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English Tongue Twisters with AUDIO!
Especially For ESL/EFL Students
The ULTIMATE Tongue Twister of all Time--invented and copyrighted by Leon of Leon's EFL Planet
Here are a few common tongue twisters
1. She sells sea shells by the sea shore.
2. Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers. Now if Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers, how many peppers did Peter Piper pick? [Note: In my opinion that (#2) is NOT really a tongue twister; It is an alliteration. But, it is fun nevertheless]. 3. If a woodchuck could chuck wood, how much wood would a woodchuck chuck? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck, if a woodchuck could chuck wood. By the way, Dr. Seuss's book of tongue twisters is GREAT! I love it! You can purchase it here! Now, here some original tongue twisters that I (Leon) have invented (specifically for ESL & EFL students). For teaching the and phonemes: (for articulation see my Phonics Page) First start with : - Three thin thieves thought a thousand thoughts. Now if three thin thieves thought a thousand thoughts, how many thoughts did each thief think? After the students master that one, move on to : - That which is theirs is neither more nor less than that which is thine. After the students master that both those above, start mixing and : - This thing and that thing are better than those things. (easy for native speakers, but not so easy for none natives). - The thin thief went through that thicket over there. If you really want to get tricky, add /t/ and /d/...- Charles Dickens had a thick thicket, which was adorned by a thousand thorns; And those thorns were adorned by a thousand tickets. He called it the "Dickens Ticket Thicket". And, the Dickens Ticket Thicket was so thick that in the thick and thin of things, I think it was thickest ticket thicket I'd ever seen. - Timothy Thornton, the thrifty drifter, drifted into Tiffany's Thrift Shop. [Just a reminder, students: the "th" in the word "clothes" is silent]. And if you are an English teacher or English student in China, Japan, Korea, or any Spanish-speaking nation, you can really confuse the heck out of the students by doing a tongue twister with various combinations of /s/ and and and . In Korea, where students are often heard to say things like, "Sank you," and "I sink you should...", I would work on the /s/ and It is suggested to start with some easy tongue twisters, then get progressively harder (and longer): - Theodore sees a door. - Theodore sees a door and she adores Theodore. - I sank you and you thanked me. - I sank you and you thanked me; I think I'll sink you again. - I thought I shot a dot.ADVANCED TONGUE TWISTERS:- I thought I sought a shot of something super strong. But what I think I thought , and what I should have thought are surely NOT things that I like to think about for very long.- I thought I sought a shot, but I sought a thought instead. And the thought I sought was not a shot, but a thimble and a thread.- She sees the three seas, and he sees that she sees what she sees when she sees the three seas.The ultimate tongue twister of all time: - I think that a thick, sick, chic chick surely, thoroughly sank its shank into the tank and drank. How about some /f/ tongue twisters? [In Chinese, there is an /f/ phoneme, but in Korean and Japanese, there is no /f/ phoneme, which makes me wonder why they transliterate Mt. Fuji as "Mt. Fuji", instead of the correct, "Mt. Huji".] The following tongue twisters is especially for the Japanese students: - Five funny fairies found five funny frogs on Mount Huji. [NOT FUJI!!!!!] - Hu had the flu, and when Hu flew the flu flew.- Fu found four frosty frappuccinos, and who did he find with them? Four fabulous females.- The foreheads of four heads were fairly hairy for foreheads. For the Koreans, who have problems with /f/ and /p/... - The four fleas are poor fleas.- Let the four poor fleas flee, please. - The four fathers found that poor fathers had forefathers who were poor fathers, too. - Puns are fun, so have some fun with five fun puns! [see my Puns Page] None of the following languages: Korean, Japanese, Chinese, have the phoneme /v/, but the Koreans use /b/ for /v/, and the Chinese use /w/ for /v/. I don't know what the Japanese do. So, for the Koreans: - I put some vile bile in a file and labeled it the "Vile Bile" file. - "Berries vary very much," said the berry fairy very well. - One should wear one's best vest for the fest. In other words, one should wear one's best fest vest. And, for the Chinese: - The best fest in the West is the Vest Fest. - I'm very wary of very scary films. - The very vile villain vied very vehemently for his village . - Valerie values volleyball very much. And, for the Spanish-speakers: - She's says she's special since she's especially smart! - She spies the special school, which is especially special because of the especially special students, who study especially studiously. My favorite all-time tongue twister: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.
2. Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers. Now if Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers, how many peppers did Peter Piper pick?
[Note: In my opinion that (#2) is NOT really a tongue twister; It is an alliteration. But, it is fun nevertheless].
