时间:2019-01-11 作者:英语课 分类:人与地方


英语课

  BBC Learning 1 EnglishPeople and PlacesSpeak English like a native!
  Amber 2: Hello! Today, we learn how to speak English likesomeone from Yorkshire, inthe north of England, and like someone from the USA! Ourteacher is Penny Dyer – she’s one of the most respectedinternational film and theatre voice coaches. A voice coachteaches actors to speak with different accents.
  An accent is a way of saying words that shows what country,region or social class someone comes from. So we talk about‘a Yorkshire accent’ or ‘an American accent’, and youmay have heard of ‘RP’ – which stands for ReceivedPronunciation. RP is a way of speaking British English thatis considered to be the standard pronunciation in the UK.
  And we have the verb‘to coach’, which means to teach someone a special skill.
  Penny has worked with many famous actors such as NicoleKidman, Cate Blanchett and Helen Mirren (whom Penny taughtto act the role of the Queen!). So, time for our firstlesson – how to speak English with a Yorkshire accent or‘dialect 3’. Penny’s advice to actors is to ‘use yourimagination’ – in other words, try to see the place, or‘the landscape’ in your mind, and try to feel theweather! As you listen to Penny, try to catch what theweather is like in Yorkshire.
  Penny DyerGetting in through the actor’s imagination is always theway forward with dialect. So I suppose, when you listen tosomeone like Kelly from Doncaster, what she’s doing istalking about how lovely it is to get all snuggle-ly andwrapped up against the biting cold, wet Yorkshire weather,and there’s something about that that you need to battleagainst when you do a Yorkshire accent. So actually talkingabout the landscape, the topography, the history - thatsort of gets you into other areas and that opens up theimagination really for the actors.
  Amber: So Penny says to speak with a Yorkshire accent, youneed to imagine you aretrying to keep warm in the face of ‘the biting cold, wetYorkshire weather’! That’s a strong description - isn’tit? - ‘the biting cold’. Penny says you need to thinkabout ‘the topography’ of Yorkshire – the features ofthe Yorkshire landscape – for example, the opencountryside, the hills, the winding 4 roads. Listen again andtry to hear the sound of the rolling Yorkshire countrysidein Penny’s Yorkshire accent!
  Penny DyerGetting in through the actor’s imagination is always theway forward with dialect. So I suppose, when you listen tosomeone like Kelly from Doncaster, what she’s doing istalking about how lovely it is to get all snuggle-ly andwrapped up against the biting, cold, wet Yorkshire weather,and there’s something about that that you need to battleagainst when you do a Yorkshire accent. So actually talkingabout the landscape, the topography, the history - thatsort of gets you into other areas and that opens up theimagination really for the actors.
  Amber: Next, we learn how to speak like a native American!
  As you’ll hear, the trick is the same as before. We haveto imagine the place, and in the case of the USA, the hugeplace! So we need to think of putting some ‘space’ intohow our English sounds!
  Notice Penny also talks about emphasising ‘the vowelsounds’ – vowel 5 sounds are the sounds you make withoutclosing your mouth or throat. Penny says Americans put alot of ‘the emotional 6 meaning’ into their vowel sounds.
  That’s interesting, isn’t it? See if you can hear thatthe next time you hear anAmerican accent, in a film, for example. Here’s Pennyagain. As you listen, try to move your face and mouth inthe relaxed way she suggests!
  Penny DyerYou need to think about the air under the armpits and thespace between the knees when you’re doing an Americanaccent – you sort of have to take your space and you sortof hear that, because they put a lot of what they do intothe vowel sounds. You know, that’s how you get the energy,and the length, and the meaning. The emotional meaning goesstraight into the vowel, and you let the tongue reallystart to relax a little bit more in the back of your mouthand that makes you realise that the resonant 7 space isfurther back. Everything is a little bit more relaxed inthe front of the face, and you’re working a little bit offyour lip corners, here, because that’ll help you to getinto the ‘r’ – because as we know, with most of theAmerican accents, we have to use something that we don’tuse, for instance 8, with southern English, which is thisall-American ‘r’.
  Amber: How did you do?! The important thing seems to be tomake a bigger space inside your mouth – a ‘resonant space’. Have fun practising!



