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

Intonation

Intonation refers to the rising and falling tones of the voice when speaking. There are two basic intonation patterns in English - falling and rising intonation. Falling intonation, where the voice falls at the end of a sentence, is most common and used for statements, commands, and questions seeking information. Rising intonation, where the voice rises at the end of a sentence, invites the speaker to continue and is used for yes/no questions. Other intonation patterns include rise-fall for choices/lists and fall-rise to show uncertainty. Intonation conveys attitude and emotion.

Uploaded by

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

Intonation

Intonation refers to the rising and falling tones of the voice when speaking. There are two basic intonation patterns in English - falling and rising intonation. Falling intonation, where the voice falls at the end of a sentence, is most common and used for statements, commands, and questions seeking information. Rising intonation, where the voice rises at the end of a sentence, invites the speaker to continue and is used for yes/no questions. Other intonation patterns include rise-fall for choices/lists and fall-rise to show uncertainty. Intonation conveys attitude and emotion.

Uploaded by

Anssty
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 16

INTONATION IN

ENGLISH
PRONUNCIATION
What is intonation?

• Intonation and stress are closely linked. In fact it's impossible to dissociate them.
They go hand in hand.

• Intonation is about how we say things, rather than what we say, the way the voice
rises and falls when speaking, in other words the music of the language.

• Just as words have stressed syllables, sentences have regular patterns of stressed
words. In addition, the voice tends to rise, fall or remain flat depending on the
meaning or feeling we want to convey (surprise, anger, interest, boredom,
gratitude, etc.).

Intonation therefore indicates the mood of the speaker.


There are two basic
patterns of intonation
in English:

- falling intonation;

- rising intonation.

In the following examples a downward


arrow (➘) indicates a fall in intonation and
an upward arrow (➚) indicates a rise in
intonation.
THESE ARE NOT RULES BUT PATTERNS GENERALLY USED BY
NATIVE SPEAKERS OF ENGLISH.

! !
JUST REMEMBER THAT CONTENT WORDS ARE STRESSED, AND
INTONATION ADDS ATTITUDE OR EMOTION.

IT SHOULD BE REMEMBERED THAT A WRITTEN EXPLANATION CAN


NEVER BE A SUBSTITUTE FOR A 'LIVE' CONVERSATION WITH A
NATIVE SPEAKER.

ATTITUDINAL INTONATION IS SOMETHING THAT IS BEST


ACQUIRED THROUGH TALKING AND LISTENING TO ENGLISH
SPEAKERS.
Falling Intonation (➘)
(The pitch of the voice falls at the end of the sentence.)

• Falling intonation is the most common intonation pattern in


English.

• It is commonly found in statements, commands, wh-questions


(information questions),
confirmatory question tags and exclamations.
Rising Intonation (➚)
(The pitch of the voice rises at the end of a sentence.)

• Rising intonation invites the speaker to continue talking.


It is normally used with yes/no questions, and question tags that
are real questions.
Rise-Fall Intonation (➚➘)
(The intonation rises and then falls.)

• We use rise-fall intonation for choices, lists, unfinished thoughts


and conditional sentences.
Fall-Rise Intonation (➘➚)
(The voice falls and rises usually within one word.)

• The main function of fall-rise intonation is to show that the


speaker is not certain of the answer they are giving to a question,
or is reluctant to reply (as opposed to a falling tone used when
there is no hesitation). It is also used in polite requests or
suggestions.
SOURCE
https://www.learn-english-today.com/pronunciation-stress/intonation.html

You might also like