Nine rules of word stress Flashcards

1
Q

Word stress is the emphasis placed on a syllable.

A

A syllable is a unit of sound in a word that usually contains a vowel sound.

cat. - /kæt/ (has one syllable and on vowel sound)

Picture. - /ˈpɪkʧər/ ( has two syllable and two vowel sounds

*** we do not stress every syllable.
**we do not stress consonants; unless they sound like vowel letter like in the Y when it sounds like:

Physical - /ˈfɪzɪkəl/

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2
Q

There are three ways to stress syllables in English:

A
  1. Primary stress (the loudest syllable in a word)
  2. Secondary stress (syllables which aren’t completely unstressed but, aren’t loud as primary stress)
  3. Weak or unstressed.
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3
Q

Primary stress

A

Primary stress is the emphasis placed on certain syllables in a word that makes them more prominent than other syllable.

It is indicated with an apostrophe:

  • Table - /ˈteɪbəl/
  • Banana. - /bəˈnænə/
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4
Q

Secondary stress

A

Secondary stress occurs in longer words and is indicated by a coma.

Academic - /,ækəˈdɛmɪk/
organization - /ˌɔrɡənɪˈzeɪʃən/

***Weak stress is where there is no stress at all on the syllable.

***The vowel will often take the sound of the schwa instead of the full vowel sound

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5
Q

Rule #1
Two syllable nouns have the main stress on the first syllable

A

Pic-ture. - /ˈpɪkʧər/
Mi-rror. - /ˈmɪrər/
Bo-ttle. - /ˈbɑtəl/
Cup-board - /’kʌbəd/

***We do not stress both vowel sounds.

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6
Q

Rule #2
Two syllables adjectives have the main stress on the first syllable

A

Prett-y - /’prɪti/
Per-fect - /ˈpɜrˌfɪkt/
Comm-on. - /ˈkɑmən/
Help-ful - /ˈhɛlpfəl/

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7
Q

Rule #3
Two syllable verbs have the main stress on the second syllable

A

pro-vide. - /prəˈvaɪd/
believe. - /bɪ’li:v/
bi-gin. - /bɪˈɡɪn/
de-cide - /ˌdɪˈsaɪd/

There are lots of two syllable verbs in English and very often the change of stress can change the word class.

The following words are examples of this:

Noun: Ex-port - /ˈɛkspɔrt/
Verb: to export - /tu ɪk’spↄːt/

Noun: import. - /ˈɪmpɔrt/
Verb: to import - /tu ɪm’pɔrt/

Noun: contract. - /ˈkɑnˌtrækt/
verb: to contract. - /tu kɑn’trækt/

***Stress can change the class and the meaning of a word too:

object. - /ˈɑbʤɛkt/
to object - /tu ɑb’ʤɛkt/

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8
Q

Rule #4
Words ending in IC
These words have the main stress on the syllable before the IC ending.

A

music. - /ˈmjuzɪk/
heroic. - /hɪˈroʊɪk/
graphic - /ˈɡræfɪk/
geographic - /ˌʤiəˈɡræfɪk/
magnet-ic. - /mæɡˈnɛtɪk/
e-lec-tric. - /ɪˈlɛktrɪk/
el-ec-tro-nic - /ɪˌlɛkˈtrɑnɪk/

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9
Q

Rule #5
Words endings in sion and tion
these words have the main stress on the syllable before the sion and tion endings

A

in-va-sion. - /ɪnˈveɪʒən/
po-llu-tion. - /pəˈluʃən/
ed-u-ca-tion - /ˌɛʤəˈkeɪʃən/
con-ver-sa-tion. - /ˌkɑnvərˈseɪʃən/

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10
Q

Rule #6
Words ending in CY, TY, PHY and GY
These words have the main stress on the antepenultimate syllable.

A

psy-chol-o-gy. - /saɪˈkɑləʤi/

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11
Q

Rule #7
Words ending in AL
These words have the main stress on the antepenultimate syllable.

A

Phy-si-cal. - /ˈfɪzɪkəl/
cri-ti-cal. - / ˈkrɪtɪkəl/
Mag-i-cal. - /ˈmæʤɪkəl/
hy-ster-i-cal. - /hɪˈstɛrɪkəl/

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12
Q

Rule #8
For compound nouns: the stress is on the first part.

A

black-bird - /’blæk-bɜrd/
book-case. - /’bʊk-keɪs/
green-house. - /’ɡrin-haʊs/

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13
Q

Rule #9
For compound adjectives: the main stress is on the second part.

A

old-fast-ioned. - /,oʊld-ˈfæʃənd/
well-known. - /,wɛl-noʊn/

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14
Q

When you learn a word is a good idea to learn word family.

A

Verb: educate - /ˈɛʤəˌkeɪt/
Noun: education - /ˌɛʤəˈkeɪʃən/
Adj: educational - /ˌɛʤəˈkeɪʃənəl/

Prefixes:
Uneducated. - /əˈnɛʤʊˌkeɪtɪd/
well-educated. - /wɛl-ˈɛʤəˌkeɪtəd/
poorly-educated. - /ˈpurli-ˈɛʤəˌkeɪtəd/
highly-educated. /ˈhaɪli-ˈɛʤəˌkeɪtəd/

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