Menu
Sign In Search Podcasts Charts People & Topics Add Podcast API Pricing
Podcast Image

EnglishStories

he Focus of This Lesson Is Stress in American English.Grammar Points

27 Nov 2022

Description

The Focus of This Lesson Is Stress in American English. In the first two lessons, we talked about vowels and consonants, which are the sounds that make up a word. In this lesson, we will talk about stress. For Example: Grammar Points English is a stress language. This means that every word has at least one syllable that is more audible than the rest of the syllables. When we stress the wrong syllable, the word may be harder to understand. Stress only falls on vowels and not consonants. 1. "star": one-syllable word, one stress 2. "lesson": two-syllable word, one stress 3. "calendar": three-syllable word, one stress See whether you can hear the stress in the words in the above examples. The sound that we emphasize the most is the stress, and most often it is also the syllable that lasts the longest. For Example: Here's an example of a word that has a functional difference when we change the stress: 1. "an increase": noun 2. "to increase": verb And here's an example of how sometimes it's hard to understand different accents (note the spelling difference as well). For Example: 1. "aluminum": American English 2. "aluminium": British English Some words may have a secondary stress, such as "pronunciation." It may seem as though this word has two stresses, but the "-a"is the main stress, and the "-u" is the secondary stress. EnglishClass101.com Learn English with FREE Podcasts Nouns, verbs, and adjectives are known to be content words in a sentence, which mean that they have meaning on their own. We usually hear the stress in these words, which then sets the rhythm of the sentence. For Example: 1. "I saw a friend last weekend." In this particular sentence, "saw," "friend," and "last" "weekend" are the content words. Thus, hearing the sentence as a whole, those are the words that have the most audible stress. The other words, "I," "a," and "last," are not as important; therefore, we do not stress them as much when we are speaking. This does not mean that we do not say them, but rather we do not emphasize them as much. Of course, depending on what you want to convey, the stress of the sentence may change. For Example: 1. "I saw a friend last weekend." In this sentence, the speaker is trying to make it clear that it was "last" weekend and not any other weekend. If you want to stress the subject, then you might say the sentence like this. For Example: "I saw a friend last weekend." Stress is an important aspect to know and understand when learning English. It will also set the stage for the next lesson. If your native tongue is not a stress language, then it may be hard to pronounce words as well as hear and understand them at first. However, once you recognize the difference, you will know what to look out for and what to practice.

Audio
Featured in this Episode

No persons identified in this episode.

Transcription

This episode hasn't been transcribed yet

Help us prioritize this episode for transcription by upvoting it.

0 upvotes
🗳️ Sign in to Upvote

Popular episodes get transcribed faster

Comments

There are no comments yet.

Please log in to write the first comment.