ENG 478/678
Some problems and issues in phonetics

STRESS

In English, stress affects the way we pronounce words, and therefore must be taken into account in any phonetic transcription system.  The main effect (for our purposes) will be on vowels, an effect known as "vowel reduction."

Words of one syllable, as far as we are concerned, will all have primary stress.  (In real speech there is a broad class of exceptions, but we will ignore the exceptions for now.)  So each one-syllable word will be transcribed simply as pronounced.  For example,

In words of two or more syllables, however, we will have only one syllable with primary stress, and one (or more) unstressed syllables.  Other syllables may have some stress, but not as much as the primary-stressed syllable; this is called secondary stress.  Syllables with primary or secondary stress will all contain full vowels, as in the words above.  But vowels in an unstressed syllable may undergo "vowel reduction."  The result is the reduced vowel, for which we use the phonetic symbol "schwa".   For example,
 

Notice that in the first syllable of "tundra" we use the "caret"  to symbolize the full vowel in mid central lax position, while the similar-sounding but shorter "schwa"  is used in the second syllable to symbolize the reduced vowel.

Not all unstressed vowels are necessarily reduced.  In words like "ÓNLY" [onli] and in most compound words ("mixup") an unstressed vowel is still full.  But most of the time, the unstressed vowel will reduce to schwa.  When I give you words of two or more syllables to transcribe, I will indicate stress.



Practice

Transcribe the following words.  Make sure you give them normal pronunciation:
 
 


SYLLABLES, VOWELS, AND SYLLABIC CONSONANTS

One of the definitions of the vowel specifies that it is the "nucleus of the syllable."  That means that a vowel is the one essential element of the syllable.  In other words, however many consonants a syllable may have (from zero to n) it will have one, and only one, vowel.

Listen to the second syllable, however, in a word like DAYTON or CERTAIN.  Each has two syllables, but in normal (moderate or fast speech) pronunciation, the exact nature of the vowel in the second syllable is unclear--it doesn't actually seem to exist.  Both syllables sound like *[tn].  But we just said that the vowel is the nucleus of every syllable; so a vowel has to be present in some form.

One solution (which we will adopt, following our textbook) is to allow for certain consonants to function as "syllabic consonants."  A syllabic consonant is a consonant which functions like a vowel in that it can be the nucleus of a syllable.  One way of understanding this is to imagine that a vowel has been reduced past the point of being a "schwa" to where it has no independent identity at all.  It has been blended with or swallowed up by the consonant after it.  This is true of the second syllable in DAYTON.

Here are the four syllabic consonants, with a few examples of their use:

Remember that there are only these four syllabic consonants, and that each represents a reduced vowel followed by the consonant.  Because this is true, an alternative representation of each would be schwa plus the consonant.  In other words:
  is the same as
  is the same as
  is the same as , and
  is the same as


Return to the Syllabus for ENG 478/678

Return to Dr. Limouze's Home Page

Return to the Basic Transcription Exercises

Return to the Intermediate Transcription Exercises