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Emphatic intonation is a type of intonation which is emotional and powerful.

It serves:

– to intensify (make more prominent) the meaning of the whole sentence;

– to intensify one or more words in the sentence.

The English language distinguishes intensity emphasis and contrast emphasis.


Intensity emphasis is emphasizing of the whole sentence or one or more words in it in order to intensify the meaning. The meaning of the whole sentence is intensified by increasing the stress.

Contrast emphasis is emphasizing of one or more words in the sentence in order to express contrast.


Components of the emphatic intonation:

Melody

Sentence stress

Timbre

Tempo of speech

Melody in emphatic speech is characterized by compound tones, special scales, different pitch-levels and pitch-ranges.

The tones used in emphatic speech are: High-Fall, Fall-Rise, Rise-Fall, Fall+Rise, Rise-Fall-Rise.

Special scales are ascending (gradually ascending, sliding, scandent), descending (stepping, stepping-broken, sliding, scandent) and level (low and high) ones.

Pitch-levelsof sense groups in emphatic speech may be made deliberately higher or lower and such ranges are wider and narrower than in unemphatic speech. Rising of the pitch-level and widening of the range are used to express: joy, joyful surprise, anger, irritation.

² Good heavens!

Lowering of the pitch-level and narrowing of the range serves to express hopelessness, sadness, disappointment, horror, negative emotions.

² It snows and snows.

Sentence stressin emphatic speech is made stronger than in unemphatic speech.

² His acting was marvellous!

Word stress too is sometimes changed in emphatic speech: an unstressed syllable may be stressed deliberately to make the word more prominent.

² I reee-\peat it! I reee-\peat it!

Timbrein emphatic speech expresses emotions such as joy, anger, surprise, irony etc.

Tempo of speechin emphatic speech may be deliberately made quicker or slower than in unemphatic speech.

EXERCISE 46

² Pair-work practice: listen to the recording and put intonation marks. Practice pronouncing the following sentences and intone them:

High-Fall \By the way

Fall-Rise There’s a v barber’s |and a v hairdresser’s…

Rise-Fall ^All of them| are on the ground \ floor.

Fall+Rise Could I try a\nother pair, / please?

Rise-Fall-Rise But you’ve already ~tried...

 

EXERCISE 47

² Pair-work practice: listen to the recording and put intonation marks. Define the type of the nuclear tone. Practice pronouncing the following sentences and intone them:

1) I’m afraid not.

2) What facilities are there in the hotel?

3) Isabel didn’t scream or scurry.

4) Certainly.

5) What about tomorrow?

6) They suit me very well…

7) I don’t think this shade of red really suits me.

8) It doesn’t matter, dear.

9) It’s you.

10) What do you think?

11)Yes!

12) You’ve got a lovely voice.

EXERCISE 48

² Pair-work practice: listen to the recording and put intonation marks. Practice pronouncing the following sentences with the types of scales given:

Gradually ascendingSwallow this!

Ascending slidingHe is running twenty miles every day.

Ascending scandent(I’ve just told you!) On an antique rosewood table my father wrote his own novels on!

SteppingThe games were restricted to Greeks...

Stepping-brokenThat’s really more than enough for one day.

Descending slidingAnd if you ask the lion...

Descending scandentMy little daughter’s very naughty.

Level (low)As a matter of fact.

Level (high)As a matter of fact.

 

EXERCISE 49

² Pair-work practice: listen to the recording and put intonation marks. Define the type of scale. Practice pronouncing the following sentences and intone them:

1) No, the large blue “Ford”!

2 He doesn’t love me.

3) He wants to be delighted.

4) Sorry, can you say that again?

5) I didn’t mean to be rude.

6) Greg threw a glass of beer at Quentin.

7) He says he hasn’t got time for girls at sea.

8) Lovely day, isn’t it?

9) What? She keeps spiders as pets?

EXERCISE 50

² Pair-work practice: listen to the recording and put intonation marks. Define the emotions that are expressed with the help of timbre. Practice pronouncing the following sentences:

1) Yes, these ones fit quite nicely.

2) Well, the rich became very, very rich.

3) Miss Lucy had a baby, his name was Tiny Tim.

EXERCISE 51

²Pair-work practice: listen to the recording and put intonation marks. Define the tempo of speech. Practice pronouncing the following sentences and intone them. Make up your own sentences with different types of speech tempo.

1) Go to the cinema, or to the beach, or to the tennis club!

2) The meat I am about to chew is neither steak nor chops, it’s you!

 

EXERCISE 52

² Pair-work practice: listen to the dialogues and put intonation marks. Define the means of the emphatic intonation. Act the dialogues out.

Dialogue 1

- Sorry, you can’t have the office car. The boss has gone off in it.

- Where’s he gone?

- Not far!

- How far’s not far?

- Er…

- Er… As far as the golf-club…

Dialogue 2

– Come on, Tom! Hurry up! Lunch is ready. We want to start.

– I’m coming.

– What are you doing?

– I’m in the bath, mother.

– What a funny time for the bath! By the way, Margaret’s come.

– Did you say “Margaret’s come”, mother?

– Tom, put something on! You can’t come to lunch in a towel.

Dialogue 3

– And last, the farm cottage.

– Not the cottage. No, I can’t sell the farm cottage.

– I’ve got an offer.

– I promised my father…

– It’s a large offer.

– But I promised my father that I would not sell it…

– It’s a very large offer, Miss Clark.

– Even so! I can’t possibly sell it… Er… How large is the offer?

Dialogue 4

– It was such a wonderful party. Oh, am I the last? I must go.

– Wasn’t Arthur funny?

– Oh, Arthur, ha-ha… I laughed and laughed…

– Another cup?

– Er… Half a cup, yes…Just a little more, please. M-m-m… Thank you. And, perhaps, some of that lovely chocolate cake. Wonderful! Oh, yes, Arthur, ha-ha… I laughed and laughed, ha-ha… Well, yes, perhaps, just a little larger. M-m-m… It’s such a lovely chocolate cake. M-m-m…

 


GLOSSARY OF TERMS


Intonation

Unemphatic speech

Emphatic speech

Statement

Final sense-group

Non-final sense group

Part of a simple sentence

Clause

adverbial phrases

elements of enumeration

parentheses

Direct addresses

Reporting phrases

General question

Special question

Alternative question

Disjunctive question

Rhetorical question

Imperative

Command

Request

Warning

Invitation

Exclamation proper

Exclamation-like sentence

Greeting

Leave-taking

Gratitude

Apology

Attention-getter

Temporizer

intensity emphasis

contrast emphasis

Speech melody

Pitch level

Sentence-stress

Voice-timbre

Tempo of speech

Intonation group

intonation pattern

nucleus or nuclear tone (pl. nuclei)

tail

Descending falling scale

Descending stepping scale

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