Aspects of Connected Speech
Second Class/ Department of English
The Lecturer: Dr. Nidaa Hussain Fahmi Al Khazraji
Aspects of Connected Speech
When words are pronounced separately in their citation forms, their pronunciation
differs from pronunciation in natural connected speech (spontaneous speech) in
which they are joined together without any clear boundaries.
Connected speech is a factor of fluency, when we speak quickly, we utter groups
of words which are continuous and may not have pauses between them, and this
causes changes to the shape of the words.
The most common features of connected speech are the weak forms and
contractions of grammatical and some lexical words, some of which are acceptable
in written English e.g. (can’t, won’t, didn’t, I’ll, he’d, they’ve … etc..).
Utterance is a piece of speech which starts with stress and ends with a pause
(silence).
Various features contribute to characterise natural connected speech:
rhythm
weak forms ( reductions)
assimilation
elision ( contractions)
linking
Rhythm:
It can be said that rhythm stands for that regular timing of beats we can recognise
in songs. English is very rhythmical language, so that a learner who can maintain
the rhythm of the language is more likely to sound both natural and fluent. The two
components of the system which have the greatest influence on rhythm are
sentence stress and various features of connected speech, i.e. what happens to
words when we put them in an utterance. Rhythm is regular occurrence of stressed
syllable, the foot begins with a stress syllable and includes all following unstressed
syllable up to (not including) the following stressed syllable. The following
sentence would be divided into five feet as following:
1 2 3 4 5
׳Walk ׳down the ׳path to the ׳end of the ca ׳nal
Rhythm is an aspect of connected speech involves some noticeable events
happening as stressed-time rhythm, it implies that stressed syllables will tend to
occur at relatively regular intervals whether they are separated by unstressed
syllable or not (unstressed). Cotenant words are stressed and the functional words
are unstressed. The time between walk and down is the similar to the time between
down the, end of the ca and nal the foot beings with a stress syllable and includes
all following unstressed syllable up to (not including) the following stressed
syllable. Stress syllable + unstressed syllable, some of utterance beings with
unstressed syllable. When the following sentence is analysed with two feet:-
1st. foot 2nd .foot
Thank you for the letter
Note: There is tendency in English to avoid having two stressed syllables coming
close to each other. This will influence stress syllable is avoidable. The phrase:
Twen ty pla ces fur ther back
S W S W S W S
S: stands for strong W: stand for weak
Assimilation
It’s a process of connected speech in which two neighbouring sounds influence in
one feature or more. In relatively rapid speech adjacent consonant sounds often
influence one another to produce changes involving modification in voicing place
of articulation or in both (voicing and place). These changes may occur between
words or within a word when one speech sound comes to resemble or become
Dr. Nidaa H. Fahmi
identical with neighbouring sound. This process is called assimilation. If the
influence is forward the assimilation, it is called progressive.
In a summary, if a phoneme is affected by one than comes later in the sentence, the
assimilation is termed regressive.
If a phoneme is affected by one that came earlier in the utterance, the assimilation
is termed progressive.
Phoneme 1 Phoneme 2
Progressive
Regressive
Progressive Assimilation
When two words are combined; the first of which ends with a single final
consonant (fC) and the sound of which starts with a single initial consonant ( iC). If
f
C changes to become like iC in some way i.e. the influence is forward (the
preceding consonant influences the following one, the assimilation is called
regressive.
Usually progressive assimilation occurs within words example:
Dog+s /dogz/, ask +ed /ӕskt/, beg+ed /bəgt/
i f
C effects on C
Regressive Assimilation
The phoneme that comes first is affected by the one that comes after it.
i f
C effected by C
The influence is backward (the following sound influence the preceding one) so it
will be regressive, for example:
Have to /hӕv tu/ /hӕf tu/
Dr. Nidaa H. Fahmi
news /nju:z/ → newspaper /nju:speipə/
Sometimes the two consonant sounds combine into one which is different from
both sounds the result is a new sound. This process is called merging or
coalescence.
Merging: is happened when two consonants combine into one sound which
differs from the both, for example:
t+j aren’t you /a:nt ju/ /a:ntʃ u/
d+j would you /wud ju/ /wudӠ u/
during /djuərɪŋ/ /dᵹuərɪŋ/
educate /edjukeit/ /edᵹukeit/
Assimilation may result in different ways. The main differences between
consonants are of three types:
a- Voicing
b- Place of articulation
c- Manner of articulation
These differences might be summarized as followings:
1. /t/ changes to /p/ before /m/ /b/ or /p/
basket maker, mixed bag, mixed blessing, best man
2. /d/ changes to /b/ before /m/ /b/ or/p/
bad pain, good cook, blood bank
3. /n/ changes to /m/ before /m/ /b/ or /p/
action planning, iron man, on me, open prison, open book
4. /t/ changes to /k/ before /k/ or /g/
Dr. Nidaa H. Fahmi
cigarette card, short cut, cut glass, first class
5. /d/ changes to /g/ before /k/ or /g/
bad girl, hard copy, sand castle
6. /n/ changes to /ŋ/ before /k/ or /g/
action group, open court, town clerk
7. /s/ changes to /ʃ/ before /ʃ/ or /j/ followed by a rounded vowel sound
dress shop, nice yacht, nice shoes
8. /z/ changes to /ӡ/ before /ʃ/ or /j/ followed by a rounded vowel sound
cheese shop, these sheep, where’s yours?
9. /θ/ changes to /s/ before /s/
earth science, fifth set, fourth season
Dr. Nidaa H. Fahmi