Voice and voicelessness in English consonants can be a complicated topic. Describing the phonology of English has never been an objective of this blog, which is why in today's post I describe the basics which can be confusing to Polish students of English in particular and may also be similarly difficult to speakers of other languages where the devoicing of consonants works in a comparable way, e.g. other Slavic languages, German or Finnish.
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.
Thursday, 25 March 2021
Devoicing of voiced consonants
Tuesday, 27 October 2020
2020 Halloween Special
I used Tophonetics.com to transcribe some of the answers.
Ex. Match the trivia about Gothic and horror literature with the phonemic transcription of the answers. Then write the answers using ordinary English spelling.
Key. 1b Dracula, 2f Pennywise, 3g Robert Bloch, 4c Rosemary, 5a nevermore, 6e Mister Hyde, 7h The Shining, 8d Cthulhu
Tuesday, 1 September 2020
Avoiding Polish "ą" and "ę" in English pronunciation
The sound inventory of Polish contains two phonemes which are treated as vowels even though phonetically speaking, they are diphthongs in which a non-nasal vowel is followed by a nasal semi-vowel. They are "ą" /ɔ̃/ and "ę" /ɛ̃/. Polish speakers of English may sometimes mishear and mispronounce e.g. the English vowel /æ/ or the sequence /en/ as /ɛ̃/ and the diphthong /əʊ/ or the sequence /ɒn/ as /ɔ̃/. In some cases the problem appears to lie in misinterpreting English spelling rather than mishearing a given word. Here we omit cases where in many native English accents vowel allophones are actually nasalised (e.g. in southern dialects of American English).
N.B. There exist some borrowings from French in which the French nasal vowels close to /ɔ̃/ or /ɛ̃/ can be pronounced in a somewhat French manner. This group includes the words restaurant, genre, blancmange, croissant and pain (au chocolat), enfant (terrible).
Ex. In each set below there is pseudo-phonetic Polish transcription of common errors accompanied by the prescribed RP pronunciation in IPA. Write the words transcribed.
e.g. "kęt" /kɑːnt/ can't
a. "dęs" /dɑːns/ b. "częs" /tʃɑːns/ c. "frędz" /frendz/ d. "fręs" /frɑːns/
e. "pęz" /pænz/ f. "tęz" /tænz/ g. "hąk" /hɒŋk/ h. "dąt" /dəʊnt/
i. "łąt" /wəʊnt/ j. "łąt" /wɒnt/ k. "frąt" /frʌnt/ l. "ęt" /ænt/ m. "ęt" /ɑːnt/
n. "ęt" /ænd/ or weak forms /ən(d)/ o. "tąp" /tuːm/ p. "bąb" /bɒm/
q. "strąk" /strɒŋ/ r. "rąk" /rɒŋ/
KEY
a. dance, b. chance, c. friends, d. France, e. pans, f. tans, g. honk, h. don't, i. won't, j. want, k. front, l. ant, m. aunt, n. and, o. tomb, p. bomb, q. strong, r. wrong
Saturday, 30 May 2020
Silent letters
Ex. In each set choose the word which is pronounced differently from the remaining words. Indicate which letter is or is not silent.
a. past - bath - party - logically
b. dumb - plumber - number - tomb
c. school - cause - muscle - cane
d. obtain - doubt - debt - bomb
e. castle - thistle - jostle - mostly
f. thyme - thick - thin - three
g. signing - reign - benign - ginger
h. hotel - honour - horror - hostel
i. heir - hair - hourly - honestly
j. folk - yolk - bulk - stalk
k. Malmö - palm - calmer - embalm
l. knowledge - acknowledge - knead - kneel
m. hymn - condemn - damnation - damn
n. pterodactyl - psalm - upside - psychology
o. corps - corpse - corporal - copious
p. choir - chorus - technical - church
q. gullet - ballet - bouquet - valet
r. fax - faux - lax - box
s. singsong - parson - lesson - person
t. wrapper - lower - whistle - white
u. wear - weary - more - merely
v. amazing - zany - lazy - rendezvous
KEY
a. logically silent "a",
b. number non-silent "b" (but number, the comparative of numb, also has a silent "b") ,
c. muscle silent "c" ("sc" pronounced /s/)
d. obtain non-silent "b"
e. mostly non-silent "t"
f. thyme silent "h" ("th" pronounced /t/)
g. ginger non-silent second "g"
h. honour silent "h"
i. hair non-silent "h" (in RP)
j. bulk non-silent "l"
k. Malmö non-silent "l"
Tuesday, 28 April 2020
Pronunciation games 3
players in groups of 2-5
1. The aim of the game is to pick two cards, one from each stack or set, and make one word according to what both of the cards say. For example, one set of cards specifies the number of syllables, from one to four, while the other set specifies which sounds you need to use. Let's say a student has picked two cards:
Thursday, 23 April 2020
Pronunciation of "x"
Ex. Categorise the following words depending on the pronunciation of the letter "x".
xenophobia, exhume, exalt, exit, xenon, examination, expect, example, xylophone, lexical, exhilarate, maximum, exonerate, syntax, Xena, coccyx, Xerox
1. /ks/ 2. /gz/ 3. /z/
KEY
1. /ks/ coccyx, exhume, exit, expect, lexical, maximum, syntax, Xerox (second "x")
2. /gz/ exalt, examination, example, exhilarate, exonerate
3. /z/ Xena, xenon, xenophobia, Xerox (first "x"), xylophone
Monday, 20 April 2020
Pronunciation games 2
You'll need: sets of cards with questions or challenges (e.g. 15 cards for each group), a list of words for each group (e.g. 30 words)
1. The aim of the game is to pick a card and find the right words on the list. For example, the list contains the following words:
about, away, acorn, abacus, April, apricot, armour, attention
Card 1 says: "Find 3 words which begin with the schwa /ə/ sound". The student should select "about", "away" and "attention".
Card 2 says: "Find 3 words which consist of 3 syllables". The student should select "abacus", "apricot" and "attention".
Card 3 says: "Find 1 word which begins with the /ɑː/ sound". The student should select "armour".