intonation group. If considered not only from the purely intonational point of view, but also from the
semantic and grammatical points of view this unit is known as the
sense-group. An intonation group may consist of a whole sentence or a part of it. In either case it may
consist of a single word or a number of words.
An intonation group has the following characteristics:
a)
It has at least one accented word carrying a marked change in pitch (a rise, a fall,
etc)
b)
It is pronounced at a certain rate and without any pause within it.
c)
It has some kind of voice quality.
The number of intonation groups in the same sentence may be different.
In
ˏ
June
| Ju ly | and
ˏ
August | our 'children 'don’t 'go to
ˎ
school.
In 'June, 'July and
ˏ
August | our
'children 'don’t 'go to
ˎ
school.
The end of each sentence is characterized by relatively long pause. The pauses between
intonation groups are shorter. They vary in length. There may be no pauses between
intonation groups at all.
Each intonation group is characterized by a certain intonation pattern, i.e. each syllable
of an intonation group has a certain pitch and bears a larger or smaller degree of
prominence.
Intonation patterns containing a number of syllables consist of the following parts:
the pre-head, the head, the nucleus and the tail .
The pre-head includes unstressed and half-stressed syllables preceding the first
stressed syllable.
The head includes the stressed and unstressed syllables beginning with the first stressed
syllable up to the last stressed syllable.
The last stressed syllable is called
the nucleus. The unstressed and half-stressed syllables that follow the nucleus are called
the tail .
It was a very sunny day yesterday.
It was a …. – the pre-head
…'very 'sunny – the head
…
ˎ
day …
– the nucleus
…yesterday – the tail
Note:
According to V.D. Arakin, the first unstressed syllable which may contain either
unstressed or half-stressed syllables is called