English Language JSS3 First Term
Week 3
Contents:
Phonemes
Phonetics: Long and short vowels
Tenses
Phonemes
A phoneme is a unit of sound in speech. A phoneme doesn’t have any inherent meaning by itself, but when you put phonemes together, they can make words. A phoneme is the smallest sound unit in a language that is capable of conveying a distinct meaning. A phoneme of a language or dialect is an abstraction of a speech sound or of a group of different sounds which are all perceived to have the same function by speakers of that particular language or dialect. For example, the English word “through” consists of three phonemes: the initial “th” sound, the “r” sound, and an “oo” vowel sound. Notice that the phonemes in this and many other English words do not always correspond directly to the letters used to spell them (English orthography is not as strongly phonemic as that of certain other language.
There are about 44 phonemes, or sound units, in English, thanks to the many ways that the 26 letters of the alphabet can be used and arranged. For instance, the phoneme or sound /f/ can be spelled using the letters f, ff, or ph.
Vowel Phonemes | Consonant Phonemes | ||||
01 | pit | 21 | pit | ||
02 | pet | 22 | bit | ||
03 | pat | 23 | time | ||
04 | pot | 24 | door | ||
05 | luck | 25 | cat | ||
06 | good | 26 | get | ||
07 | ago | 27 | fan | ||
08 | meat | 28 | van | ||
09 | car | 29 | think | ||
10 | door | 30 | that | ||
11 | girl | 31 | send | ||
12 | too | 32 | zip | ||
13 | day | 33 | man | ||
14 | sky | 34 | nice | ||
15 | boy | 35 | ring | ||
16 | beer | 36 | leg | ||
17 | bear | 37 | rat | ||
18 | tour | 38 | wet | ||
19 | go | 39 | hat | ||
20 | cow | 40 | yet | ||
41 | shop | ||||
42 | leisure | ||||
43 | chop | ||||
44 | jump |
Phonetics: Long and short vowels
English distinguishes between the following sounds. Get the sounds wrong and it can affect the meaning. The main difference between these pairs of sounds is in their length. Listen and repeat
Short vowels | Long vowels |
/æ/ – hat, cat | /ɑ:/ – heart |
/i/ – hit, ship | /i:/ – heat |
/ɒ/ – shot, dog | /ɔ:/ – short |
/Ʊ/ – put | /u:/ – boot |
/ʌ/ – bud, bus | /ᴈ:/ – bird |
we have practised these sounds before in earlier classes but in this class, you don’t just learn the sound but the symbol that goes with which sound. Note that the colon (:) after each of the long sounds denotes length.
Look at the list below and pick out which one has a different vowel sound from the other
A | B | C | D |
Spit | Kit | Feet | Fit |
Ham | Heart | Harm | Laugh |
Shot | Spot | What | Fought |
Shirt | Hurt | Front | Skirt |
Food | Foot | Boot | Flute |
Using Phonetic Symbols
Here is a list of examples of how the long and short vowel sounds can be spelt. Listen and repeat:
/æ/ – Most words spell this sound with the letter ‘a’: man, stand, fan etc But not the word plait
/ɑ:/ – This sound also uses the letter ‘a’ sometimes followed by ‘r’ or ‘l’: father, class, cart, start, half, palm, etc. But note: laugh, guard and heart.
/i/ – Often spelt with the letter ‘i’: sit, stick, brick. But note: houses, enough, become, English, rhythm, sorry, many, lady, cities, private, orange, manage, busy, business, women, Monday.
/i:/ – be, she, street, these, sea, police, machine, niece, believe, ceiling, receive.
/ʌ/ – sun, son, one, some, young, flood, does.
/ᴈ:/ – term, learn, early, bird, girl, journey, world. Note too: colonel (sounds like kernel)
/ɒ/ – cost, hobby, watch, quality
/ɔ:/- sport, talk, walk, water, saw, four, fought, board, quarter, warn, taught, door, sure.
/Ʊ/ – put, push, sugar, wood, could, sgould, woman
/u:/ – do, who, soon, food, soup, through, tune, beautiful, true, stew, fruit, nuisance.
Practice:
1. Which of these sounds contain the /ɒ/ sound?
a. swan
b. guard
c. young
d. stone
2. the /ɔ:/ sound?
a. palm
b. what
c. talk
d. world
3. the /ɑ:/ sound
a. quality
b. caught
c. laugh
d. talk
English Tenses
Read the examples in the table below:
Name of Tense | Example | Use |
The Present Simple | We usually go to town on Saturdays | To talk about things the happen regularly or normally |
The Present Continuous |
|
|
The Present Perfect |
|
|
The Past Simple |
|
To talk about events, actions or situations in the past that are now finished. These events may be recent or distant. |
The Past Continuous | When I arrived today, the teacher was calling the roll | To describe actions or situations that were in progress at some time in the past |
The Past Perfect | When I arrived this morning, the teacher had already called the roll | To show which of two events happened first in the past. (We can say it is used to describe ‘an earlier past’) |
Describing Emotions
Some verbs are not words of action: they express a state of being. Exampes include be, become and feel. Often, these verbs are followed by an adjective. In these examples, this pattern is used to talk about emotions:
Subject | Verb | Adjective |
Tola | Felt | Unhappy |
Felt | sad |
Often a preposition and an object follow the adjective as in the examples which follow:
Subject | Verb | Adjective | Preposition | Object |
Timon | Was | Happy | With | Ade |
They | Felt | Shocked | At | Her response |
Different adjectives are followed by different prepositions. Here is a list of some common examples:
Adjectives | Prepositions |
Alarmed, embarrassed | At |
Happy, pleased | With, by |
Resentful, certain | Of |
Worried, anxious | About |
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