Today, we’ll be tackling 3 English tongue twisters. Consonant sounds can be tricky, but tongue twisters are a great way to improve your English pronunciation & build brain connections.
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Video Transcript:
Seventy-seven Benevolent Elephants
I can’t do this one. Why practice tongue twisters? My students who have problems with some of the sounds in American English need to train their mind to guide their mouth, to effortlessly go through the positions for these sounds. Tongue twisters can help with this. they can help build the brain connection: This is a T-H thhhh so that your body can do it on its own, without thinking of it, without the mind having to guide the tongue through the position. And that’s what we want of course. We want the habit. We want to take the sounds that are hardest, and make them effortless. So today we’re going to go over some tongue twisters to untwist your tongue and help you master some of the trickiest consonant sounds of American English. As always, if you like this video or you learn something new, please give it a thumbs up and subscribe with notifications, and come join us Tuesdays for new videos.
Today we’re training 3 super-tricky tongue twisters. First, Seventy-seven benevolent elephants. This is going to help with your V. My students from India and Germany tend to sometimes switch V and W, and these can be tricky sounds for other language groups as well. Mastering this tongue twister will help your brain really get that V is vvv.
We’re also to do “which wristwatches are swiss wristwatches?” Hitting the W hard, also the R. That’s because the W is silent in the word ‘wrist’. Look out, this one is really tricky.
And I’m not going to forget that ever important TH. “He threw three free throws” – you’ll get to work on R with that one too. What other tongue twisters do you know? Put them in the comments below.
Let’s look at our first one, seventy-seven benevolent elephants. That’s a lot of elephants. Benevolent means kind, expressing goodwill, helping others. You usually don’t think of an elephant as being benevolent, but it does make a good tongue twister. This one is tricky. Too fast, and it even native speakers mess it up. This is my friend Ginny and her daughter Natalie.
Seventy-seven Benevolent Elephants
And this is my sister-in-law Audrey.
Seventy-seven Benevolent Elephants
We’ll focus on the word ‘benevolent’. First, it helps so much with a longer words to focus on stress. The second syllable here is stressed, let’s practice just that. Nev. Nev. It’s like a hill. Nev. Nev. It has our tricky V sound. V, not a W, no lip rounding. Nev, vvv. Next, unstressed. The first syllable is just ‘be,be’. Very simple, very fast. Let’s put it with the stressed syllable. Benev. Benev. Remember, these two syllables should feel totally different. One is stressed, one is unstressed. The first one is very fast, the second one is longer, it has that hill shape. Benev. Benev. Our other two syllables, -olent, -olent. All three of our unstressed syllables here have the schwa, pronounced like this ‘uh’. Can you believe that? Almost no jaw drop, totally relaxed face. It almost doesn’t even look like I’m not even talking. -olent, -olent, -olent. Benev – -olent. Benevolent. Put them together but don’t slow down those fast syllables. Keep them fast, keep it simple. Benevolent. Seventy-seven benevolent elephants, Seventy-seven benevolent elephants.
The next word, elephants,that first syllable has the hill shape, the stress. Practice with me. El-. El-. The other two syllables, schwas, said more quickly. Ephant. Ephant. Ephant. Put it together, elephant. The PH makes an F sound. Did you know F and V have the same mouth position? F is unvoiced, meaning just air makes the sound, ffff, and V Is voiced, meaning your vocal cords are engaged, making a sound. Vvvv. I’ll alternate. See that nothing in my mouth changes. Ff, vv, ff, vv. Let’s put the two words together. It’s going to be common to make the ending T a stop T. Stop the air in your throat, but don’t release tt, the T sound. Benevolent, benevolent. Benevolent elephants. Move your arm on those stressed syllables. Benevolent, benevolent, benevolent elephants. Okay, move your arm on those stressed syllables. Benevolent elephants, Benevolent elephants. Benevolent elephants. Do it as slowly as you need to, to make sure you’re doing it correctly. Remember, we want to train the right positions.
Seventy-seven. This is going to help us train that V sound some more. Both parts of the word have first syllable stress. Seventy-seven. Seventy-seven. Notice I’m making that T more of a D, or a Flap T sound. This is an exception. Usually after N it’s either dropped or a True T. But here it’s a Flap T. Seventy-seven (flap). Seventy. Seventy-seven. Seventy-seven. Okay I’m going to try it now. Seventy-seven benevolent elephants. Seventy-seven benevolent elephants. If V is at all tricky sound for you, do this over and over. Slowly. Get it down good. This will help. Don’t go so fast that you’re doing it incorrectly. You want to practice doing it right, then you can speed it up.
Our second tongue twister today is “which wristwatches are swiss wristwatches”. This one is so hard.
“which wristwatches are swiss wristwatches”.
