0% found this document useful (0 votes)
28 views

Topic 4 - Unit - 11 Pitch

This document summarizes a lecture on suprasegmentals and pitch. It defines suprasegmentals as speech features like stress, tone, or word juncture that accompany vowels and consonants. Pitch is defined as the perceived highness or lowness of a tone based on vocal cord vibrations. Some languages use distinctive tones, where pitch distinguishes words' meanings, like Mandarin Chinese. The lecture discusses tones and pitch accents in English and other languages. It identifies six major tones in English and their functions, and defines pitch-accent languages like Japanese that distinguish few words through pitch variations rather than using tone systematically.

Uploaded by

Skyler Roberts
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
28 views

Topic 4 - Unit - 11 Pitch

This document summarizes a lecture on suprasegmentals and pitch. It defines suprasegmentals as speech features like stress, tone, or word juncture that accompany vowels and consonants. Pitch is defined as the perceived highness or lowness of a tone based on vocal cord vibrations. Some languages use distinctive tones, where pitch distinguishes words' meanings, like Mandarin Chinese. The lecture discusses tones and pitch accents in English and other languages. It identifies six major tones in English and their functions, and defines pitch-accent languages like Japanese that distinguish few words through pitch variations rather than using tone systematically.

Uploaded by

Skyler Roberts
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 10

Degree in English Studies. Option: English Pronunciation.

Lecturer: Ekaterina Sinyashina

Topic 4: Suprasegmentals

Unit 11. Pitch

Lecture 11
The aims of Unit 11 are:

To understand the notion of suprasegmentals.

To be able to define pitch and tone.

To be aware of the existence of tone languages.

To understand the lexical and grammatical use of tone.

To make the difference between tones and pitch-accents.

To know the basic dynamic tones of the English language


together with their communicative functions.

To practise phonemic transcription.

1
Degree in English Studies. Option: English Pronunciation. Lecturer: Ekaterina Sinyashina

Pitch

1. Introduction

In Phonetics, Suprasegmental, also called Prosodic Feature, is a


speech feature such as stress, tone, or word juncture, that
accompanies or is added over consonants and vowels; these features
are not limited to single sounds but often extended over syllables,
words, or phrases. Suprasegmentals are so called in contrast to
consonants and vowels, which are treated as serially ordered
segments of the spoken utterance.
In Spanish stress is often used to distinguish between otherwise
identical words, e.g. término means term and termino means I finish.
In Mandarin Chinese tone is a distinctive suprasegmental, e.g. shih
pronounced on a high level note means to lose; on a slight rising note
means ten, on a falling note means city, market, and on a falling-
rising note it means history. In English nitrate and night rate are
distinguished by word juncture. These examples illustrate functional
suprasegmentals. Non-functional suprasegmentals that do not change
the meaning of words or phrases also exist, e.g. stress in French.
Pitch may be defined as “the sensation which corresponds to
the fundamental frequency of a periodic sound, varying between high

2
Degree in English Studies. Option: English Pronunciation. Lecturer: Ekaterina Sinyashina

and low.” (Rocher 2001: 111). It may also be defined as “the relative
highness or lowness of a tone as perceived by the ear, which depends
on the number of vibrations per second produced by the vocal cords.
Pitch is the most important correlate of tone and intonation.”
(http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/1357164/pitch).
In some cases, it is the pitch level that distinguishes a word,
while in others it is a pitch movement. We refer to these
characteristics of pitch as tone. Therefore, tone may be defined as a
variation of the pitch of the voice while speaking. The word tone is
usually applied to those languages (called tone languages) in which
pitch serves to help distinguish words and grammatical categories,
i.e. in which pitch characteristics are used to differentiate one word
from another word that is otherwise identical in its sequence of
consonants and vowels. For example, man in Mandarin Chinese may
mean either deceive or slow depending on its pitch. One of the
interesting facts about languages is that some use tone in this
distinctive way, while others (including most European languages) do
not. Languages which use tone distinctively are called tone
languages. It is probably true to say that the majority of the world’s
population speaks a tone language, so it is surprising how little
importance is given to this aspect of speech in books on phonetics.
Perhaps this shows that the subject is dominated by speakers of
European languages. We find tone-languages in South-East Asia (e.g.
Chinese, Thai and Vietnamese), in much of South and West Africa
(e.g. Hausa, Yoruba and Zulu), and in indigenous languages of
America (e.g. Mixteco, Zapotec and Navajo).

