RP RULES Flashcards

1
Q

Consonant Sounds [r] included

A
  1. at the beginning of a word
  2. after a consonant sound
  3. between two vowel sounds in a single word
  4. between two vowel sounds split between two words (linking R)
  5. between a word ending in the “ah” sound and followed by a word starting with a vowel sound (intrusive R)
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2
Q

Consonant Sounds [r] not included

A
  1. when it comes after a vowel sound and simply elongates the preceding vowel sound (car, cart)
  2. when it comes after a vowel sound and is replaced by a schwa (hair)
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3
Q

Consonant Sounds [t]

A
  1. distinct and crisp (unvoiced, aspirated, released plosive)
  2. explode medial t (football, boatload, treatment, sentimental, greatly, grateful, shortly)
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4
Q

Consonant Sounds [l]

A
  1. clear and light (low silly feeling), made with the front of the tongue, vs. darker and more vowel like (full, well, still, wild).
  2. Older speakers will not use the darker sound.
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5
Q

COMPLETE Vowel and Diphthong Sounds

A
  1. [iː] (subtle) to [əiː] as in me! No Cockney
    final y is [ɪ]
  2. [eɪ] to [ɛ], tighter, “bɛk ə kɛk” (bake a cake)
  3. [ɛ] to [e]
  4. [æ] to [ɛ] tighter, “Pɛm sɛŋ” (Pam sang)
  5. [æ] sometimes becomes [ɑː], “ask list”,
    also, look to the “can’t” list
  6. [aʊ] to [ɑː], or no change
  7. [ɑː] to [ɒ]. lot and cloth sets
  8. [ɑː] to [ɔː]
  9. [oʊ] to [əʊ, ɛʊ, eʊ, or ʌʊ]
  10. [uː] (subtle) to [əuː] as in who? No Cockney
  11. [ʊ] and [uː] are more rounded
  12. ə to ʌ
  13. ɝː + syllable to ʌ + r + syllable
    - /r/ initiates next syllable
    - Example sentence: The worried burro hurried to the borough of Durham for courage.
    - Please not that place names ending in -borough may be pronounced with a single syllable
  14. [ɛ] + r + syllable to [æ] + r + syllable
    /r/ initiates next syllable
    Examples: carry, marry, Harry, character, carriage, arrogant, narrow, clarify
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6
Q

COMPLETE Consonant Sounds

A

r, t, l, j

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7
Q

Consonant Sounds [j]

A
  • “liquid u”
  • following alveolar consonants t,d,n,l,s
  • preceding the [uː] vowels e, eu, ew, u, ue, ui
    Examples: new, duke, Tuesday, assumes nuclear
  • Older speakers may use it for alluring, lewd, suit
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8
Q

Special Rules

A
1. -ɛri to -rɪ 
Newbury's satisfactory secretary
2. spelled -ile pronounced [aɪl]
Fragile, juvenile mobile
3. one-off differences of pronunciation
zebra, process, lever
4. one-off differences of stress in polysyllabic words
cigar-ETTE, maga-ZINE, tele-VIS-ion
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9
Q

Things to know

A

Increasingly prevalent habit of adding tags like “isn’t it,” “didn’t they,” or “can’t you,” to the ends of sentences as emphasis, not as a question. Should usually be given a downward inflection (like a statement) unless you are sure they are intended as questions or needs for approval.

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10
Q

[eɪ]

A

[eɪ] to [ɛ], tighter, “bɛk ə kɛk” (bake a cake)

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11
Q

[æ] (2)

A
  1. [æ] to [ɛ] tighter, “Pɛm sɛŋ” (Pam sang)
  2. [æ] sometimes becomes [ɑː], “ask list”,
    also, look to the “can’t” list
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12
Q

[ɑː] (2)

A

[ɑː] to [ɒ] lot and cloth sets;

[ɑː] to [ɔː] bought

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13
Q

[ə]

A

[ə] to [ʌ], think of short AH in certain words like cup

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14
Q

[oʊ]

A

[oʊ] to [əʊ, ɛʊ, eʊ, or ʌʊ]

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15
Q

[uː] (subtle)

A

[əuː] as in who? No Cockney

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16
Q

[iː] (subtle)

A

[əiː] as in me! No Cockney

17
Q

[uː] and [ʊ]

A

[ʊ] and [uː] are more rounded

18
Q

[aʊ]

A

[aʊ] to [ɑː], or no change

19
Q

ɝː + syllable

A

ɝː + syllable to ʌ + r + syllable

  • /r/ initiates next syllable
  • Example sentence: The worried burro hurried to the borough of Durham for courage.
  • Please not that place names ending in -borough may be pronounced with a single syllable
20
Q

ɛ + r + syllable

A

ɛ + r + syllable to æ + r + syllable in polysyllabic situations

  • /r/ initiates next syllable
  • Example sentence: Don’t marry arrogant Harry in a carriage.
21
Q

[ɪ]

A

final y is [ɪ]