I cannot do it quickly at all. Look at all these W and R sounds. W are in red, R in blue. Beginning R and W actually look a lot a like from the outside. Watch: rrrrrr, wwwww. Lots of lip rounding. But what’s happening inside is pretty different.
For R, the middle part of the tongue lifts towards the roof of the mouth, the tip is back and up, not touching anything. For the W, the tongue tip touches the back of the bottom front teeth, then the back stretches up, and we have a little something extra in the throat. Wwww, just a little bit of a narrowing here. Wwww, Wwww wRrrrrist wwwwwatch. If R is at all a problem for you, or W, then nailing the tongue twister, slowing it down, getting it right, is going to help you out.
Let’s do just the first two words: which wrist, which wrist. Both have the IH as in SIT vowel. Which wrist, and the both have that hill shape, they’re both stressed. Which wrist, which wrist, which wrist, which wrist. Do that with me slowly: which wrist, which wrist. Let’s put in the second half of our compound word, ‘watches’. IN a compound word, the first word is stressed. So Watches is unstressed, watches, watches, watches. It doesn’t have that hill shape, it’s flatter. Wrist watches. Wrist watches. Say that with me. Wrist watches, wrist watches. Which wrist watches, which wristwatches.
By the way, this reminds me of another terribly hard tongue twister, “I wish to wash my Irish wristwatch.” I made my nieces and my niece’s fiancée try that one a couple of years ago, it was not pretty.
But this one, I think, is slightly easier. By the way, I’ll put the link to that other tongue twister video in my video description. Our next word is ‘are’. This word won’t be stressed. In fact in lots of sentences a native speaker would just say ‘er’. “Where are the kids?” Where are, er, er, er. For example, let’s try that. Just ‘er’ on the end of ‘watches. Which wrist watches are. Which wrist watches are. Watches are, watches are, watches are. Reducing are. Next, Swiss, we have another W. Lip rounding. Swiss, swiss. This is also stressed with that hill shape. A little bit longer. Swiss. Which wrist watches are Swiss. Do it slowly and accurately. Which wristwatches are Swiss. Notice even when I’m going slowly, I’m still connecting all the words in that line. We want that. No breaks, no separation. All smoothly linked. That’s something we just love in English. Which wristwatches are Swiss. Now all we need is ‘wrist watches’ again. Which wristwatches are Swiss wrist watches? Which wristwatches are Swiss wrist watches? Have you got that? Take your time, do it daily.
Okay, our third and final tongue twister that we’re practicing today is pretty tough. My sister-in-law and niece could not get it.
He threw three free throws.
He threw three free throws. Natalie couldn’t get it either.
He threw three free throws.
Not quite. Julia, nope.
He threw three free throws.
Let’s give Ginny a try.
He threw three free throws.
(lauging) I’m so sorry.
She says no, she can’t do it. But you can do it. We can do it if we slow it down, get it good, and then speed up. And if you master this, your TH is going to be a lot clearer and THR would be way less intimidating.
This one is extra tough because we’re dealing not just with TH and F, but with clusters with R. THREE, FREE. A lot of little kids can’t even say TH actually. They say F instead. I remember when my son Stoney did that.
Marf..
So you’re going Marf. You’re using your lip but we want to use your tongue.
No almost. Bring your tongue.
He wasn’t very interested in learning that day. Was he? To make the unvoiced TH like threw, three, and throws, your tongue tip has to come through the teeth. Th, th, just air. No tension, no holding, no stopping, th. Easy sound. Let’s alternate between three and free. I’ll zoom in. Three, free, three, free, three, free. You can do it. It takes practice, but you can get it. He threw. Let’s just do that. Threw is stressed. He threw, he threw. Three is also stressed, another THR cluster. So for the THR, you go from the tongue tip being out, th to being pulled back and up a little bit. Thr, thr. Slow it down, feel that movement at the tip of your tongue. He threw three. He threw three. He threw three. Free is also stressed. Here you do want to use your bottom lip. Th, th, three. And then throws, unstressed. Free throws, free throws, free throws. Do that with me slowly. Free throws. You can hold out the consonant, really make sure you’re getting the right mouth position. He threw three free throws. Practicing slowly gives your mind time to guide your tongue into the right position. And once your brain does that enough, you won’t have to think about it anymore. The habit will be made.
Our three tongue twisters today are all training problem consonant sounds in English for non-native speakers. Take your time. Get it right. Form the right pathway in the brain. You can do it. Seventy-seven benevolent elephants. Which wrist watches are Swiss wrist watches? He threw three free throws. And as you get more comfortable, you can increase your speed. Tongue twisters are actually kind of fun, aren’t they? Huge thanks to my friends and family for helping me out with this video, they’re not afraid of a few tongue twisters! Audrey, Emily, Molly, Taylor, Ginny, Natalie, and Julia, thank you. Keep your learning going now with this video, and don’t forget to subscribe. I make new videos every Tuesday and I love being your English teacher. That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.
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