For years, phoneticians have tried to simplify pronunciation for EFL/ESL learners. Some have identified four degrees of primary, secondary, tertiary, and weak stress, and others only three degrees: primary, secondary, and weak. Still others have concentrated on two stress levels: accented versus unaccented, or stressed versus unstressed (Bowen, 1975; Stageberg, 1964; Chomsky & Halle, 1968). None, however, has followed an orthography-based approach to English accent. Because orthography is the most static way of representing words in English, spelling- or orthography-based rules of accent/stress placement may come as a relief to ESL/EFL learners. In this article I present four spelling-based rules for stress placement to help EFL/ESL learner...
Abstract Learning about pronunciation is also learning about stress and intonation. They are aspects...
This paper studies the role played by stress and rhythm in English. The effects of stress on the pho...
There is a systematic relationship between stress accent and pronunciation variation in spontaneous ...
Literate English speakers read and write unfamiliar English words with their correct stress patterns...
The first part of the paper contrasts two different systems for representing the stress or accentuat...
Sponsored in part by the National Science Foundation through Grant Gn-534.1 from the Office of Scien...
Word stress is a suprasegmental feature in English pronunciation. The word stress supports the corre...
A number of studies on pronunciation have shown that most students with English as a foreign langu...
This study explores the belief that if students of Spanish do not write a word correctly, they can n...
The learning/teaching of English language pronunciation is considered a great challenge for both the...
Archibald (1997) argues that Japanese learners store the English stress lexically and do not compute...
Not all languages have stress and not all languages that do have stress are alike. English is a lexi...
Low frequency words in English show a regularity effect; words whose spellings represent regular pho...
Word stress often causes problem for learners of English. This is due to the apparent irregularity o...
The intelligibility of speech strongly depends on the placement of primary stress, which is a supras...
Abstract Learning about pronunciation is also learning about stress and intonation. They are aspects...
This paper studies the role played by stress and rhythm in English. The effects of stress on the pho...
There is a systematic relationship between stress accent and pronunciation variation in spontaneous ...
Literate English speakers read and write unfamiliar English words with their correct stress patterns...
The first part of the paper contrasts two different systems for representing the stress or accentuat...
Sponsored in part by the National Science Foundation through Grant Gn-534.1 from the Office of Scien...
Word stress is a suprasegmental feature in English pronunciation. The word stress supports the corre...
A number of studies on pronunciation have shown that most students with English as a foreign langu...
This study explores the belief that if students of Spanish do not write a word correctly, they can n...
The learning/teaching of English language pronunciation is considered a great challenge for both the...
Archibald (1997) argues that Japanese learners store the English stress lexically and do not compute...
Not all languages have stress and not all languages that do have stress are alike. English is a lexi...
Low frequency words in English show a regularity effect; words whose spellings represent regular pho...
Word stress often causes problem for learners of English. This is due to the apparent irregularity o...
The intelligibility of speech strongly depends on the placement of primary stress, which is a supras...
Abstract Learning about pronunciation is also learning about stress and intonation. They are aspects...
This paper studies the role played by stress and rhythm in English. The effects of stress on the pho...
There is a systematic relationship between stress accent and pronunciation variation in spontaneous ...