Ex. Look at the following words containing the letter "a" and put them in groups according to the sound that the digraph beginning with an "a" represents. The options include short vowels, long vowels and diphthongs.
1. /ɑː/ 2. /ɔː/ 3. /aʊ/ 4. /eɪ/ 5. /eə/ 6. /iː/ 7. /ɒ/
aardvark
aerial, algae,encyclopaedia, maelstrom
gait, hair, lair, maim
chaos, Laos, Taoism
auburn, auction, Australia, authority
KEY
1. /ɑː/ aardvark 2. /ɔː/ auburn, auction, authority 3. /aʊ/ Laos, Taoism
4. /eɪ/ chaos /'keɪɒs/, gait, maelstrom, maim,
5. /eə/ aerial (the second "a" is /ə/), hair, lair
6. /iː/ algae, encyclopaedia
7. /ɒ/ Australia
When in doubt, I consulted the Cambridge Dictionary at dictionary.cambridge.org.
I'm a Reader (Assistant Professor) in the Institute of English and American Studies at the University of Gdańsk, Poland. I hold a PhD in Linguistics, and I specialise in sociolinguistics, normative linguistics and English for Academic Purposes. This blog contains exercises for my students and other advanced English learners.
Friday, 31 August 2018
Wednesday, 29 August 2018
Pronunciation of the letter "a"
English spelling is famous for its complex rules and the different ways in which it is connected to pronunciation. In today's exercise we are dealing with the pronunciation of "a".
Ex. 1. Look at the following words containing the letter "a" and put them in groups according to the sound that the letter "a" represents (sometimes together with letters next to it). The options include short vowels, the schwa, long vowels and diphthongs.
1. /ɑː/ 2. /æ/ 3. /ə/ 4. /eɪ/ 5. /eə/
above, air, among, ago, baker, bass, class, dance, father, gran, grant, mat, mate, mare, mayor, nag, part, sofa, stare, start, state, tan
Ex. 2. How does the pronunciation of the stressed vowel change in the following words?
1. nation - national 2. status - statutory 3. class - classic/classical 4. mass - massive
5. photograph - photography (consider both o's and the a) 6. base - basic
7. compare - comparison 8. parent - parental (consider the a and the e)
KEY
Ex. 1.
1. /ɑː/ dance, father, grant, part, start
2. /æ/ class, gran, mat, nag, tan
3. /ə/ above, among, ago, sofa,
4. /eɪ/ baker, bass, mate, state
5. /eə/ air, mare, mayor, stare
Ex. 2.
1. /eɪ/ - /æ/
Ex. 1. Look at the following words containing the letter "a" and put them in groups according to the sound that the letter "a" represents (sometimes together with letters next to it). The options include short vowels, the schwa, long vowels and diphthongs.
1. /ɑː/ 2. /æ/ 3. /ə/ 4. /eɪ/ 5. /eə/
above, air, among, ago, baker, bass, class, dance, father, gran, grant, mat, mate, mare, mayor, nag, part, sofa, stare, start, state, tan
Ex. 2. How does the pronunciation of the stressed vowel change in the following words?
1. nation - national 2. status - statutory 3. class - classic/classical 4. mass - massive
5. photograph - photography (consider both o's and the a) 6. base - basic
7. compare - comparison 8. parent - parental (consider the a and the e)
KEY
Ex. 1.
1. /ɑː/ dance, father, grant, part, start
2. /æ/ class, gran, mat, nag, tan
3. /ə/ above, among, ago, sofa,
4. /eɪ/ baker, bass, mate, state
5. /eə/ air, mare, mayor, stare
Ex. 2.
1. /eɪ/ - /æ/
2. /eɪ/ - /æ/
3. /ɑː/ - /æ/
3. /ɑː/ - /æ/
4. /æ/ Correction: no change ("mass" does not have /ɑː/)
5. first "o" /əʊ/ - /ə/, second "o" /ə/ - /ɒ/, "a" /ɑː/ - /ə/
6. /eɪ/ no change
7. /eə/ - /æ/
8. "a" /eə/ - /ə/, "e" /ᵊ/ - /e/ (the upper index schwa means it is optional)
When in doubt, I used the Cambridge Dictionary at https://dictionary.cambridge.org.
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