English Sound Building - British Pronunciation

Season 5 recap - Burger burglars and other tongue twisters

December 05, 2022 Tamsin Season 5 Episode 54
Season 5 recap - Burger burglars and other tongue twisters
English Sound Building - British Pronunciation
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English Sound Building - British Pronunciation
Season 5 recap - Burger burglars and other tongue twisters
Dec 05, 2022 Season 5 Episode 54
Tamsin

Welcome to season 5 of English Sound Building! Today, we’re reviewing all the sounds from season 5, and many others too, with ten tongue twisters.

Practise as often as you can to build muscle memory, and make sure you subscribe so you don't miss the next one.
 
The Podcast script is available free on my Patreon.

Don't forget to follow me on Instagram.
 
Interested in classes? Get in touch! I occasionally have availability for 1:1 students. Email learnbrickbybrick@gmail.com

Support the Show.

Show Notes Transcript

Welcome to season 5 of English Sound Building! Today, we’re reviewing all the sounds from season 5, and many others too, with ten tongue twisters.

Practise as often as you can to build muscle memory, and make sure you subscribe so you don't miss the next one.
 
The Podcast script is available free on my Patreon.

Don't forget to follow me on Instagram.
 
Interested in classes? Get in touch! I occasionally have availability for 1:1 students. Email learnbrickbybrick@gmail.com

Support the Show.

It's season recap time, and this time around it’s all about tongue twisters! I’ve chosen ten for us to work through today, to cover all of the sounds from this season, which have been /r/ (a lot of that), /e/, /ɜ:/, /eə / and /eɪ/, and of course the /r/ and /l/ clusters from the last few weeks.

Firstly, to practise /ɜ:/, but with an /l/ cluster in there too (as well as some non rhotic /r/s), a very short one: 

  1. Burger burglar.

Next, one mixing /ɜ:/ and /e/

  1. A nurse unearthed a nest.

 

Now on to /eɪ/, with some other vowels in there too, and I love this one too for the /l/ and /r/ practice:

  1. A maid named lady marmalade made mainly lard and lemonade

And a second one, with some nice /gr/ clusters too:

  1. Eight great grey geese grazing.

 

Next, for /eə/, with a bonus intrusive /r/:

  1. Fair bears care about hairy bears.

 

 

Now to /r/.

The first one is great for anybody who struggles with /r/ and /w/:

  1. Will these real wheels really wheel? 

The next is one of the classic English tongue twisters, I wonder if you’ve heard it before?

  1. Red lorry, yellow lorry.

The second has /r/ and /l/:

  1. Truly rural, purely rural. Truly rurally, purely rurally.

OR we can put a linguistic twist on it.

·       Truly plural, purely plural. Truly plurally, purely plurally.

The next refers to the plant ‘broom’ rather than the broom we use to sweep with:

  1. The broom blooms when the bluebells bloom.

And the final one has some /gr/ and /gl/ tongue twisters:

  1. A growing gleam glowing green.

OR 

·       A glowing gleam glowing green.