How to speak English Fast like a Native Speaker | 3 pro tips to speak English fast
We all want to speak English
very quickly, as the British say. But I can't, I get stuck talking a lot of the
time or the time comes when I speak the regional language or mother tongue of
our country. Today I will give you some tips with which you can easily improve
your English speaking skills and you can speak English fluently. If
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Let's get started-
Tip 1: Don’t Speak Fast English
Okay, so, I don't want your goal to speak English fast.
Because, many students make quick and normal mistakes. Students think that
English speakers speak fast because it is fast for them. Because they don't
even understand the language. That's why it sounds so fast when they watch a
movie. But to be honest, for English speakers, it's not fast. This is normal
speed. Your goal is to speak English naturally. Because speaking English
quickly from the point of view of communication is not really a good quality. The
reason it is heard so quickly is that English speakers do not pause between our
words. The break makes you sound unnatural and it makes you slow down. So at
the moment I want that to be your goal. Take your break, talk at a normal pace.
Tip 2: Understand linking
I'm just talking about reducing the break to speed up. Another
thing that English speakers always do, which may be a more difficult idea for
you to understand, is to link. We link our words together. And through linking
we often change the pronunciation. And we change it so that we can say the
sentence smoothly. And that's why it comes out so fast. So a student often
takes longer to say the same sentence because their sentence is so long when
you include breaks and the fact that they are not using reduction and linking.
Where an English speaker, even though they are saying exactly the same thing,
it is so long. Because taking breaks and reducing words and linking. So really,
it's not that we're talking fast. We're actually talking words. And we say
fewer words because we combine them. So let me give you an example. Here's a
sentence I'm going to say very slowly, unnaturally. Thanks, but I bought a
black car. So with this sentence, I paused between each word and I did not link
my words. So each word is said individually. Now, speak naturally of me. Thanks
but I bought a black car. Let's see what happens. So for linking, we have,
thank you. But what I do is I move that word to the next word and I'm actually
saying more than I kew. Than to know. Than to kew. K repeats. Than to kew.
Good. Now, the reason I do this is because it allows me to take breaks. Because
k is a hard sound and it forces me to breathe air. So to change that, I move
the word to the next word and I say kew. Because now I can say it in one
word. than kew. But I, not Q. After all sure, I'm aware of all this,
that's why i'm aware of it ahead of time.. So here, I'm not saying but me. Bu
die. Bu die.
So I'm moving this word to the next word. Now you will notice that
I call it soft because it is an American accent. Bu die. Bu die. All right.
Bought a. Here, I just put this one word. Bought a. Bought a. Okay, so now
we've bought a Bu Die black car. So here we have a word that ends in a K, but
the next word starts with a K. So for this reason I have omitted only one of
the K sounds, and I use it to link these two words together. So I took the blah
car. Blah. So I'm not actually saying black. I'm changing this. Blah. Which is
not a word? But I say it quickly and I combine it with the car so that you hear
K in the car, you hear it for both of you. Bla car. Bla car. Bla car. Now it
only works as a word. If I say blah car with a break, it doesn't work. Okay, so
all together, than buying Kiu Bu Die Blocker.
Tip 3 : Practice slowly and increase speed
normally
So let's take the sentence we used earlier. When you are
practicing it, start slowly. So the way I said, thanks but I bought one. But I
bought one. That's probably too fast now. And that's okay. You can practice
with one but I bought one. Practice slowly. But I bought one. But I bought one.
Now say maybe 5 times. Maybe 10 times. Say as much as you need to feel
comfortable with the word. And once you're comfortable, speed it up a bit. But
I bought one. But I bought one. Now say 5 or 10 times until you feel comfortable
with it. And then speed up. But I bought one. But I bought one. And your goal
is to gradually increase the speed until it sounds normal. But remember, your
goal is not to say fast. Second you say it too fast and you lose clarity, so if
the person doesn't understand you then you have to slow it down. But I bought
one. That's very fast. I won't be able to understand that. So your goal is not
fast, your goal is normal.