0
Faintest_Scent Posted 21 years ago
Speech & Pronunciation

Accent-a troublesome nuisance! :-(

Hello everyone, i'm new to this forum and would like some help with reducing accents.
Actually, i immigrated to Canada 3 years ago from China and has tried hard to adapt to the western society ever since. I'm not very concerned with my writing skills or my grammar because i know that they can be fixed and corrected. My accent, however, may not be so easy of a problem to solve. I always have trouble to pronounce words with the "l" ending, such as: bell, feel, purple, coal,etc. As you can see, there's a very broad range of volcabulary comprising the "l" pronounciation!
I suffer a lot from having a Chinese accent because of the negative racial stereotype that peers exert. It would be ok for me to endure if i have a bashful personality, but i don't. I'm anything but quiet! I'm right now at a dilemma: to speak freely and risk being mocked at or to stay quiet against my true nature.
I just wish that i will get rid off this accent because i know i won't be able to change the way people think and the prejudices that everyone have.
Sorry if my message seems misleading and confusing. The point is that i want to know how to pronounce to "l" sound...and if anyone feels or had felt the same way as i do now!?
  

Top answer

Hello Faintest, I'm sorry to hear that ignorant people are giving you trouble about your accent. 'L' can be very difficult for Chinese and Japanese people to pronounce, but I wonder how many of those who mock you can speak your language! I'm afraid that the only way to pronounce this correctly is to practise.

  • Hello Faintest, I'm sorry to hear that ignorant people are giving you trouble about your accent.
  • 'L' can be very difficult for Chinese and Japanese people to pronounce, but I wonder how many of those who mock you can speak your language!
  • I'm afraid that the only way to pronounce this correctly is to practise.
  • There are books and tapes you can buy whci have pictures showing the shape of the mouth, position of the tonge etc.
  • I know of one called "Ship or Sheep" which is used a lot in England, and you could probably find it on Amazon.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

4 Answers
0
Hello Faintest,

I'm sorry to hear that ignorant people are giving you trouble about your accent. 'L' can be very difficult for Chinese and Japanese people to pronounce, but I wonder how many of those who mock you can speak your language!

I'm afraid that the only way to pronounce this correctly is to practise. There are books and tapes you can buy whci have pictures showing the
0
0 Get yourself some audio materials which have drills on the various sounds of English. I'm sure they are available at your local bookstores. 02br
02br
00In the meantime, a few suggestions for final 'l': 02br
02br
00Don't round your lips like you do for "O". 02br
00Make sure the tip of your tongue is in firm contact with the inside of the uppe
0
0 Hi Faintest Scent, 02br
02br
00I'm from HK, so I think I understand where you're coming from. 02br
02br
00Until 1997, a British accent was deemed highly desirable in HK (Pygmalion syndrome). 02br
00My parents made me listen to a bunch of British audio tapes. (The rain in Spain stays mainly in the plain. 05000 ) That helped my pronunc
0
Wow, I really hope they pin this!

I have a very strange problem of having words in my mind and not being able to say them out correctly, or at least pronounce them correctly at the moment of wanting to deliver it - even though I feel confident or at least fake confidence in doing it.

Your advice of pulling the throat back down really HELPED solve the problem at this moment! Than

Related Questions