Test! Get Rid of Your Accent: The English Pronunciation and Speech Training Manual (Part 2)
Added by: klod18 | Karma: 17.21 | Black Hole | 20 December 2011
0
Test! Get Rid of Your Accent: The English Pronunciation and Speech Training Manual (Part 2)
Our first book deals primarily with the pronunciation of English sounds and helps with clarify of speech. In this book, we are taking the study of English a step further. It will help you make your speech fluent, natural and more like that of a native English speaker! It will also prove to be invaluable for everybody who needs public speaking skills, as it provides effective practice for the use of pause and voice modulation!
Dear User! Your publication has been rejected as it seems to be a duplicate of another publication that already exists on Englishtips. Please make sure you always check BEFORE submitting your publication. If you only have an alternative link for an existing publication, please add it using the special field for alternative links in that publication.
Thank you!
This programme is about accent - the British accent Received Pronunciation (RP). Although only spoken by a relatively small number of people, these people occupy powerful positions in English life and in the rest of the world. We look at the pronunciation features that characterize RP, at how people react to the RP accent and its speakers, and at how RP is changing.
Dear User! Your publication has been rejected as it seems to be a duplicate of another publication that already exists on Englishtips. Please make sure you always check BEFORE submitting your publication. If you only have an alternative link for an existing publication, please add it using the special field for alternative links in that publication.
Thank you!
For most of his adult life, Bryson has made his home in the U.K, yet he actually entered the world in 1951 as part of America's postwar baby boom and spent his formative years in Des Moines, Iowa. Bryson wistfully recounts a childhood of innocence and optimism, a magical point in time when a distinct sense of regional and community identity briefly—but blissfully—coexisted with fledgling technology and modern convenience. Narrating, Bryson skillfully wields his amorphous accent—somehow neither fully British nor Midwestern—to project a genial and entertaining tour guide of lost Americana.