English for Learners
INTONATION
IN ENGLISH
PRONUNCIATION
THE FALLING AND RISING PATTERNS OF INTONATION
INTONATION
What is intonation?
                                                    Intonation and stress are closely linked. In fact
                                                    it's impossible to dissociate them. They go hand
                                                    in hand.
                                                    Intonation is about how we say things, rather
                                                    than what we say, the way the voice rises and
                                                    falls when speaking, in other words the music of
                                                    the language.
                                                     Just as words have stressed syllables, sentences
                                                     have regular patterns of stressed words. In
                                                     addition, the voice tends to rise, fall or remain
flat depending on the meaning or feeling we want to convey (surprise, anger, interest, boredom,
gratitude, etc.). Intonation therefore indicates the mood of the speaker.
There are two basic patterns of intonation in English: falling intonation and rising intonation.
In the following examples a downward arrow (➘) indicates a fall in intonation and an upward
arrow (➚) indicates a rise in intonation.
Again, these are not rules but patterns
generally used by native speakers of
English.
Just remember that content words are
stressed, and intonation adds attitude or
emotion.
This explanation on intonation is intended
to serve as a general guide to help learners.
It should in no way make them unnecessarily anxious!
It should be remembered that a written explanation can never be a substitute for a 'live'
conversation with a native speaker.
Attitudinal intonation is something that is best acquired through talking and listening to English
speakers.
FALLING INTONATION
(➘)
(The pitch of the voice falls at the end of the
sentence.)
Falling intonation is the most common
intonation pattern in English.
It is commonly found in statements,
commands, wh-questions (information
questions), confirmatory question tags and
exclamations.
Statements
   Nice to meet ➘ you.
   I’ll be back in a ➘ minute.
   She doesn’t live here ➘ anymore.
   Dad wants to change his ➘ car.
   Here is the weather ➘ forecast.
   Cloudy weather is expected at the end of the ➘ week.
   We should work together more ➘ often
   I'm going for a walk in the ➘ park.
Commands
  Write your name ➘ here.
  Show me what you’ve ➘ written.
  Leave it on the ➘ desk.
  Take that picture ➘ down.
  Throw that ➘ out.
  Put your books on the ➘ table.
  Take your hands out of your ➘ pockets.
Wh- questions (requesting information)
(Questions beginning with 'who', 'what', 'why', 'where', 'when', 'which', and 'how')
   What country do you come ➘ from?
   Where do you ➘ work?
   Which of them do you ➘ prefer?
   When does the shop ➘ open?
   How many books have you ➘ bought?
   Which coat is ➘ yours?
   Whose bag is ➘ this?
Questions Tags that are statements requesting confirmation rather than questions.
Not all tag questions are really questions.
Some of them merely ask for confirmation or invite agreement, in which case we use a falling tone
at the end.
   He thinks he’s so clever, doesn’t ➘ he?
   She's such a nuisance, isn't ➘ she?
   He failed the test because he didn't revise, did ➘ he?
   It doesn't seem to bother him much, does ➘ it?
Exclamations
   How nice of ➘ you!
   That's just what I ➘ need!
   You don't ➘ say!
   What a beautiful ➘ voice!
   That's a ➘ surprise!
RISING INTONATION (➚)
(The pitch of the voice rises at the end of a sentence.)
Rising intonation invites the speaker to continue talking.
It is normally used with yes/no questions, and question tags that are real questions.
Yes/No Questions
(Questions that can be answered by 'yes' or 'no'.)
   Do you like your new ➚ teacher?
   Have you finished ➚ already?
   May I borrow your ➚ dictionary?
   Do you have any ➚ magazines?
   Do you sell ➚ stamps?
Questions tags that show uncertainty and require an answer (real questions)
   We've met already, ➚ haven't we?
   You like fish, ➚ don't you?
   You're a new student ➚ aren't you?
   The view is beautiful, ➚ isn't it?
COMBINED INTONATION
We sometimes use a combination of rising and falling intonation in the same sentence.
The combination is called Rise-Fall or Fall-Rise intonation.
RISE-FALL INTONATION (➚➘)
(The intonation rises and then falls.)
We use rise-fall intonation for choices, lists, unfinished thoughts and conditional sentences.
Choices (alternative questions.)
  1. Are you having ➚ soup or ➘ salad?
  2. Is John leaving on ➚ Thursday or ➘ Friday?
  3. Does he speak ➚ German or ➘ French?
  4. Is your name ➚ Ava or ➘ Eva?
Lists (rising, rising, rising, falling)
Intonation falls on the last item to show that the list is finished.
    We've got ➚ apples, pears, bananas and ➘ oranges
    The sweater comes in ➚ blue, white, pink and ➘ black
    I like ➚ football, tennis, basketball and ➘ volleyball.
    I bought ➚ a tee-shirt, a skirt and a ➘ handbag.
Unfinished thoughts (partial statements)
In the responses to the following questions, the rise-fall
intonation indicates reservation.
The speaker hesitates to fully express his/her thoughts.
   Do you like my new handbag? Well the ➚ leather is ➘
     nice... ( but I don't like it.)
   What was the meal like? Hmm, the ➚ fish was ➘
     good... (but the rest wasn't great).
   So you both live in Los Angeles? Well ➚ Alex ➘ does ... (but I don't).
Conditional sentences
(The tone rises in the first clause and falls gradually in the second clause.)
   If he ➚ calls, ask him to leave a ➘ message.
   Unless he ➚ insists, I'm not going to ➘ go.
   If you have any ➚ problems, just ➘ contact us.
FALL-RISE INTONATION (➘➚)
(The voice falls and rises usually within one word.)
The main function of fall-rise intonation is to show that the speaker is not certain of the answer
they are giving to a question, or is reluctant to reply (as opposed to a falling tone used when there
is no hesitation). It is also used in polite requests or suggestions.
Hesitation/reluctance:
So you'd be willing to confirm that? ...Well ... I ➘sup➚pose so ...
You didn't see him on Monday? I don't quite ➘re➚member ...
Politeness-Doubt-Uncertainty: (You are not sure what the answer might be.)
   Perhaps we could ➘vis➚it the place?
   Should we ➘cop➚y the list?
   Do you think it's ➘al➚lowed?