ТОР 5 статей: Методические подходы к анализу финансового состояния предприятия Проблема периодизации русской литературы ХХ века. Краткая характеристика второй половины ХХ века Характеристика шлифовальных кругов и ее маркировка Служебные части речи. Предлог. Союз. Частицы КАТЕГОРИИ:
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Peculiarities of GA intonation.The most frequent intonation contour for statements and requests in GA is the tune, beginning low, rising to a high level, and then steadily falling. E.g. He asked me to do it. He asked me to do it. The same type of falling intonation contour may characterize the so called General Questions in GA. Did he ask you to do it? "Rising" tunes that rise from a low pitch level and end on a high pitch level occur with some General Questions, especially in situations where a very polite form is desirable. E.g. Do you know him? Though the so—called Special Questions are pronounced with a falling tone in both RP and GA, the difference lies in the pronunciation of the Scale. If in RP it is usually the Descending Scale, in GA the whole utterance is generally pronounced on a level tone. E.g. RP Why haven't you told me about it? GA Why haven't you to ld me about it? Such questions sound dispassionate and disrespectful to an RP speaker. The RP Special Questions pronounced with a rising tone (polite questions) are perceived by the Americans as questions implying curiosity. Another frequent intonational characteristic in GA is to end a sentence with a high—pitched fall—rise. E.g. Can you do it? We certainly can. On account of the fact that the features which distinguish AE from British English are so numerous, some linguists claim that AE can no more be considered a variant of the English language. But most of the linguists express the opposite point of view. It has been proved that the distinctions between AE and BE do not affect the inventory of the main language units. Those distinctions are but functional variations of language units which are common to both variants of the English language: AE and BE. Thus, there is a wide range of pronunciation varieties of the English language. These varieties reflect the social class the speaker belongs to, the geographical region he comes from, and they also convey stylistic connotations of speech. Some of these varieties are received pronunciations, others are not. Every national variant of the English language has an orthoepic norm of its own: RP, or Southern English, for British English, GA for American English, the Australian Standard Pronunciation for Australian English. Each of these orthoepic norms tolerates a definite range of phonemic variation, and each of them has its own peculiarities of combinatory phenomena.
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