3. If a woodchuck could chuck wood, how much wood would a woodchuck chuck? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck, if a woodchuck could chuck wood. By the way, Dr. Seuss's book of tongue twisters is GREAT! I love it! You can purchase it here! Now, here some original tongue twisters that I (Leon) have invented (specifically for ESL & EFL students). For teaching the and phonemes: (for articulation see my Phonics Page) First start with : - Three thin thieves thought a thousand thoughts. Now if three thin thieves thought a thousand thoughts, how many thoughts did each thief think? After the students master that one, move on to : - That which is theirs is neither more nor less than that which is thine. After the students master that both those above, start mixing and : - This thing and that thing are better than those things. (easy for native speakers, but not so easy for none natives). - The thin thief went through that thicket over there. If you really want to get tricky, add /t/ and /d/...- Charles Dickens had a thick thicket, which was adorned by a thousand thorns; And those thorns were adorned by a thousand tickets. He called it the "Dickens Ticket Thicket". And, the Dickens Ticket Thicket was so thick that in the thick and thin of things, I think it was thickest ticket thicket I'd ever seen. - Timothy Thornton, the thrifty drifter, drifted into Tiffany's Thrift Shop. [Just a reminder, students: the "th" in the word "clothes" is silent]. And if you are an English teacher or English student in China, Japan, Korea, or any Spanish-speaking nation, you can really confuse the heck out of the students by doing a tongue twister with various combinations of /s/ and and and . In Korea, where students are often heard to say things like, "Sank you," and "I sink you should...", I would work on the /s/ and It is suggested to start with some easy tongue twisters, then get progressively harder (and longer): - Theodore sees a door. - Theodore sees a door and she adores Theodore. - I sank you and you thanked me. - I sank you and you thanked me; I think I'll sink you again. - I thought I shot a dot.ADVANCED TONGUE TWISTERS:- I thought I sought a shot of something super strong. But what I think I thought , and what I should have thought are surely NOT things that I like to think about for very long.- I thought I sought a shot, but I sought a thought instead. And the thought I sought was not a shot, but a thimble and a thread.- She sees the three seas, and he sees that she sees what she sees when she sees the three seas.The ultimate tongue twister of all time: - I think that a thick, sick, chic chick surely, thoroughly sank its shank into the tank and drank. How about some /f/ tongue twisters? [In Chinese, there is an /f/ phoneme, but in Korean and Japanese, there is no /f/ phoneme, which makes me wonder why they transliterate Mt. Fuji as "Mt. Fuji", instead of the correct, "Mt. Huji".] The following tongue twisters is especially for the Japanese students: - Five funny fairies found five funny frogs on Mount Huji. [NOT FUJI!!!!!] - Hu had the flu, and when Hu flew the flu flew.- Fu found four frosty frappuccinos, and who did he find with them? Four fabulous females.- The foreheads of four heads were fairly hairy for foreheads. For the Koreans, who have problems with /f/ and /p/... - The four fleas are poor fleas.- Let the four poor fleas flee, please. - The four fathers found that poor fathers had forefathers who were poor fathers, too. - Puns are fun, so have some fun with five fun puns! [see my Puns Page] None of the following languages: Korean, Japanese, Chinese, have the phoneme /v/, but the Koreans use /b/ for /v/, and the Chinese use /w/ for /v/. I don't know what the Japanese do. So, for the Koreans: - I put some vile bile in a file and labeled it the "Vile Bile" file. - "Berries vary very much," said the berry fairy very well. - One should wear one's best vest for the fest. In other words, one should wear one's best fest vest. And, for the Chinese: - The best fest in the West is the Vest Fest. - I'm very wary of very scary films. - The very vile villain vied very vehemently for his village . - Valerie values volleyball very much. And, for the Spanish-speakers: - She's says she's special since she's especially smart! - She spies the special school, which is especially special because of the especially special students, who study especially studiously. My favorite all-time tongue twister: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.
3. If a woodchuck could chuck wood, how much wood would a woodchuck chuck? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck, if a woodchuck could chuck wood.
