sentence into intonation-groups if necessary. Mark the stresses and tunes. Find the
communicative centre of each sentence. Practise reading the text:
We had a grand holiday last year. My husband and I took the children to the
seaside for a month. We have five children. John, the eldest, is 12 years old, and
little Mary, the baby, is only two and a half.
John has been to the seaside several times before, but this was the first time
the other children had been. Naturally, it was a great event for them. For weeks
before we were to go they talked of nothing else and were very busy getting their
things ready. Finally, the day came when our holiday was to begin. John was a
great help in looking after the other children and so was Betty, who is nearly
eleven. It was a fine morning. We were up very early as we wanted to leave
home soon after breakfast. We made the journey by car, and we took some
refreshments with us so that we could stop for lunch when we found a pleasant
place in the country. We reached the seaside town, where we intended to stay in
the early afternoon, and as soon as we arrived the children were asking if they
could go down to the beach and see the sea. After that we spent many hours of
each day on the beach. The children made sandcastles and bathed. John and
Betty, who are quite good swimmers, had a swim every morning with their father
while I sat with the others. Several
times my husband and I went to the theatre in the evening and once or twice
we went dancing.
16.
This exercise is meant to develop your ability to read and narrate a story with
proper intonation, a) Listen to the joke. Write it down. Mark the stresses and tunes. Practise
reading the joke, b) Listen carefully to the narration of the joke. Observe the peculiarity in
intonation-group division, pitch, stress and tempo. Note the use of temporizers. Retell the
joke according to the model you have listened to.
16.
Read and retell the jokes:
Doctor's Orders
S e r v a n t : Sir, wake up, wake up!
M a s t e r : What is the matter?
S e r v a n t : It's time to take your sleeping tablets.
Politeness
M o t h e r : Which apple do you want, Tom? T o m :
The biggest one.
M o t h e r : Why, Tom, you should be polite and take the little one. ' T o m :
Well, Mamma, should I lie just to be polite?
His Pipe
L i t t l e g i r l : Grandpa, would you like me to give you a new pipe for your
birthday?
G r a n d p a : That's very nice of you, Mary, but I have got a pipe.
L i t t l e g i r l : Don't think you have, Grandpa, I've just broken it.
A Good Student
P r o f e s s o r : Can you tell me anything about the дтеМ chemists of the
17th century?
S t u d e n t : Yes, sir, they are all dead, sir.
Section Ten
Intonation Pattern VII
(LOW PRE-HEAD + ) FALLING HEAD + FALL-RISE
M o d e l : Type out this letter at once.
I Vcan't 'possibly x finish it ,now
This intonation pattern is used in statements, commands and other
communicative types of sentences to express the same attitudes as Intonation
Pattern VI. Stressed syllables of the head sometimes glide down.
e. g. I didn't know you drank coffee. I -* do
—
xsome, times.
EXERCISES
1. a)* Listen carefully to the following conversational situations. Concentrate your
attention on the intonation of the replies:
Verbal Context Drill
S t a t e m e n t s
[expressing concern, hart feelings, reproach, contradiction,
correction, uncertainty, contrast, grumbling)
Do you smoke?
I do sometimes.
Can we smoke here?
It's not forbidden.
She is a pretty girl, isn't she? She has a lovely face.
Are you using the ruler?
Not at the moment.
We got here about midnight. It was earlier than that. The clock's twelve
minutes fast. I'm quite sure it's not thft
much out.
Are you coming for a swim?
Not I. Not likely.
May I come to your lecture?
There'll be nothing new in it
for you.
What about this green dress?
The recipe says a pound of dried fruit.
I'd like to go, but it's such an expensive journey.
She's an absolute failure. You're a clumsy oaf. We'll leave before dawn.
Look, Mummy, I'm right at the top.
b| Listen to the replies and re voice fall as low as possible. Start not go up too high.
I shouldn't buy that one if I were you.
I doubt whether a pound will be enough.
You shouldn't let the cost of it deter you from going.
C o m m a n d s (urgent, warning)
Now be fair. Steady on. Have a heart. Have a bit of sense. Mind you don't
fall.
them in the intervals. Make yourrise from the lowest pitch and do
c) Listen to the verbal context and reply in the intervals.
2. In order to fix Intonation Pattern VII in your mind, ear and speech habits repeat the
replies yonrself until they sonnd perfectly natural to yon.
3. Listen to your fellow-student reading the replies. Tell him what his errors in intonation
are.
4. Listen to the verbal context suggested by your teacher. Reply by using one of the drill
sentences below. Pronounce it with Intonation Pattern VII. Say what attitude you mean to
render:
Verbal Context
Are you coming to dinner tonight?
Everyone's at home.
What a nice house!
He won't come, I tell you.
I came at a quarter past two.
Here I am.
Do you like my hat?
Drill I will if I can.
Not everyone. It isn't a large one. He hasn't definitely refused. , Half past
three it was. You're rather late. If you don't mind my saying so, it's terrible.
}don't know what to do about it.
it's not easy, you know.
Јhe speaks English quite fluently.
Sfou look cold.
pit last she has passed her exam. fcVill you be staying in London till autumn?
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