Thank you, and are there other choices than raising a pitch for London? Can I also write,"Have you ever been to London? Which is the capital of England." then ?
Originally Posted by sky3120;939321 Can I also write,[COLOR=#333333
"Have you ever been to London? Which is the capital of England." then ?[/COLOR]
No
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Thank you, and are there other choices than raising a pitch for London? Can I also write,"Have you ever been to London? Which is the capital of England." then ?
No. The second clause is not a sentence.
On the original question, I'd raise the pitch twice, but with the first clause taking primary stress.
Intonation gets particularly interesting in report of direct speech. In 'Where are you going?' the normal pitch falls until the verb and then rises. In "'Where you going?' he asked" the intonation doesn't rise to its highest point until the second verb, so that the report of the question follows the same down-up trajectory as the original question. In other words, the new sentence spreads out the change in tone, 'misrepresenting' the orinal intonation.
Here's how I would say it with an England - British accent. Listen here or click here for a direct download link (or click on London.mp3 below). This not the way, but a way to say it. As others have said, there are many ways you can go with this question.
As an aside, I probably wouldn't say "Have you ever been to London, which is the capital of England?"
If my goal was to specify which "London" I was referring to, I'd say:
Have you even been to London, England? Have you ever been to London, Ontario?
Having said that, most people would assume that by "London" you are referring to the capital of England. (No disrespect to the inhabitants of London, Ontario!) At least, that is my experience.
Hope it helps!
Last edited by Chicken Sandwich; 13-Nov-2012 at 13:35.
Reason: fixed typo + added attachment