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Practicing pronunciationTeaching methodology, learning techniques, linguistics-- any of the various aspect of learning or teaching a foreign language. |
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Practicing pronunciation
I go to a tutor 4 times a week for 1.5 hours each time. This forms the bulk of my learning technique. My goal is to get to an intermediate fluency level for talking to people in latin America. I don't need this for academics or work.
My main issue right now is that my pronunciation is bad. Even if I know a word and use it in a sentence correctly, a native Spanish speaker won't recognize what I'm saying. I want a CD that I can listen to driving to work (must be CD not cassette). I spend 2-3 hours commuting each day, so this is an ideal time to practice my accent. Right now I just listen to Spanish radio, which I don't think helps that much. |
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#3
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Welcome to you, Mastov, and you'll do well to heed Rusty's excellent advice.
Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, they say, and it's been the most helpful thing I myself have done on the long road to becoming understood. What I mean is, while listening to the radio I like to try to duplicate what I hear by periodically turning the volume off immediately following a short phrase and saying it out loud do myself. Of course my listening is done on shortwave, so when I hear something like Esta es Radio....., transmitiendo desde..., territorio libre en las Américas (don't want to mention which country, for political reasons!) I make a stab at what I can recall hearing, trying to duplicate the stress, the accent etc. In addition, a pocket-size digital voice recorder is handy for recording transmissions for playback at your convenience, and then speaking along with them - pausing when necessary. If you happen to be a baseball fan like I am, live broadcasts of games are a goldmine of terminology & sayings; just as in English, sportswriters and broadcasters are known for their colorful language. Just some ideas. Good luck to you and again, Welcome! |
#4
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An MP3 player is an excellent investment in listening and speaking practice. You don't need the latest iPod - a generic Wal*Mart or e-Bay one for $9.99 with 4 gig of memory can hold immense amounts of training material.
I have some folders on mine, that are full of little scraps of dialogue from other sources ... 2 to 5 words at a time. I play those on "shuffle" to help train my mind to be nimble enough to quickly latch on to the meaning of each sample. If I'm alone I'll speak these bits aloud. It doesn't matter that the result is all gobbledegook - the point is to develop familiarity with the "feel" of the sounds in my mouth. It's too hard for a beginner to speak extemporaneously. Let the MP3 player prompt you with things to say, and follow along. Last edited by Mozzo; June 07, 2015 at 08:23 PM. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Practicing - simple notes | JosephThomas | Grammar | 9 | December 14, 2010 10:50 AM |