Friday, 15 April 2016

Is Grammar Really Boring?...Difficult?...
            Grammar is the building block of any language. Grammar shows the path to speak, write and read. But surprisingly, learners find grammar very difficult to study and understand.It may be for different reasons. The reasons differ from individual to individual. 
            However, we think in either way. What is grammar? Grammar is that part of language which contains rules to use a language. It is a law book. It is the fact that grammar contains technical language that is difficult to understand and remember. So we will try to find the way by which we can learn grammar naturally; avoiding the technical and difficult language.
            It is always better to find the fittest word at a place in a sentence rather than remember the rule. Of course, we should not avoid grammar; instead we should try to learn it indirectly. Recall your childhood. How did you learn speaking- by listening or by learning grammar? We try the same way.
           But, here I am going to introduce rules of grammar in between or wherever relevant in the simplest possible language. My aim is make it enjoyable and entertaining rather than making it as a burden.But our aim is fixed-whatever may be the way, we must be good at grammar because it has no option if we want to use language well!
(to be continued)

Monday, 4 April 2016

Importance of Pronunciation
                  It would be possible to understand what a person wants to say by asking him/her questions if he commits grammatical mistakes or chooses the wrong vocabulary. But it becomes almost impossible if he/she uses wrong pronunciation.
                That is why; pronunciation becomes significant everywhere- in everyday communication, in jobs and in business. Additionally, when there is a question of an international examination or communication, correct pronunciation has no alternative.
            For non-native speakers, improving pronunciation is a matter of practice.It may be by listening to the BBC radio, self-practice, speaking to a tutor or speaking to a native speaker if possible.
               As discussed earlier,there are some important aspects of pronunciation which are as follows.

1. Word Stress
2. Sentence Stress
3. Intonation
4. Fluency
5. Coherence
6. Grammatical Range and Accuracy

1. Word Stress
English words are not pronounced in a plain tone. Some parts of the words are stressed.Sometimes, there are primary and secondary stresses in the same word. In the following examples, the capital letters show the stress.

about  - aBout
beautiful  - Beautiful
controversial – ControVERsial ( Here, C has secondary stress and main stress is on V) etc.
Any good dictionary shows the stress marks for a word. 


2. Sentence Stress
            This is a peculiarity of English language. While speaking, only  important words are stressed.
For example,
1.I am going MY HOME.
2.The CAT is sitting under a TREE.
3.I want to IMPROVE my PRONUNCIATION.
4. There is a LAPTOP, a DICTIONARY, a NOTEBOOK, PENCILS and a BOOK on the TABLE.
          This gives rise to some more points of  which the first one is strong and weak forms.
          For example, in the following  sentences the words in bold italics are not stressed or sometimes they are not even heard clearly.
1.       There is a cat in the garden sitting under a tree which is near the gate.
( The s cat n the garden sitting under a tree which s near the gate.)
2.       I can do it without hesitation.
( I cn do it without hesitation.)
3.       What do you do?
( What d you do?)
Of course, it is the choice of the speaker which words are to be stressed.
Secondly, the stress on the word underlines what meaning one wants to convey.
For example,
This is the man who stole my purse.
When different words are stressed, the preference of importance changes.
This is the man who stole my purse.
This is the man who stole my purse.
This is the man who stole my purse.
This is the man who stole my purse.
This is the man who stole my purse.

3.Intonation
There is variation of pitch and tone to express feelings and functions. The tone shows the speaker’s state of mind, intention or attitude. It is the melody or rhythm of speech.
 The tones are
1. The falling tone-
                It is used for ‘wh’ questions, to give complete information, to order, when the speaker expects agreement with him and in exclamations.
  e.g. It is Sunday today.
        Bring me a cup of tea.
2. The rising tone
                It is used to ask ‘yes’, ‘no’ questions, for encouraging statements, when the speaker does not expect agreement with him, for ‘wh’ questions to show interest etc.
e.g. It is hot today, isn’t it?
        Yes, it is.        (Agree)
3. The falling-rising tone
                It is used for adding some qualifying information or for correction.
4. Combination of the above

The other factor,s that is, fluency, coherence and accuracy are self-explanatory.
                    In conclusion, these are the minimum requirements for a good pronunciation. But practice, interaction and study are the only ways to master it.