IELTS Speaking: Sentence Stress for a Band 8.0+
When preparing for the IELTS Speaking test, most candidates obsess over complex vocabulary and advanced grammar. But what if you have perfect grammar and still get a Band 6.0 in Pronunciation?
The culprit is usually a lack of Sentence Stress.
English is a time-stressed language, meaning it relies on a specific rhythm—a “music”—to convey meaning naturally. If you speak English like a robot, giving every single word the exact same volume and length, the examiner will struggle to understand your main points.
This guide reveals the exact rules of sentence stress, how to use it to sound like a native speaker, and the “Contrastive Stress” secret that can push your score to a Band 8.0 or higher.
What is Sentence Stress?
Sentence stress is the practice of emphasizing specific words in a sentence by making them louder, longer, and higher in pitch.
Native English speakers naturally stress the words that carry the most important information, while quickly gliding over the less important words.
To master this, you need to divide English words into two categories: Content Words and Structure Words.
The Golden Rule: Content vs. Structure Words
If you want to sound natural, you must learn which words to highlight (stress) and which words to hide (un-stress).
Content Words (Stress These!)
These are the heavy lifters. They carry the meaning of the sentence. If you delete everything else, the listener will still understand your main idea.
- Main Verbs: buy, study, travel, decide
- Nouns: computer, student, city, happiness
- Adjectives: beautiful, expensive, difficult
- Adverbs: quickly, rarely, extremely
- Negative Auxiliaries: don’t, can’t, won’t, haven’t (Always stress negatives so the listener knows you are saying “no”!)
Structure Words (Do NOT Stress These)
These are the grammatical glue. They make the sentence correct, but they don’t carry the core message. You should say these quickly and quietly.
- Pronouns: I, he, she, they, it
- Prepositions: on, at, into, of
- Articles: a, an, the
- Conjunctions: and, but, because
- Auxiliary Verbs: is, are, have, do, can (when positive)
Let’s Look at an Example:
Imagine the sentence: “I am going to the store to buy some apples.”
- Unstressed (Quick & Quiet): I am… to the… to… some…
- Stressed (Loud & Clear): GOING… STORE… BUY… APPLES.
The Band 8.0 Secret: Contrastive Stress
Once you master the basic rules of content vs. structure words, you can use Contrastive Stress. This is when you deliberately break the rules to change the meaning of a sentence or correct a misunderstanding. Examiners love this because it shows absolute control over the language.
Look at how the meaning changes depending on which word you stress in this single sentence:
- “I didn’t say he stole the money.” (Someone else said it, not me).
- “I didn’t SAY he stole the money.” (I implied it, or I wrote it down, but I didn’t speak the words).
- “I didn’t say HE stole the money.” (I said someone else stole it).
- “I didn’t say he stole the MONEY.” (He stole something else, maybe the jewelry).
How to use this in the IELTS test:
If the examiner asks: “Do you like playing football?”
- Band 6.0 Answer (Flat): “No, I like watching football.”
- Band 8.0 Answer (Contrastive Stress): “No, I don’t like PLAYING football, but I absolutely love WATCHING it.”
Top 3 Strategies to Practice Sentence Stress
Strategy 1: The “Shadowing” Technique
Find a short audio or video clip of a native English speaker (TED Talks or BBC news clips are perfect). Listen to one sentence, pause it, and try to mimic their exact rhythm, volume, and pitch. Repeat this until your “music” matches theirs.
Strategy 2: The “Rubber Band” Method
Hold a physical rubber band in your hands. Read an IELTS Speaking Part 2 transcript out loud. Every time you hit a Content Word, stretch the rubber band. This builds physical muscle memory that links to the length and stress of the word in your mouth.
Strategy 3: Mark Your Cue Cards
During your 1-minute preparation time for Speaking Part 2, don’t just write down words. Underline or circle the specific adjectives and verbs you want to emphasize. When you speak, hit those underlined words with extra energy.