By the way, Dr. Seuss's book of tongue twisters is GREAT! I love it! You can purchase it here! Now, here some original tongue twisters that I (Leon) have invented (specifically for ESL & EFL students). For teaching the and phonemes: (for articulation see my Phonics Page) First start with : - Three thin thieves thought a thousand thoughts. Now if three thin thieves thought a thousand thoughts, how many thoughts did each thief think? After the students master that one, move on to : - That which is theirs is neither more nor less than that which is thine. After the students master that both those above, start mixing and : - This thing and that thing are better than those things. (easy for native speakers, but not so easy for none natives). - The thin thief went through that thicket over there. If you really want to get tricky, add /t/ and /d/...- Charles Dickens had a thick thicket, which was adorned by a thousand thorns; And those thorns were adorned by a thousand tickets. He called it the "Dickens Ticket Thicket". And, the Dickens Ticket Thicket was so thick that in the thick and thin of things, I think it was thickest ticket thicket I'd ever seen. - Timothy Thornton, the thrifty drifter, drifted into Tiffany's Thrift Shop. [Just a reminder, students: the "th" in the word "clothes" is silent]. And if you are an English teacher or English student in China, Japan, Korea, or any Spanish-speaking nation, you can really confuse the heck out of the students by doing a tongue twister with various combinations of /s/ and and and . In Korea, where students are often heard to say things like, "Sank you," and "I sink you should...", I would work on the /s/ and It is suggested to start with some easy tongue twisters, then get progressively harder (and longer): - Theodore sees a door. - Theodore sees a door and she adores Theodore. - I sank you and you thanked me. - I sank you and you thanked me; I think I'll sink you again. - I thought I shot a dot.ADVANCED TONGUE TWISTERS:- I thought I sought a shot of something super strong. But what I think I thought , and what I should have thought are surely NOT things that I like to think about for very long.- I thought I sought a shot, but I sought a thought instead. And the thought I sought was not a shot, but a thimble and a thread.- She sees the three seas, and he sees that she sees what she sees when she sees the three seas.The ultimate tongue twister of all time: - I think that a thick, sick, chic chick surely, thoroughly sank its shank into the tank and drank. How about some /f/ tongue twisters? [In Chinese, there is an /f/ phoneme, but in Korean and Japanese, there is no /f/ phoneme, which makes me wonder why they transliterate Mt. Fuji as "Mt. Fuji", instead of the correct, "Mt. Huji".] The following tongue twisters is especially for the Japanese students: - Five funny fairies found five funny frogs on Mount Huji. [NOT FUJI!!!!!] - Hu had the flu, and when Hu flew the flu flew.- Fu found four frosty frappuccinos, and who did he find with them? Four fabulous females.- The foreheads of four heads were fairly hairy for foreheads. For the Koreans, who have problems with /f/ and /p/... - The four fleas are poor fleas.- Let the four poor fleas flee, please. - The four fathers found that poor fathers had forefathers who were poor fathers, too. - Puns are fun, so have some fun with five fun puns! [see my Puns Page] None of the following languages: Korean, Japanese, Chinese, have the phoneme /v/, but the Koreans use /b/ for /v/, and the Chinese use /w/ for /v/. I don't know what the Japanese do. So, for the Koreans: - I put some vile bile in a file and labeled it the "Vile Bile" file. - "Berries vary very much," said the berry fairy very well. - One should wear one's best vest for the fest. In other words, one should wear one's best fest vest. And, for the Chinese: - The best fest in the West is the Vest Fest. - I'm very wary of very scary films. - The very vile villain vied very vehemently for his village . - Valerie values volleyball very much. And, for the Spanish-speakers: - She's says she's special since she's especially smart! - She spies the special school, which is especially special because of the especially special students, who study especially studiously. My favorite all-time tongue twister: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.
By the way, Dr. Seuss's book of tongue twisters is GREAT! I love it! You can purchase it here!
Now, here some original tongue twisters that I (Leon) have invented (specifically for ESL & EFL students).
For teaching the and phonemes: (for articulation see my Phonics Page)
First start with :
- Three thin thieves thought a thousand thoughts. Now if three thin thieves thought a thousand thoughts, how many thoughts did each thief think?