Lexical and grammatical use of tone

Tone works in different ways in different languages. For example, we


may say tone has a lexical function when the meaning of a word (as
it would appear in a dictionary) is determined by its tone. By
contrast, tone has a grammatical function when the grammatical

3
Degree in English Studies. Option: English Pronunciation. Lecturer: Ekaterina Sinyashina

category of a spoken utterance is determined by its tone. The English


language is characterised by a grammatical use of tone. The following
major tones may be clearly differentiated in the English language
(O’Connor & Arnold 1966):

a) High fall (Descendente alto):

Mary works in a bank

It is used in affirmative sentences, in Wh-questions or non-


polar questions, in question-tags (meaning requesting
confirmation), and in commands, e.g. Yes, she was there, What
do you want?, What time did you arrive?, How did they manage
to learn it?, Martha, you’re a genius. How on earth did you do
that?, He lives in London, doesn’t he?, Open the door, Let me
in, etc.

b) Low fall (Descendente bajo):

Mary is always complaining

It is used to express that the answer was expected by the


receiver of the message. It may also be used to express lack of
interest or motivation on the part of the speaker.

c) High rise (Ascendente alto):

Do you like going to the cinema?

It is used in polar questions or to make an affirmative utterance


into an indirect question, e.g. ‛Yes?, Do you like the ‛city?,
You’re ‛leaving your job, etc.

4
Degree in English Studies. Option: English Pronunciation. Lecturer: Ekaterina Sinyashina

d) Low rise (Ascendente bajo):

Please, come in!

It is used to express lack of interest or motivation. It is also


used before short pauses (marked with commas in written
language), e.g. Good ‚morning, ‚Please come in, I don’t know it
is a ‚dog, a ‚cat, a ‚wolf or ‘what, etc.

e) Rising-falling (tono quebrado, ascendente-descendente):

It is mainly used to highlight words, e.g. ˆYes (meaning Of


course, Indeed), The ˆdriver doesn’t know the way, Is ˆthis
what you were looking for?, etc.

f) Falling-rising (tono quebrado, descendente-ascendente)


I can’t believe what you are saying

It is used to express doubt, surprise, astonishment, insecurity,


reservations or confusion. It is also used to check something
out, e.g. ˇYes (meaning surprise), I ˇthink he’s coming
(meaning I am not sure), If you ˇlike (meaning I am not sure it
is the best thing to do).

Tones and pitch-accents


Nobody has ever claimed that English is a tone language. However,
pitch and pitch movements play an important role in English and
similar languages in marking out certain syllables as distinctive and
important. If you say the word ‘important’ on its own, you will
probable notice that on the middle syllable the pitch of your voice
steps up from the pitch of the first syllable, then glides down to the

5
Degree in English Studies. Option: English Pronunciation. Lecturer: Ekaterina Sinyashina

lower pitch of the final syllable. This distinctive pitch movement is


sometimes known as accent, and the middle syllable can be said to
be accented. It is not always easy to distinguish this function of pitch
from the tonal contrasts that we have been looking at. In a number
of languages which are not normally thought of as tone languages it
is possible to find pairs of words which really seem to be
distinguished from each other by pitch characteristics, the Japanese,
Swedish and Serbo-Croat languages are some illustrative examples.
In a tone language, pitch variation is used on practically all the
syllables or words of the language, but in the cases just mentioned,
only a limited number of words are distinguished by pitch. To avoid
having to class Japanese, Swedish, Norwegian, and Serbo-Croat as
tone languages, we say that they are pitch-accent languages, and
that certain words are distinguished by pitch-accents.

References

Alcaraz Varó, E. & Moody, B. 1990. (2ª ed.). Fonética Inglesa para
Españoles. Pp. 179-190. Alcoy: Marfil.

