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		Techniques and methods in Language Teaching > pronunciation     
			
		 pronunciation 
		
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 racim
 
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							| pronunciation 
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							| Dear all,           Do we pronunce " Could I come in ?"  with a falling or a rising intonation at the end of the question . Thank you . |  12 Dec 2012      
					
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 yanogator
 
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							| Falling at the end. Stress on "I", then falling from there.     I would diagram the intonation like this:                 I                     come   in?    Could |  12 Dec 2012     
					
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 chrissmolder
 
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							| It could be pronounced with a falling or a rising intonation.  It is conventional to teach that yes/no questions (questions beginning with an auxiliary and not a question word) are spoken with a  �rising � intonation. 
 Intonation is a very complex issue, but two common uses of it in this case might be as follows:
 
 falling - spoken to a person who is familiar to you (a relative, friend or colleague) or inferior (an employee) and it is assumed that the answer will be  �yes �
 
 rising or fall-rise - polite, the question seems more genuine
 
 �Come in � is a phrasal verb with an adverbial.  This means that the tonic will probably be on  �in � since  ��in� is a content word and �come in� is the focus of the phrase/sentence.  The tonic is the place where the tone usually falls or drops and then rises again.  If it is rising, the intonation sometimes rises throughout the whole phrase/sentence, but with  �in � as the highest and longest syllable.  Again--intonation varies considerably, but these are some general tendencies of some native speakers (others may disagree!).
 
 Sometimes a fall-rise seems like it is falling, but it does gently rise again at the end.  This may be the most common type of intonation for this question, but I would have to check the research.  I can recommend a great thesis on the subject if you are interested!
 
 |  13 Dec 2012     
					
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