Accent Reduction – Get the Syllable Accent Stress Rules for French-Latin Suffixes
Accent Reduction – Get the Syllable Accent Stress Rules for French-Latin Suffixes
I like finding the patterns in English pronunciation. Based on academic learning and experience, I’ve learned that about everything has a pattern.
I’ve been looking for the pattern for syllable accent stress when suffixes are added to English words for quite some time.
Voila—reading John McWhorter, I found a good part of the answer.
Recall that for Germanic suffixes, the syllable accent stress stays in the same place as it was in the root word.
However, that is not the case with French and Latin suffixes. Instead, the key is that French and Latin endings often pull the syllable accent stress closer to the suffix. In particular, the syllable accent stress moves to the syllable right before the suffixes which are French or Latin in origin. These suffixes include –ity , –uous, -ic, -tion/sion/cian.
MO-dern
Mo-DER-ni-ty
PER-son-al
per-son-AL-ity
TEM-pest
Tem-PEST- uous
DI-plo-mat
di-plo-MA-tic
OR-gan
or-GAN-ic
CHAR-ac-ter
Char-ac-ter-IS-tic
PER-mit
per-MIS-sion
pro-HI-bit
pro-hi-BI-tion
POL-i-tics
Pol-i-TI-cian
Be sure to watch our English Speech Tips videos and Accent Reduction Tip videos for more English pronunciation and accent reduction exercise.
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Rerun from May 4, 2016
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