Pronunciation

  • More opportunities in the land of opportunity for better speakers of English

    I realize that may sound arrogant as it assumes that the land of opportunity has to be where English happens to be the first language but no one can argue that countries like the United States, Canada and Australia (and certainly some European countries) have been a common destination for the world’s immigrants over…

  • How To Master English Pronunciation

    Thoughts on English Pronunciation I must have written tens of articles about English pronunciation but I never run out of ideas or other angles to view this topic from. Pronunciation, for the majority of learners, is what they study when having problems being understood. On the other hand, for some, it essentially has to…

  • Pronunciation Teaching: The Basics

    [googleapps domain=”docs” dir=”presentation/d/1JoFVDW49THMcpywYlOKnpQDoL3pVZYOgQ0rSnsi-dNU/embed” query=”start=false&loop=false&delayms=3000″ width=”960″ height=”569″ /]

  • Are you good enough to sell in English?

    We are all selling something aren’t we? We sell our skills and experience to future employers. We sell our vision to potential investors. We sell products to consumers and services to clients. Some of us even try to sell Gods to non-believers. Never before has the ability to sell been more critical for survival…

  • Should I Study Grammar?

    DUH! That is how I answer this extraordinarily clever question often asked by most English learners.  Most English learners automatically assume and even presume that the fact that I am specialized in pronunciation, must imply that I am “anti grammar”. Well, allow me to say that is a bunch of baloney! I do not…

  • Good pronunciation: Intelligibility or Impact?

    Most English teachers seem to consider good pronunciation as being intelligible. They view intelligibility as the ultimate goal of learning pronunciation.  “If I can understand you, and you can understand me, then your pronunciation is good enough”.  It has somehow been agreed upon in this industry that to be understood is just “good enough”…