CONNECTED SPEECH

  • Connected speech is more than just a string of individual target segments joined together in series, since each segment is liable to influence the segments that surround it. The precise form that these influences take is determined by the particular language in question, and so the phonology of connected speech is part of the phonology of the language that the child has to master . . .."
    (Sara Howard, Bill Wells, and John Local, "Connected Speech." The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics, ed. by Martin J. Ball, Michael R. Perkins, Nicole Muller, and Sara Howard. Blackwell, 2008)

  • "Attempting to count the number of words in even a few seconds of a conversation or radio broadcast in an unfamiliar language will quickly demonstrate how difficult that task is because words run together in an utterance of any language.
    Ifwordswereprintedwithoutspacesbetweenthemtheywouldbeprettytoughtoread.
    As you recognize, sorting out the individual words would not be easy. Actually, the task is even more difficult than the run-together words in the printed sentence might suggest because the letters in the sentence above are discrete and separated from one another, but the individual sound segments in spoken words blend together into a continuous stream."
    (Edward Finegan, Language: Its Structure and Use, 6th ed. Wadsworth, 2012)


  • "It would be wrong to imagine that the stresspattern is always fixed and unchanging in English words. Stress position may vary for one of two reasons: either as a result of the stress on other words occurring next to the word in question, or because not all speakers agree on the placement of stress in some words. The former case is an aspect of connected speech . . .: the main effect is that the stress on a final-stressed compound tends to move to a preceding syllable and change to secondary stress if the following word begins with a strongly stressed syllable. Thus . . ."
    bad-'tempered but a bad-tempered 'teacher
    half-'timbered but a half-timbered 'house
    heavy-'handed but a heavy-handed 'sentence"
    (Peter Roach, English Phonetics and Phonology: A Practical Course, 4th ed. Cambridge University Press, 2009)


  • "In fast, connected speech some sounds may be be deleted by the speaker. For example, the sound /t/ may be deleted between the words 'want to,' making the pronunciation of 'want to' sound like "wənnə.' (Note: the symbol ə represents a very short, weak sound.) . . .
    eg. ' . . . I don't wənnə spend too much today.'"
    (Susan Boyer, Understanding Spoken English: A Focus on Everyday Language in Context, Book 1. Boyer Educational Resources, 2003)


  • There are some important points to remember about connected speech processes [CSP]:
    - They occur at the edges of words, since this is where words 'meet' in sentences.
    - Importantly, connected speech processes are optional. . . .
    - We can think of them affecting sounds at the phonemic level rather than the allophonic level. When /t/ or /d/ or /h/ is elided, for example, we do not find that a different allophone occurs; we simply find that the phoneme is lost altogether.
    - Because CSPs affect phonemes, they may lead to confusions about meaning . . .
    From: http://grammar.about.com/od/c/g/Connected-Speech.htm 


    Aspects of connected speech
    Speech is a continuous stream of sounds, without clear-cut borderlines between them, and the different aspects of connected speech help to explain why written English is so different from spoken English.
    So, what is it that native speakers do when stringing words together that causes so many problems for students?
    Intrusion and linking
    When two vowel sounds meet, we tend to insert an extra sound which resembles either a / j /, / w / or / r / , to mark the transition sound between the two vowels, a device referred to as intrusion. For example:
    • Intruding / r/
      The media / r /are to blame.
      Law(r)and order.
    • Intruding / j /I / j / agree.
      They / j /are here!
    • Intruding / w/I want to/ w/eat.
      Please do/ w/it.

    Word boundaries involving a consonant and a vowel are also linked, as we tend to drag final consonants to initial vowels or vice versa. For example:
    • Get on. ( geton )
    • Not at all. ( notatall )
    • It´s no joke. ( snow joke)

      Elision
      As I have mentioned, a native speaker's aim in connecting words is maximum ease and efficiency of tongue movement when getting our message across. In minimizing our efforts, we weaken our articulation. If articulation is weakened too much, the sound may disappear altogether, a process known as elision. It is the vowels from unstressed syllables which are the first to be elided in non-precise pronunciation.
      • Common sound deletions
        A syllable containing the unstressed "schwa" is often lost. For example,
        • int(e)rest,
        • sim(i)lar,
        • lib(a)ry,
        • diff(e)rent,
        • t(o)night.
      • / t / and / d /
        With consonants, it is / t / and / d / which are most commonly elided, especially when they appear in a consonant cluster. For example,
        • chris(t)mas
        • san(d)wich
          The same process can occur across word boundaries, for example,
        • mus(t) be
        • the firs(t) three
        • you an(d) me
        • we stopp(ed) for lunch
      • / h /
        The / h / sound is also often deleted. For example,
        • you shouldn´t (h)ave
        • tell (h)im.
      Working on connected speech
      If your learners have not worked on these forms before, you might wish to set some lesson time aside to work specifically on these features of connected speech. One way of introducing them to sound deletions could be to write a few short phrases on the board. For example:
      • That´s an interesting idea.
      • Are you coming out tonight?
      • It´s the tallest building.
      • You must tell him.
      Try if possible to use language you have recently been working on in the classroom. Then ask the class to count the number of sounds in each word, and write the numbers which they give you on the board above the 
      words, like this:
      3
      You
      4
      must
      4
      tell
      3
      him
      Now play a recording of the phrases, or read them yourself, and ask the learners to listen again and write down how many sounds they hear. Prompt them if necessary, asking if, for example, the "t" is really pronounced twice between "must" and "tell", or only once.
      • Drill the phrases then ask the students to practise these phrases themselves.You could also read out the phrases, once using the elided forms, then again in a more clipped, emphatic manner.
      • Ask the learners which sounds more natural. Highlight that the features of connected speech not only make the phrase more natural sounding but that it is also easier to pronounce the words in this way.

        Exercises like this help to show learners the differences between written and spoken English, and they highlight the importance of listening to words rather than relying on their written forms.

        Integrating work on connected speech
        It is a good idea to try and integrate work on connected speech into everyday lessons. When studying grammar for example, don´t focus solely on the form of the words, draw attention to the way they are pronounced in
        natural conversation.
        • Superlatives, for example, provide practice of sound deletions. You could write a few phrases on the board:
          • The Nile is the longest river in the world.
          • The Vatican is the smallest country in the world.
        • Ask the students to listen to the sounds while you repeat the phrases a few times and see if they can spot the disappearance of the "t" on the superlative adjective.
          • Drill the phrases, chorally and individually. Students might like to write their own general knowledge quiz, using questions such as, "Which is the tallest building in the world?".
          • As they read their questions, make sure they elide the final "t" (unless of course, the next word begins with a vowel).

            Such exercises provide practice of both grammatical form and pronunciation, and the repetition helps students to begin using these features of connected speech in a natural manner.

          Anything which you have recently been working on in class can be used as a basis for pronunciation work. For example, a useful way of practising the intruding sounds / r /, / w / and/ j / is when studying phrasal verbs.
          Do/ w /up
          lay / j / up
          Go/ w /away
          Go / w / out
          • Drill the verbs chorally and individually before providing a more personalized practice activity in which students ask each other questions using the verbs you are focusing on.

          Phrasal verbs can also be used to show how we tend to link final consonants and initial vowels across word boundaries.
          Get out ( getout )
          Put on ( puton )
          Come out ( cumout )


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