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КАТЕГОРИИ:






Affecting the position of soft palate.




1. Assimilation affecting a) the point of articulation takes place when the principal (alveolar) variants of the phonemes [t],[d],[n],[l],[s],[z] are replaced by dental variants if they adjacent to dental consonant phonemes [θ],[ð].
E.g.: tenth [tenθ] in them [inðem] read this [ri:d ðis]
b) Assimilation affecting the active speech organ and the point of articulation takes place in the following cases:
In words with prefix - con - when it’s followed by the consonants [k],[g]: the forelingual alveolar [n] is replaced by the back lingual velar [η] if the prefix is stressed.
E.g.: congress [kάηgres]
There is NO assimilation if the prefix is unstressed – congratulation[kəngrætjύlei∫n].
When [m] is standing before [f], [v] it’s assimilated to them. The principal bilabial variant is replaced by its labio-dental variant.
2. Assimilation affecting the manner of production of noise takes place in following case.
When constrictive noise fricative [v] is standing before the occlusive nasal sonorant [m] in the word connection between me and give, let, in rapid speech they are assimilated to [m].
E.g.: give me [gim mi] let me [lem mi]. In this case, we consider assimilation affecting not only the manner of production, but the position of the soft palate.
3. Assimilation affecting the work of vocal cords takes place in the following cases.
A) A voiceless consonant may be replaced by a voiced one under the influence of the adjacent voiced consonant. The voiceless [s] in goose [gu:s] is replaced by the voiced [z] in the compound noun gooseberry [gu:zbəri] under the influence of the voiced [b] in berry.
b) A voiced consonant may be replaced by a voiceless one under the influence of the adjacent voiceless consonant.
E.g.: used [ju:zd] the consonants [z] and [d] have been replaced by the voiceless consonant [s] and [t] in used to [ju:st tu].
The pronunciation is common even when no to follows.
Used they to live here? [ju:st ðei tə liv hiə]
c) When the vowel [i] in the verb form is [iz] is omitted in the rapid speech and [z] is replaced by [s] under the influence of the preceding voiceless consonant.
E.g.: What is this? - What's this?
d)The English sonorants [m],[n],[l],[r],[j],[w] are partly devoiced when they are preceded by the voiceless consonants [s],[p],[t],[k] E.g.: small, please, slow, try.
4. Assimilation affecting the lip position takes place when the phonemes [k], [g], [t], [s] are labialized and used under the influence of the following bilabial sonorant [w].
E.g.: quick [kwik] twenty [twenty] language [læηgwidʒ].
5. Assimilation affecting the position of the soft palate takes place when nasal consonants influence oral ones.
E.g.: let me, give me.
Also in sandwich [sænwidʒ] kindness [kainess] grandmother [grænmΛðə] the consonant [d] influenced by preceding [n],then it changed to the consonant [n] and disappeared.
In handkerchief [hæηkət∫if] the consonant [d] is changed under the influence to consonant [n] and then disappeared. The remaining [n] changed to [η] under the influence of [k]. In this word we observe assimilation affecting the active organ of speech and the point of articulation.

B. 3 degrees of assimilation.
Assimilation may be of three degrees: complete, partial, intermediate.
Assimilation is said to be complete when the articulation of the assimilated consonant fully coincides with articulation of the assimilating one.
E.g.: horse-shoe [hɔs su:]
Assimilation is said to be partial when the assimilated consonant retains its main phonemic features and becomes only partly similar in some feature of its articulation to the assimilating sound.
E.g.: the alveolar variants of the consonants [t],[d],[n],[l],[s],[z] are replaced to the dental under the influence of the consonants [θ],[ð]; the main phonetic features of the former are retained but their point of articulation is changed.
The degree of assimilation is said to be intermediate between complete and partial when the assimilated consonant changes into a different sound but does not coincide with the assimilating consonant.
E.g.: congress [kaηgres], where [n] is replaced by [η] under the influence of [g].
C. Assimilation may be of three types: progressive, regressive, double.
We concern the follow directions:
In progressive assimilation the assimilated consonant is influenced by the preceding consonant.
This can be presented by the formula A→B, where A is the assimilating consonant and B the assimilated consonant.
E.g.: place the fully voiced variant of the consonant phoneme [l] is assimilated to [p] and is replaced by a partly devoiced variant of the same phoneme.
In regressive assimilation the preceding consonant is influenced by the one following it.
E.g.: the voiced consonant [z] in news [nju:z] is replaced by the voiceless consonant [s] in the compound word newspaper [nju:speipə] under the influence of the voiceless sound [p].
In horse-shoe [hɔ: ∫∫ u: ] [s] in horse [hɔ:s] was replaced by the [∫] and become fully assimilated to [∫] in shoe [u:]
In double assimilation two adjacent consonants influence each other.
E.g.: twenty [twenti], quick [kwik] the sonorant [w] is assimilated to the voiceless plosive consonants [t] and [k] becoming partly devoiced. In their turn, [t], [k] are assimilated to [w] and are represented by their labialized variants.
In rapid colloquial speech one more of double assimilation may take place in some close-knit groups.
E.g.: in the phrases don’t you can’t you [t] is immediately followed by [j] and influences on it thus [j] changes into [t∫].
As a result [dj] is replaced by [d∫]:
don’t you [doʊnt jʊ ] - [doʊnt ∫ʊ]
can’t you [kɑ:nt jʊ] - kɑ:nt ∫ʊ]

E.g.: When [j] is preceded by [d] the former disappears giving [d] tongue-front coarticulation. As a result [dj] is replaced by [dʒ].
did you [did jʊ][didʒʊ]
could you [kʊd ju][kʊdʒu].






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