I. Stress in Simple Words
The nature of stress
The nature of stress is simple, we can study stress from the point of view of production and of perception, the two are obviously closely related, but are not identical. The production of stress depends on the speaker using more muscular energy that is used for unstressed syllables.
From the point of view of perception, all stressed syllables have one characteristic in common, and that is prominence, stressed syllable are recognised as stressed because they are more prominent than unstressed syllable. What makes a syllable prominent?
At least four different factors are important:
1) most people seem to feel that stressed syllable are louder than unstressed, in other words, loudness is a component of prominence.
2) the length of syllable has an important part to play in prominence.
3) every syllable is said on some pitch, pitch in speech is closely related to the frequency of vibration of the vocal cords.
4) A syllable will tend to be prominent if it contains a vowel that is different in quality from neighboring vowels.
Generally these four factor work together in combination, though syllables may sometimes be made prominent by means of only one or two of them. These factors are not equally important, the strongest effect is produced by pitch and length, loudness and quality have much less effect.
Levels of stress
The prominence that results from the pitch movement, or tone, gives the strongest type of stress, this is called primary stress.
In some words, we can observe a type of stress that is weaker than primary stress but stronger than unstressed syllables. The stress of these words is called secondary stress.
We have now identified two levels of stress: primary and secondary, as well as a third level which is called unstressed and regarded as being the absence of any amount of prominence. These are the three levels that we’ll use in describing English stress.
Placement of stress within the word
How can one select the correct syllable or syllable to stress in an English word? As is well known, English is not one of those languages where word stress can be decided simply in relation to the syllable of the word, as it can be done in French (where the last syllable is stressed), Polish (where the syllable before the last is stressed) or Czech Polish (where the first syllable is stressed). Many writers have said that English word stress is so difficult to predict that it is best to treat stress placement as a property of the individual word, to be learned when the word itself is learned.
In order to decide on stress placement, it is necessary to make use of the following information:
1. whether the word is morphologically simple, or whether it is complex as a resul either of containing one or more affixes (that is, prefixes or suffixes) or being a compound word;
2. the grammatical category to which the word belongs (noun, verb, adjective, etc);
3. the number of syllable in the word.
II. Complex Word Stress
Complex words
Complex words are of two major types:
1. words made from a basic stem word which the addition of an affix (affix words);
2. compound words, which are made of two (or occasionally more) inde-pendent English words.
Affixes can influence the word stress:
1. the affix itself receives the primary stress (person-personality);
2. the word is stressed just is if the affix was not there (pleasant-unpleasant);
3. the stress remains on the stem, not he affix, but is shifted to a different syllable (magnet-magnetic).
Compound words
The main characteristic of this word is that it can be analysed into two words, both of which can exist independently as english words. As far as stressis concerned, a few rules can be given.
The most familiar type of compound is the one which combines two nouns, and has the stress on the first element.
But a variety of compounds receive stress on the second element:
1. compounds with an adj. As the 1st element
bad-tempered
heavy-handed
2. compounds in which the first element is a number
rhree-wheeler
second-class
3. compounds functioning as a adverbs
North-East
head-first
4. compounds which function as verbs and have an adv. As the 1st element
ill-treat
down-grade
III. Stress in Word – class Pairs
There are several pairs of two syllable words with identical spelling, which differ from each other in stress placement, according to word class (noun, verb or adjective). The stress will be placed on the second syllable of the verb, but on the first syllable of the noun or adjective.
Abstract – abstract
Export – export
Object – object
Present – present
Record – record
IV. Weak Forms
Certain well-known English words can be pronounced in two different ways, they can have strong forms and weak forms. Almost all these words belong to a category that may be called function words. These function words are words such as auxiliary verbs, prepositions, conjunctions, all of which are in certain circumstances pronounced in their strong forms but which are more frequently pronounced in their weak forms.
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