搜尋自 英語 {1} 教師……
Thanks Allah
what is secondary stress in english and how to know where to place it in a word?
2010年11月12日 09:43
解答 · 6
there is no way to know in advance where the secondary stress will be- you have to learn every word in particular. A dictionary might help.
2010年11月12日
There are three environments where you can find a secondary stress :
1. Constructions with separable prefixes, such as re-form (as opposed to reform, without secondary stress on the first syllable). Those constructions are generally found with a secondary stress on the separable prefix, even if this generates a succession of two stresses.
2. When the word is derived (to which there are one or more suffixes), the secondary stress will generally be on a syllable bearing stress in the word from which it is derived (primary or secondary). For example : amBAssador --> amBAssaDOrial. However, when this generates a succession of two stresses, the secondary stress is moved to the first syllable, like : dePARtment --> DEpartMENtal.
3. There is a general "rythmical" constraint in English that states that no word may start with two unstressed syllables. So, if a word is not derived, it will generally receive a secondary stress on its first syllable. Like : KANgaROO.
Hope it helps :)
2012年6月25日
Basically, a word with several syllables will have the main stress on one syllable, and a not-as-heavy stress on the syllable after the next. That is, a stressed syllable in a word will normally be followed or surrounded by weak syllables.
Eg: *AL*-li-GA-tor, *SYL*-la-BLE, *AF*-ter-MATH, per-*FUNC*-to-RY
My advice is, just listen for it first and imitate that. Trying to work it out technically may lead to mistakes in pronunciation.
2010年11月12日
還沒找到你要的答案嗎?
寫下你的問題,讓母語者來幫助你!
Thanks Allah
語言能力
阿拉伯語, 英語, 希伯來語
學習語言
英語, 希伯來語
你也許會喜歡的文章

Santa, St. Nicholas, or Father Christmas? How Christmas Varies Across English-Speaking Countries
6 讚 · 4 留言

Reflecting on Your Progress: Year-End Language Journal Prompts
5 讚 · 2 留言

Same Word, Different Meaning: American, British, and South African English
25 讚 · 18 留言
更多文章
