English Pronunciation In Use Advanced Book Pdf May 2026
Unlike basic pronunciation books that focus primarily on individual sounds (phonemes), the Advanced edition delves into the nuanced, prosodic features of English—stress, rhythm, connected speech, intonation, and discourse-level pronunciation—that mark a speaker as truly proficient.
English Pronunciation in Use Advanced is the third and highest level in Cambridge University Press’s highly regarded “English Pronunciation in Use” series (following Elementary and Intermediate). Authored by Martin Hewings, this book is specifically designed for advanced learners (CEFR level C1–C2) who already have a strong command of English grammar and vocabulary but wish to refine their pronunciation to achieve greater clarity, naturalness, and communicative effectiveness. english pronunciation in use advanced book pdf
Covers connected speech: elision (dropping sounds), assimilation (sounds changing), linking /r/, contraction, and weak forms. Also covers intonation patterns for questions, lists, and backchannelling (“mm,” “uh-huh”). Unlike basic pronunciation books that focus primarily on
Unlike basic pronunciation books that focus primarily on individual sounds (phonemes), the Advanced edition delves into the nuanced, prosodic features of English—stress, rhythm, connected speech, intonation, and discourse-level pronunciation—that mark a speaker as truly proficient.
English Pronunciation in Use Advanced is the third and highest level in Cambridge University Press’s highly regarded “English Pronunciation in Use” series (following Elementary and Intermediate). Authored by Martin Hewings, this book is specifically designed for advanced learners (CEFR level C1–C2) who already have a strong command of English grammar and vocabulary but wish to refine their pronunciation to achieve greater clarity, naturalness, and communicative effectiveness.
Covers connected speech: elision (dropping sounds), assimilation (sounds changing), linking /r/, contraction, and weak forms. Also covers intonation patterns for questions, lists, and backchannelling (“mm,” “uh-huh”).