Speech Work: Revision of Vowels and Consonants
Vowels:
/i:/ | ‘ee’ in greet, ‘ea’ in treat |
/i/ | ‘I’ in simple, cripple |
/e/ | ‘e’ in bet, set, let |
/æ/ | ‘a’ in mat, cat |
/u:/ | ‘oo’ in moon |
/Ʊ/ | ‘oo’ in look, ‘u’ in bush |
/ɔ:/ | ‘a’ in fall, ‘or’ in lord |
/ɒ/ | ‘o’ in hot, ‘a’ in what |
/ɑ:/ | ‘a’ in father |
/ʌ/ | ‘u’ in stuff, ‘o’ in love |
/ᴈ:/ | ‘ir’ in first, ‘ur’ in burn |
/ә/ | ‘e’ in happen, ‘o’ in reason, ‘a’ in plural |
/ei/ | ‘a’ in late, ‘ai’ in pain |
/iә/ | ‘ear’ in clear |
/eә/ | ‘air’ in fair, ‘are’ in rare |
/aƱ/ | ‘ou’ in mouth, ‘ow’ in now |
/ɔi/ | ‘oi’ in oil, ‘oy’ in boy |
/ai/ | ‘I’ in time, ‘igh’ in night |
/әƱ/ | ‘o’ in go, ‘ow’ in flow |
/Ʊә/ | ‘oor’ in poor, ‘ur’ in sure |
Consonants:
/p/ | ‘p’ in pay |
/b/ | ‘b’ in beat |
/t/ | ‘t’ in take |
/k/ | ‘k’ in keep, ‘c’ in come |
/d/ | ‘d’ in do |
/g/ | ‘g’ in get |
/tʃ/ | ‘ch’ in check |
/dӡ/ | ‘j’ in just, ‘dg’ in ledge |
/f/ | ‘f’ in first |
/v/ | ‘v’ in very |
/s/ | ‘s’ in so, ‘ss’ in miss |
/z/ | ‘z’ in zero, ‘s’ in has |
/ʃ/ | ‘sh’ in rush |
/ӡ/ | ‘s’ in measure |
/θ/ | ‘th’ in think, both |
/ð/ | ‘th’ in the, that |
/n/ | ‘n’ in no |
/m/ | ‘m’ in my |
/ŋ/ | ‘ng’ in sing |
/l/ | ‘l’ in lip |
/r/ | ‘r’ in run |
/w/ | ‘ w’ in we |
/j/ | ‘y’ in you |
/h/ | ‘ h’ in help |
Examination Hints: Paper testing
What is Paper Testing?
Essay writing is ‘a test of the candidates’ ability to communicate in English through the medium of writing.
Apart from AMPS (Audience, Medium, Purpose and Style), you will need to pay attention to the following:
The common complaints by chief examiners include the following:
How to do the examination
Clichés
A cliché is a type of collocation that is defined in the dictionary as ‘a phrase or idea that has been used so much that it no longer has much meaning and is not interesting’. A good example is the last straw that broke the camel’s back, meaning ‘the final event in a series of events, which made the general situation unbearable’. Thus a woman may have found living with her husband very difficult, for all kinds of reasons, until finally, one day, she discovers that he is having an affair with their neighbour’s wife. She tells a friend: ‘That was the last straw that broke the camel’s back’. And she decides to ‘pack out of the matrimonial home’.
Other expressions which can be regarded as clichés are: be that as it may, dispense justice without fear or favour, go down memory lane, every Tom, Dick and Harry, ladies of the night, a canker-worm eating deep into the fabric of society.
We are often advised to avoid clichés, and to find other expressions to use instead. This is because relying on clichés is an evidence of lazy thinking: by using them we are just echoing phrases we have heard other people use, instead of trying to be creative in our own language use.
So our advice is: try to avoid clichés.
Exercise
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