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Jun 1, 2024

Sounds

Certainly! Here are some examples you can use for a pronunciation lesson, focusing on specific sounds and using tongue twisters: **Pronouncing "s" and "sh" sounds** * **Word List**: + "s" sound: sea, sand, sun, sister, south + "sh" sound: she, shop, shoe, shadow, shore * **Tongue Twister**: "She sells seashells by the seashore." * **Sentence**: "The sun shone on the sandy shore as Sarah searched for seashells." **Pronouncing "th" sounds** * **Word List**: + Voiced "th": this, that, these, those, there + Unvoiced "th": think, thin, thing, thought, throw * **Tongue Twister**: "Three thin thieves threw thirty things through the thicket." * **Sentence**: "I thought this was the perfect birthday gift for my brother, who throws thoughtful parties." **Pronouncing "r" and "l" sounds** * **Word List**: + "r" sound: red, rain, right, rock, run+ "l" sound: light, like, lift, love, late * **Tongue Twister**: "Red lorry, yellow lorry, red lorry, yellow lorry." * **Sentence**: "Larry loves to run around the lake in the light of the late afternoon." **Pronouncing "plosives" (p, b, t, d, k, g)** * **Word List**: + "p": pen, paper, pot, play, please+ "b": boy, ball, bed, bake, brown + "t": tea, time, top, two, train + "d": dog, day, did, drop, drum + "k": key, kind, cook, cake, call+ "g": go, get, game, glad, grew * **Tongue Twister**: "Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers." * **Sentence**: "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog." These examples should help you create engaging and effective lessons to practice pronunciation with your students.

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  • English

  • Beginner