Hi, questions on intonation. Hope I can get help from native speakers. Thanks.
To(up)day I am going to (up)talk about into(down)nation.
why do the speaker rise his/her intonation in "today, talk"? What kind of attitude or mood does he/she want to convey?
if it is read as "To(down)day I am going to (down)talk about into(down)nation", does it sound weird?
I am gonna (up)make some (down)jellys.
We a(up)rrived here three years ago.
You can see the vi(up)llage down in the (down)valley.
Again, why does intonation go up with "make, arrived, village"?
I know there are some general rules as where intonation should go up and go down. such as in a yes or no question. but I failed to find someone talk about how intonation varies in a statement sentence. is there a pattern?
How will you read "If it sounds weird to you maybe you should cut a sentence you think's odd and upload it for us to see. As you've transcribed it, it looks perfectly normal. "?
Thanks a lot.
Top answer
) unstressed. The final stress is intoned downward. CJ
— CalifJim
) unstressed.
The final stress is intoned downward.
CJ
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The general idea is that you stress the content words (important nouns and verbs in the statement) and you leave the function words (a, the, of, etc.) unstressed. The final stress is intoned downward.
We need to keep two things distinct: stress and accent. Different authors call these categories differently. For instance, accent (Bolinger) is referred to as pitch-accent (ToBI), and as intonational-accent (Charles-James Bailey).
The plain old heuristic "stress content words, but not functors" doesn't help a foreigner to acquire a native-like accent. Peter roach demonstrates this in his