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现代英语标准发音
  • 作 者:张凤桐主编;林必果,高红,蒋红柳编撰
  • 出 版 社:成都:四川大学出版社
  • 出版年份:2007
  • ISBN:7561436599
  • 标注页数:328 页
  • PDF页数:343 页
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1 What is a Good Pronunciation? 1

2 The Model of English Pronunciation 8

2.1 The choice of model 8

2.2 Why should we choose British General RP as our model? 9

2.3 Main differences between the Gimson Transcription and the Jones Transcription 11

3 Two Stages in Learning English Phonemes 15

3.1 Phonemes and their allophones 15

3.2 Two stages in learning English phonemes 17

3.3 Clipping 19

4 Pronouncing Written Words 21

4.1 Letters and sounds 21

4.2 Pronouncing consonant letters c and g 23

4.3 Pronouncing sh,ch and gh 24

4.4 Pronouncing th 24

4.5 Pronunciation,spelling and word stress 25

4.6 Pronouncing single vowel letters 26

4.7 Pronouncing vowel pairs 27

4.8 Silent letters 28

5 The Lungs and the Larynx 30

5.1 The human speech mechanism 30

5.2 The respiratory system 32

5.3 The phonatory system 33

5.4 Learning to control consciously the action of the vocal folds 35

5.5 Identifying the voiced and voiceless sounds 35

5.6 The linguistic uses of pitch 36

6 The Vocal Tract 39

6.1 Articulators in the vocal tract 39

6.2 Places of articulation 42

6.3 Manners of articulation 45

7 Syllables,Stresses and Tonic Syllables 49

7.1 Syllables,vowels and consonants 49

7.2 Levels of stress 52

7.3 Tonic syllables 53

7.3.1 Information words and English communication 54

7.3.2 Structure words and English communication 54

7.3.3 Tone-units and tonic stress 55

7.4 Summary 56

8 Front Vowels 57

8.1 The cardinal vowels 57

8.2 The English vowel system 61

8.3 Front vowels 62

9 Central Vowels and Back Vowels 72

9.1 Central vowels 72

9.2 Back vowels 78

10 Diphthongs 90

10.1 Closing diphthongs 90

10.2 Centring diphthongs 102

11 Obstruents(1) 109

11.1 The English consonant system 109

11.2 Plosives 111

11.2.1 Bilabial plosives /p,b/ 112

11.2.2 Alveolar plosives /t,d/ 113

11.2.3 Velar plosives /k,g/ 113

11.3 Affricates 116

11.3.1 Palato-alveolar affricates /t∫,d?/ 117

12 Obstruents(2) 119

12.1 Fricatives 119

12.2 Labio-dental fricatives /f,v/ 119

12.3 Dental fricatives /θ,?/ 121

12.4 Alveolar fricatives /s,z/ 124

12.5 Palato-alveolar fricatives /∫,?/ 127

12.6 Glottal fricative /h/ 129

13 Sonorants 131

13.1 Nasals 131

13.1.1 Bilabial nasal /m/ 131

13.1.2 Alveolar nasal /n/ 132

13.1.3 Velar nasal /?/ 134

13.2 Alveolar lateral approximant /l/ 136

13.3 Approximants 138

13.3.1 Post-alveolar approximant /r/ 139

13.3.2 Palatal approximant /j/ 142

13.3.3 Labial-velar approximant /w/ 144

14 The English Syllable 148

14.1 The structure of the English syllable 148

14.1.1 Syllable onsets 148

14.1.2 Syllable codas 152

14.2 The-s inflectional ending 153

14.3 The-ed inflectional ending 154

14.4 Syllabification 155

15 Word Stress Patterns 159

15.1 Stress and prominence 159

15.2 Primary and secondary stress 160

15.3 Word stress patterns 161

15.4 Compound words 162

15.5 Word-class pairs 164

16 Weak Forms and Rhythm 166

16.1 Weak forms 166

16.1.1 Conjunctions 166

16.1.2 Pronouns 167

16.1.3 Verbs 167

16.1.4 Determiners 169

16.1.5 Prepositions 169

16.1.6 There 170

16.2 Contracted forms 170

16.3 The use of strong forms 170

16.4 Rhythm and stress 172

17 The Intonation Mark System 176

17.1 A transcribed text 176

17.2 What is intonation? 179

17.3 Tone-unit components 181

17.4 Reading the intonation marks 183

17.4.1 Nuclear tone marks 183

17.4.2 Stress marks in the tail 184

17.4.3 Stress marks in the head 185

18 Functions of Intonation 189

18.1 The organization of information 189

18.2 The realization of communicative functions 190

18.3 The demonstration of syntactic structures 192

18.4 The expression of attitude 195

18.4.1 Major declaratives 195

18.4.2 Minor declaratives 197

18.4.3 Wh-interrogatives 197

18.4.4 Yes/No interrogatives 198

18.4.5 Tag interrogatives 198

18.4.6 Imperatives 199

18.4.7 Exclamatives 199

19 Consonant Clusters 201

19.1 Clusters in the onset 201

19.1.1 CC consonant clusters 201

19.1.2 CCC consonant clusters 204

19.2 Clusters in the coda 205

19.2.1 Stop+stop 205

19.2.2 Plosive+nasal 207

19.2.3 /t/or/d/+/l/ 208

19.2.4 Consonant+/s,z,t,d/ 209

19.2.5 Consonant+/θ/or/?/ 210

19.2.6 /l/+consonant 211

19.2.7 Nasal+consonant 211

19.3 Longer consonant clusters at word boundaries 212

20 Natural Processes 214

20.1 Assimilation 214

20.2 Elision 218

20.3 Liaison 220

20.4 Juncture 223

21 English Prosody(1) 226

21.1 Chinese prosody 226

21.2 English prosody 227

21.3 Iambic verse 229

21.4 Anapaestic verse 231

21.5 Trochaic verse 232

21.6 Dactylic verse 233

21.7 Variation in rhythm 234

21.8 Truncation 235

21.9 Mixed substitution 236

21.10 Less commonly used feet 237

21.11 Run-on verse 239

21.12 Caesura 240

22 English Prosody(2) 242

22.1 Rhyme 242

22.2 Definition of rhyme 242

22.3 Masculine rhyme 243

22.4 Feminine rhyme 244

22.5 Internal rhyme 245

22.6 The leonine rhyme 245

22.7 Assonance 246

22.8 Consonance 246

22.9 Alliteration 247

22.10 Rhyme scheme 249

22.10.1 Stanzaic verse 249

22.10.2 The septet 250

22.10.3 Triplet 251

22.10.4 The quintet 253

22.10.5 The sestet 254

22.10.6 The octave 254

22.10.7 The Spenserian stanza 256

22.10.8 The sonnet 257

23 Teaching Methods 264

23.1 Vowels 264

23.2 Consonants 265

23.3 Syllables 268

23.4 Word stress 269

23.5 Intonation 270

23.6 Adjustments in connected speech 271

23.7 Using the pronouncing dictionaries 273

Appendix Ⅰ American English Pronunciation 276

Appendix Ⅱ American English Intonation 285

Appendix Ⅲ Answers Section 292

References 318

Glossary and Index 322

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