue-twisters, rhymes, dialogues, poems
1.
Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.
A peck of pickled peppers Peter Piper picked.
If Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers
Where’s the peck of pickled peppers Peter Piper picked?
A canner can as many cans
as a canner can,
if a canner can can cans.
A tutor who tooted a flute
Tried to tutor two tutors to toot.
Said the two to the tutor,
‘Is it harder to toot
Or to tutor two tutors to toot?’
2. The Drunken Sailor
Amidst the mists
and coldest frosts,
With barest wrists
and stoutest boasts
He thrusts his fist
against the posts
And still insists
he sees the ghosts.
3.
- Aspiration. Degrees of Aspiration.
- Sound Drills.
- 1. Practise different degrees of aspiration in the following words:
- In a department store
- Leisure
- Loss of Plosion.
- Sound Drills.
- 3. Practise the following fragments of connected speech focusing on loss of plosion.
- Nasal Plosion.
- Sound Drills.
- Duty of the student
- Lateral Plosion
- Sound Drills
- 1. Pronounce the following words and phrases observing lateral plosion.
- 2. Practise lateral plosion in connected speech.
- Fricative Plosion.
- 1. Pronounce the following words and phrases observing close coarticulation of plosive and fricative consonants.
- 2. Practise fricative plosion in connected speech.
- To a False Friend
- Making a Cake
- Alveolar consonants before [0, 8].
- Sound Drills
- 1. Practice the following words and phrases. Be sure to make the sounds [t, d, n, l, s, z] dental before [0] and [8]
- 2. Practise the clusters of alveolar consonants preceding [0, 8] in connected speech.
- Boiled Eggs
- Sonants
- General Remarks
- 1. Modifications of the length of English sonants.
- 2. The syllabic function of the sonants in English
- 3. Devoicing of the sonants.
- Consonant sounds that link words.
- Linking [r]
- Consonantal glides [w] and [j]
- Sound Drills.
- 1. Practise the linking [r], [w] and [j] at the junction of words. Be sure to make the glides [w] and [j] sound very short.
- 2. Practise linking at word-boundaries in connected speech.
- Rain dying out
- Combinations of consonants with [w]
- Sound Drills.
- 1. Practice the following words and phrases observing assimilation in the consonant clusters with [w]
- 2. Practise consonant clusters with [w] in connected speech.
- Consonant clusters with [r]
- Sound Drills.
- 1. Practice the following words and phrases observing assimilation in the consonant clusters with [r]
- 1) Complete devoicing of [r]
- 2) Partial devoicing of [r]
- 3) Double assimilation
- 2. Practise consonant clusters with [r] in connected speech.
- Airport announcements.
- Travelling by train.
- Absence of assimilation in some consonant clusters.
- No assimilation according to the place or manner of articulation of English consonants
- No assimilation according to the work of the vocal cords
- Sound Drills.
- 2. Practise the difficult consonant clusters in the following contexts. Observe absence of assimilation.
- Monday’s child
- The House That Jack Built
- A vacant seat