Hello, Bale!
Thank you for
delivering a presentation in my last euphony class.
For your better
presentation, I remain some comments for you as follows.
<Check
pronunciation>
[neighboring] => Too fast read this word. Stretch [ei]
sound as a diphthong.
[year] => Make [y] sound. You should
distinguish between [ear] and [year].
So, please access to (www.m-w.com) and
check it directly
[v]ery => [V] sound was missed
[harvest] => It is pronounced [har비시트],
not [har베스트]
[flowed] => It sound [fl오우ed],
not [fl아우ed]
End[ure] => this word was unclear
# Make your
intonation smooth and soft. Do not keep high pitch tone on every single word.
Dear, Bale.
Whenever I hear
your voice, I am all the time impressed by your powerful and rich tone.
But, sometimes,
that voice brings about bad impact of your intonation. In other words, you tend
to put strong accent on every single word like staccato. Therefore, it would
make your intonation monotonous and aggressive. To tackle this problem, first
of all, you should listen to an audio file and then follow exact rhythm and
intonation of it. Second off, you
try hard to make a long chunk by reading each sentence with a single breath.
Last but not least, generally, you don’t need to place an accent on some words
such as preposition, article, verb ‘be’ or conjunction. If you try to fix them
intensively, your presentation will explosively improve. Thank you so much for being with
me in the last class : )
첫댓글 Dear, Ted.
Whenever I hear your comment,
I am grateful with all my heart and soul. Sincerely.