(Phonetics and Phonology) Session 6: I. Weak Forms II. Aspects of Connected Speech
(Phonetics and Phonology) Session 6: I. Weak Forms II. Aspects of Connected Speech
SESSION 6
I. Weak Forms
II. Aspects of Connected Speech
I. Weak forms
1. Functional/ Grammatical words
(pronoun, preposition, conjunction, auxiliary,
determiner) have two forms: strong & weak
+ In weak form, the vowel is pronounced /ə/
e.g. you (WEAK) /jə/ → (STRONG) /juː/
of /əv/ /ɒv/
at /ət/ /æt/
that /ðət/ /ðæt/
can /kən/ /kæn/
your /jə/ /jɔː/
I. Weak forms
1. Functional/ Grammatical words
+ In strong form in the following cases:
❑ At final position
e.g. I’m fond of chips. /aim 'fond əv 'tʃips/
Chips are what I’m fond of /'tʃips ə 'wɒt aim 'fond ɒv/