Search from various Tiếng Anh teachers...
chjch
what rules are there about intonation in clause? what rules are there about intonation in clause? when a falling tone or a rising tone is used?
19 Thg 02 2020 05:53
Câu trả lời · 5
1
I'll describe the intonation patterns that we use in the US for speaking with neutral emotion, neutral attitude, and with neutral emphasis. I believe that most regional varieties of English generally use similar intonation patterns when speaking in this manner. At the end of the clause there are 3 possible intonation patterns: 1. Level/even intonation: we typically use this intonation when the clause is NOT the last clause of the sentence. Level/even intonation indicates that the sentence will continue with another clause. 2. Rising intonation: we typically use this intonation at the end of a yes-no question; that is, a question where the speaker wants an answer, and expects that the answer is either "yes" or "no". For example, "Are you going to the store?" is a yes-no answer, and usually we use rising intonation on the word "store". 3. Falling intonation: we use this intonation at the end of statements, such as "Yesterday I went to the store.", and we also use it at the end an information question; that is, a question where the speaker wants an answer, and expect that the answer will be information that answers a question word such as "who", "what", "when", "where", "why", "how" or "how much". For example, the question "What is your name?" is an information question, and the expect answer is a person's name. Speech that is NOT neutral in emotion or in attitude or that has some type of emphasis uses different intonation patterns. However, speakers of different regional varieties of English often use different intonation patterns when speaking in this way.
19 tháng 2 năm 2020
Well, very briefly, we usually use a rising tone before a comma, and a falling tone before a period. In yes-no questions, we use a rising tone. Additional intonation patterns are used to express surprise, sarcasm, warmth, etc. This stuff actually takes several lessons to teach well. It’s important to know what syllables get the intonation and how to time it right (so it doesn't sound like Chinese-style lexical tone). By the way, what kind of clause did you have in mind?
19 tháng 2 năm 2020
Movend comment to answer.
19 tháng 2 năm 2020
Bạn vẫn không tìm thấy được các câu trả lời cho mình?
Hãy viết xuống các câu hỏi của bạn và để cho người bản xứ giúp bạn!

Đừng bỏ lỡ cơ hội học ngoại ngữ ngay tại nhà. Hãy xem danh sách các gia sư ngôn ngữ giàu kinh nghiệm của chúng tôi và đăng ký buổi học đầu tiên ngay hôm nay!