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Free Speech Lesson

Dr. Antonia Johnson

English Pronunciation: How to Overcome Your Speech Mispronunciations in Daily Life and Presentations

Let’s talk about a clever strategy to overcome your speech mispronunciations in daily life and presentations to give you the strength of confidence. 

shutterstock_164889821The biggest key to people understanding your words is the accuracy of your pronunciation, and the sounds being loud enough for them to hear. 

We’ve all been there: you are confident your speech is intelligible, understandable and your voice rings out. Your listener does understand every word. Another situation, you are not so confident in the pronunciation of some words. They have your difficult and error sounds. 

For example, Yerin wants a momento of her dinner with valued friends. “Use my camera,” she says. All of a sudden her voice plummets down to soft, and she mumbles the word. Her friend says “What?” She is embarrassed. 

What’s a person to do? 

Do what Raul does, and Saeng, Carlos, Xiaowei, and Vik… On the particular words with the difficult sounds, do the word carefully and slowly so you are accurate with all the sounds. If it is a multiple syllable word, make your muscles do each syllable like a word. 

You will love how that helps you. Your listeners will love that they easily understand that word. 

So with confidence, tell your friends you want them to use your camera to take your treasured picture. 

Below is a pronunciation tutorial for the “r” in “camera.”

 

ESL Speakers: You Probably Speak Too Fast!

For your weekly dose of clear English communication coaching, we have a weekly speech tip video above. AND hear this:
 
1. “My own observation is that most presenters overaccelerate their rate of delivery, making it difficult for audiences to stay in step.” Michael Klepper
 
2. “One way to curb overacceleration is to make certain you enunciate every letter of every word.” Michael Klepper on the art of public speaking
 
Michael Klepper was advising native-born English speakers.
 
Advice for ESL speakers: You probably speak too fast, also. Remember perfect pronunciation especially for the consonant at the end of a word.

How to Figure Out What An Intelligibility Score Really Means

When native U.S. English speakers talk just above a whisper, they measure about 50% intelligibility.

What does this mean to you?

A score around 50 percent for an international person means that listeners have to strain to understand them. It is about the same as listeners trying to get information from a native speaker talking a little louder than a whisper. Put another way, listeners need to rely a lot on context, grammar and gestures to figure out what the international talker and ESL person is saying.

Sometimes listeners succeed. 

Other times they are just frustrated.

My bad stammering when I was a youth and young adult made listeners uncomfortable. I could easily see that.

What a relief to be where I am now. Speech skill building in direct practice and taking every opportunity to practice new speaking skills made speaking a pleasure – for me and listeners.

 Yay for skill building. Yay for perseverance. Yay for good communication!

A Powerful Point of View for Presentations

Besides a weekly speech tip video above, here is a powerful point of view for presentations. Remember this:

 “The presentation is a moment of truth for the presenter. We can’t hide. We are exposed, for better or worse. The listeners decide whether they like us, believe us, trust us, and perceive whether we are secure in ourselves and confident in what we are saying.” — Kevin Daley
 
True wisdom even for impromptu presentations (e.g. when we answer a question in a meeting)!

Getting the American Accent : “Never Say Never”

And this from Raul, on Facebook

Hi Antonia,
Would you please do a video and use as a topic “never say never”. I believe the majority of us think we are not going to go further into learning clear English speech. However, life pushes us to take more instruction and classes on this subject. Our jobs demand more clear talk. Thanks in advance, Raul

How wonderful, Raul, to have such an insight. We have the illusion that learning is for kids. We think that once you finish formal education for high school or with college, you are done.

But making English speech clear, intelligible or understandable is a goal often triggered by work life and career wishes.

“Never say never” Raul told me is his favorite quote.

It takes 70 days of practice every day to change a habit. Mastering the pronunciations and manner of clear English speaking that makes it easier to understand our speech takes between two and three months of focused practice everyday. Build that systematic learning with scientific principles and you have wonderfully efficient learning. Fast.

“Never say never.” Fact is, even after you have the habit, you have to keep it up. If you don’t use it, you will lose it.

Take the wisdom of Raul, and apply it to your skill of clear talking. “Never say never.” Persistence is the key. Persistence in working your brain and muscles to get and keep the clear talking habit. Systematic learning is efficient. Seek and do that for your learning.

Above is a pronunciation tutorial for the “v” and word “never”. Gosh, “v” is so hard!