trab. final fonologia
TRANSCRIPT
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UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL DE OURO PRETO
INSTITUTO DE CINCIAS HUMANAS E SOCIAIS
DEPARTAMENTO DE LETRAS
TPICOS DE TRADUO
PROF. GICOMO PATROCINIO FIGUEREDO
ALUNA: CAROLINA PERES
Introduction
The purpose of this research is to analyze how Brazilian learners of English pronouncethe regular past tense grammatical ending, which is spelled ed. The past tense rule in
English states that if a verb ends with /t/ or /d/, the past tense is pronounced / d/; if a
verb ends with a voiced sound, the past tense is pronounced /d/; and finally, if a verb
ends with a voiceless sound, the past tense is pronounced /t/. Because of differences in
pronunciation patterns between English and Portuguese, it is hard for Brazilian to
deduce these pronunciation variations for the same spelling. Thus, another aim of this
research is to find the most common errors in this case and to propose a classroom
activity to improve learnerspast tense pronunciation.
Methodology
Data Collection: the collection of data to this research was taken from two informants.
The informant 1 is a Brazilian student, 24 years old, female, and considers herself as an
intermediate level English student. Informant 2, Brazilian, male, 28 years old, also
considers himself in intermediate level. The same steps were taken for the twoinformants. A set of 30 words was organized in the following way: 10 words ending
with voiceless sounds, 10 words ending with voiced sounds, 5 words ending with a /t/
sound and 5 words ending with a /d/ sound.
First Part: the informants where asked to read aloud each word of the set.
Second Part: the informants must pronounce the verbs inside a sentence.
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Lastly, the researcher committed to paper and made a register with the mistakes they
undertook.
Results
Informant 1 pronounced correctly 9 from 10 voiced ending words. Only one verb,
borrowed, she has pronounced with /d/. She also pronounced correctly all the words
which ends with a /t/ or a /d/ sound. Meanwhile, she mispronounced 8 from 10 unvoiced
ending words, using the /t/ sound only in the words stopped and finished. Informant
2 followed the same pattern of mistakes and successes, pronouncing properly all the
words which ends with /t/ or /d/ but pronouncing with an incorrectly /d/ sound most of
the unvoiced endings.
Since Portuguese speakers are familiarized with pronouncing the vowels between the
consonants, because this is the pattern in Portuguese pronunciation, the researcher
attributes to this the fact that theyve pronounced correctly all the words which includes
the shwa sound, that is, those which ends whit /t/ or /d/. On the other hand, since
Brazilians usually produce the sounds according to the letters in spelling, we can infer
that this is the reason why they pronounced even the unvoiced ends with a improper /d/
soundit happened because, in portuguese spelling, these words ends with the letter d.
According to Peter Avery and Susan Ehrlich, Teaching American English
Pronunciation book authors, many of the mispronunciations of Portuguese speakers
can be traced to the influence of the Portuguese spelling system rather than to an
inability to produce particular sounds. As such, this is just a question of ignoring the
foreign language patterns. In order to solve these pronunciation problems, the teacher
must clarify those differences between each type of ending in the regular past tensepronunciation. After exposing the past tense rule and explaining the concepts of voiced
and unvoiced sounds, the teacher can show, through voice records or songs, a pre-
organized set of regular verbs in the past tense, including the three types of endings to
be known in the rule. This same set of verbs must be distributed to the students, written
in paper, so the activity consists in complete the words with the sound they just heard on
the record. The aim of this activity is to familiarize Brazilians students with these
specific sounds, demonstrating the correct pronunciation but, mainly, helping these
students to internalize the concepts, since the grammatical ending, for natives, are
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completely predictable they are not always aware of the rules which states this
phenomenon, which is result of the phonetic context in which these variations occur.
Bibliography References:
Peter Avery and Susan Ehrlich.Teaching American English Pronunciation.OxfordUniversity Press;1992.