n.学问,学识,学习;动词learn的现在分词
  • When you are learning to ride a bicycle,you often fall off.初学骑自行车时,常会从车上掉下来。
  • Learning languages isn't just a matter of remembering words.学习语言不仅仅是记些单词的事。
n.琥珀;琥珀色;adj.琥珀制的
  • Would you like an amber necklace for your birthday?你过生日想要一条琥珀项链吗?
  • This is a piece of little amber stones.这是一块小小的琥珀化石。
n.方言,土语,地方话
  • He wrote a play in a local dialect.他用当地方言写了一个剧本。
  • They began to speak rapidly in dialect.他们开始叽里呱啦地说起地方话来。
n.绕,缠,绕组,线圈
  • A winding lane led down towards the river.一条弯弯曲曲的小路通向河边。
  • The winding trail caused us to lose our orientation.迂回曲折的小道使我们迷失了方向。
n.元音;元音字母
  • A long vowel is a long sound as in the word"shoe ".长元音即如“shoe” 一词中的长音。
  • The vowel in words like 'my' and 'thigh' is not very difficult.单词my和thigh中的元音并不难发。
adj.令人动情的;易动感情的;感情(上)的
  • Emotional people don't stop to calculate.感情容易冲动的人做事往往不加考虑。
  • This is an emotional scene in the play.这是剧中动人的一幕。
adj.(声音)洪亮的,共鸣的
  • She has a resonant voice.她的嗓子真亮。
  • He responded with a resonant laugh.他报以洪亮的笑声。
n.例,例证,实例
  • Can you quote me a recent instance?你能给我举一个最近的例子吗?
  • He's a greedy boy,yesterday,for instance,he ate all our biscuits!他是个贪吃的孩子――比如,他昨天把我们的饼干都吃了!
学英语单词
4'-hydroxychalcone
agroclavine
algebra of normal operators
allocation of berths
anneloid
antipyretic analgesic
back of lode
Banwoldo
beryllium carbide fiber
boost capacitor
carbonatian
Carpenter Gothic
Champagne Berrichonne
comb hair
conging
consumer goods industry
cross-ager
cycle limit
devines
discharge of bill
disodic alkaliine
Dundwārāganj
dynamic systems development method
dynamo-metamorphism
Eext
El Lagarto
electric neurophysiology
elevational drawing
engine driven machine
Essex, Robert Devereux
etherealises
extensive feeding
federal democratic republic of ethiopias
fewters
fibrous dysplasia of cranial bone
fistulous
Forward stitch
founding equipment
fram
fringe image
genus Kinosternon
gillingwater
Grænge
harmless test
hero-worshipped
honours list
horizontal dynamic focusing
house-tops
inability to pay debt
injury of cruciate ligament of knee joint
input/output operation
instructional needs
internal hydrogen cooling
latin alphabet
leach-precipitation
ligamenta intertransversaria
lineberger
lipps
loaded diffused optical waveguide
lower confidence interval
manual-control
mesoeephalon
metalate
output primitive
Pacific silver fir
passamaquoddy b.
periodic tables
peritoneally
prospective rate of return
psychiatry
push-ring
raperee
reflection, multiple
retinal asthenopia
rod-control soft light
rotovated
rummage around
rus-sian
sample hold switch
scarce factors
skywalk
socioemotional
soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy
South Atlantic radiation anomaly
stablity
stagger tuned amplification
stannonate
stinck
sulfur resisting lacquer
taygeta (19 tau)
theory of a synthesized economic base
thing possessed
tofenacin
Tokwe
Tësovo
ultraprotective
underevaluation
volcanist
web service architecture
welldrained
xfile
XO-I