O’Connor, J. D. & Arnold, G. F. 1966. Intonation of Colloquial English. Pp.


80-257. London: Longman.

Roach, P. 2001. Phonetics. Pp. 25-29.Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Web references

http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/1357164/pitch

http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/599104/tone

Seminar 1

Read the text above carefully and answer the following


questions:

1. Define in your own words the concept of suprasegmental.

6
Degree in English Studies. Option: English Pronunciation. Lecturer: Ekaterina Sinyashina

2. Why are vowels and consonants called segmental phonemes?

3. Why are stress, tone, and word juncture called suprasegmental


phonemes?

4. Which suprasegmental phonemes may be considered to be


lexically distinctive in Spanish? Please illustrate your answer with
one example.

5. Which suprasegmental phoneme may be considered to be lexically


distinctive in English? Please illustrate your answer with one
example.

6. Why do we say that Mandarin Chinese is a tone language?

7. Define in your own words the concept of pitch.

8. Define in your own words the concept of tone.

7
Degree in English Studies. Option: English Pronunciation. Lecturer: Ekaterina Sinyashina

9. Is English a tone language? What sort of function does tone play in


English?

10. State the major tones of the English language, describe and
illustrate their different functions with significant examples.

11. What is a pitch-accent language? Illustrate your answer with


examples.

12. Summarize the main contents of the reading passage above in


the box below (250 words).

Seminar 2

8
Degree in English Studies. Option: English Pronunciation. Lecturer: Ekaterina Sinyashina

Phonemic Transcription

1. Watch the videos that explain the pronunciation of the


vowel sounds /eɪ/, /aɪ/, /ɔɪ/ and /ə/ and practice their
pronunciation..

2. Transcribe the following sentences using the phonemic


symbols.

1. I wish you’d wash the dishes with that cloth.

2. We found the treasure very easily.

3. They visited the zoo with some of their relatives.

4. Alice’s blouse was stolen together with her shoes.

5. The day they died, we thought the trouble was over.

6. The robber ran round the rocks to the river.

7. He drowned his sorrows in strong drink.

8. Why has Harry got his hand on his heart?

9. Why is there so much chalk on the teacher’s jacket?

10. I wish the watches in the shops were cheaper.

/aɪ wɪʃ ju:d wɒʃ ðə/e ˈdɪʃɪz wɪð ðᴂt klɒθ//

/wi: faʊnd ðə/e ˈtreƷƏ ˈverɪ/i ˈi:zɪlɪ/i//

/ðeɪ ˈvɪzɪtɪd ðe/ə zu: wɪð sʌm ɒ/əv ðeƏ ˈrelƏtɪvz//

/ˈᴂlɪsɪz blaʊz wƏ/ɒz ˈstƏʊlƏn tƏˈgeðƏ wɪð hɜ: ʃu:z//

/ðe/Ə deɪ ðeɪ daɪd/wi: θɔ:t ðe/Ə ˈtrʌb(Ə)l wɒz ˈƏʊvƏ//

/ ðe/Ə ˈrɒbƏ rᴂn raʊnd ðe rɒks tʊ/Ə ðe/Ə ˈrɪvƏ//

/hi: draʊnd hɪz ˈsɒrƏʊz ɪn strɒŋ drɪŋk//

/waɪ hæz ˈhærɪ/i gɒt hɪz hænd ɒn hɪz hɑ:(r)t//

9
Degree in English Studies. Option: English Pronunciation. Lecturer: Ekaterina Sinyashina

/waɪ ɪz ðeə səʊ mʌʧ ʧɔ:k ɒ/Ən ðe/Ə ˈti:ʧəz ˈʤækɪt//

/aɪ wɪʃ ðe/Ə ˈwɒʧɪz ɪn ðe/Ə ʃɒps wɜ:/Ə ˈʧi:pə//

Seminar 3

Oral Reading

Practice reading the sentences from Seminar 2. When you


feel you are ready, record your oral reading of the
sentences and upload it to Moodle.

References

Hancock, M. 2003. English Pronunciation in Use (Intermediate).


Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Jones, D. 2006. Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary. 17th
Edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

10

You might also like