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    • How to Practice The Exercises
    • Chapter 1: The Main Sounds of English
    • Chapter 2: Stress and Intonation
    • Chapter 3: Word Connections
    • Chapter 4: Reduced Sounds
    • Other Ways to Practice Your English Pronunciation

    Improving your English pronunciation is hard. But you can make it easier by focusing on only one pronunciation skill at a time. That’s why the exercises are organized into five chapters. Focus on one chapter at a time so you don’t feel overwhelmed. There are a lot of exercises on this page. If you don’t have time to practice them all, focus on the ...

    In this chapter, you’ll find exercises to help you pronounce every main sound in English correctly. English has a lot of words that sound similar (heel vs. hill, sell vs. sale, pool vs. pull). It’s important to pronounce them correctly. In many of the exercises, you’ll be practicing two similar sounds at the same time. This is an effective way to p...

    When we say someone has a strong accent, it means they speak English with incorrect stress and intonation patterns, making them difficult to understand. So, if you want others to understand your spoken English, practice the exercises in this chapter carefully.

    This chapter will help you sound more like a native speaker. You’ll practice “linking words” together so that your speech flows better and sounds more natural.

    When speaking, native speakers don’t pronounce every syllable clearly. Instead, they “reduce” certain sounds, making it easier to speak. 1. Reduction: the word FOR (Rachel’s English) 2. How to Pronounce the Word OR (Rachel’s English) 3. How to Reduce ‘THAT’ (Rachel’s English) 4. How to Pronounce the Word ‘TO’ (Rachel’s English) 5. How to Pronounce ...

    Using the lessons on this page is one way to improve your pronunciation and accent. But there are two more methods you can use: 1. Practice the Parrot technique. (Imitate native speakers.) 2. Do an accent inspection. (Compare your accent with the native accent.) If you combine all three methods together, the results will be amazing! So if you want ...

  1. ÐIt is often as long as any other vowel 8 Length of tense v. lax vowels: All other things being equal ¥Vowel length in English is affected by many factors ¥All other things being equal, a tense vowel is longer than a lax vowel of a similar height Ð(Exception /Q/ is not shorter than low tense vowels (e.g., / / )

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    • Tongue twister exercises. Tongue twisters are tricky, but they can force you to enunciate similar sounding words to make each phrase intelligible. For example, “Peter Piper” can help you learn to enunciate consonants (in this case, “P”).
    • Consonant exercise. Consonants are speech sounds that are created when you stop air from flowing easily through the mouth. Some are made by closing your lips and others by touching your tongue to your teeth or the roof of your mouth.
    • Vowel exercise. Vowels are sounds made when breath flows through the mouth without being blocked by the tongue, teeth, or lips. Vowels have several variations, including “long” and “short” sounds.
    • Commonly mispronounced words exercise. Similar sounds can confuse even native English speakers. For instance, many people say or write “should of” and “could of” instead of “should have” and “could have.”
  2. language. grammar Vocabulary or lexis pronunciation. a) Structures (the patterns that can be seen in these are usually called grammar of the language. b) Words that convey meaning (vocabulary or lexis). c) Sound, stress, and intonation patterns, which combine to make "Pronunciation". If you communicate only through the written word, you will ...

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  3. Focus Grading pronunciation and identifying difficulties Level Elementary+ Time 30 minutes Preparation Copy the material in Box 2onto a handout. Box 2 Student handout AHow good is your English pronunciation? 1 Circle your answer: 1= high, 5= low. vowels 12345 consonants 12345 consonant clusters (e.g. cl-, fr-) 12345 word stress (e.g. aGO ...

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  5. Listen carefully to the up and down of the voice when you listen to native speakers – tune into their ‘pitch’. Start with this accent reduction exercise video for an introduction to word stress. This will help you hear the word stress and start to think about your pitch and rhythm. You’ll cover the following words:

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