After the students master that one, move on to : - That which is theirs is neither more nor less than that which is thine. After the students master that both those above, start mixing and : - This thing and that thing are better than those things. (easy for native speakers, but not so easy for none natives). - The thin thief went through that thicket over there. If you really want to get tricky, add /t/ and /d/...- Charles Dickens had a thick thicket, which was adorned by a thousand thorns; And those thorns were adorned by a thousand tickets. He called it the "Dickens Ticket Thicket". And, the Dickens Ticket Thicket was so thick that in the thick and thin of things, I think it was thickest ticket thicket I'd ever seen. - Timothy Thornton, the thrifty drifter, drifted into Tiffany's Thrift Shop. [Just a reminder, students: the "th" in the word "clothes" is silent]. And if you are an English teacher or English student in China, Japan, Korea, or any Spanish-speaking nation, you can really confuse the heck out of the students by doing a tongue twister with various combinations of /s/ and and and . In Korea, where students are often heard to say things like, "Sank you," and "I sink you should...", I would work on the /s/ and It is suggested to start with some easy tongue twisters, then get progressively harder (and longer): - Theodore sees a door. - Theodore sees a door and she adores Theodore. - I sank you and you thanked me. - I sank you and you thanked me; I think I'll sink you again. - I thought I shot a dot.ADVANCED TONGUE TWISTERS:- I thought I sought a shot of something super strong. But what I think I thought , and what I should have thought are surely NOT things that I like to think about for very long.- I thought I sought a shot, but I sought a thought instead. And the thought I sought was not a shot, but a thimble and a thread.- She sees the three seas, and he sees that she sees what she sees when she sees the three seas.The ultimate tongue twister of all time: - I think that a thick, sick, chic chick surely, thoroughly sank its shank into the tank and drank. How about some /f/ tongue twisters? [In Chinese, there is an /f/ phoneme, but in Korean and Japanese, there is no /f/ phoneme, which makes me wonder why they transliterate Mt. Fuji as "Mt. Fuji", instead of the correct, "Mt. Huji".] The following tongue twisters is especially for the Japanese students: - Five funny fairies found five funny frogs on Mount Huji. [NOT FUJI!!!!!] - Hu had the flu, and when Hu flew the flu flew.- Fu found four frosty frappuccinos, and who did he find with them? Four fabulous females.- The foreheads of four heads were fairly hairy for foreheads. For the Koreans, who have problems with /f/ and /p/... - The four fleas are poor fleas.- Let the four poor fleas flee, please. - The four fathers found that poor fathers had forefathers who were poor fathers, too. - Puns are fun, so have some fun with five fun puns! [see my Puns Page] None of the following languages: Korean, Japanese, Chinese, have the phoneme /v/, but the Koreans use /b/ for /v/, and the Chinese use /w/ for /v/. I don't know what the Japanese do. So, for the Koreans: - I put some vile bile in a file and labeled it the "Vile Bile" file. - "Berries vary very much," said the berry fairy very well. - One should wear one's best vest for the fest. In other words, one should wear one's best fest vest. And, for the Chinese: - The best fest in the West is the Vest Fest. - I'm very wary of very scary films. - The very vile villain vied very vehemently for his village . - Valerie values volleyball very much. And, for the Spanish-speakers: - She's says she's special since she's especially smart! - She spies the special school, which is especially special because of the especially special students, who study especially studiously. My favorite all-time tongue twister: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.
After the students master that one, move on to :
- That which is theirs is neither more nor less than that which is thine.
After the students master that both those above, start mixing and : - This thing and that thing are better than those things. (easy for native speakers, but not so easy for none natives). - The thin thief went through that thicket over there. If you really want to get tricky, add /t/ and /d/...- Charles Dickens had a thick thicket, which was adorned by a thousand thorns; And those thorns were adorned by a thousand tickets. He called it the "Dickens Ticket Thicket". And, the Dickens Ticket Thicket was so thick that in the thick and thin of things, I think it was thickest ticket thicket I'd ever seen. - Timothy Thornton, the thrifty drifter, drifted into Tiffany's Thrift Shop. [Just a reminder, students: the "th" in the word "clothes" is silent]. And if you are an English teacher or English student in China, Japan, Korea, or any Spanish-speaking nation, you can really confuse the heck out of the students by doing a tongue twister with various combinations of /s/ and and and . In Korea, where students are often heard to say things like, "Sank you," and "I sink you should...", I would work on the /s/ and It is suggested to start with some easy tongue twisters, then get progressively harder (and longer): - Theodore sees a door. - Theodore sees a door and she adores Theodore. - I sank you and you thanked me. - I sank you and you thanked me; I think I'll sink you again. - I thought I shot a dot.ADVANCED TONGUE TWISTERS:- I thought I sought a shot of something super strong. But what I think I thought , and what I should have thought are surely NOT things that I like to think about for very long.- I thought I sought a shot, but I sought a thought instead. And the thought I sought was not a shot, but a thimble and a thread.- She sees the three seas, and he sees that she sees what she sees when she sees the three seas.The ultimate tongue twister of all time: - I think that a thick, sick, chic chick surely, thoroughly sank its shank into the tank and drank. How about some /f/ tongue twisters? [In Chinese, there is an /f/ phoneme, but in Korean and Japanese, there is no /f/ phoneme, which makes me wonder why they transliterate Mt. Fuji as "Mt. Fuji", instead of the correct, "Mt. Huji".] The following tongue twisters is especially for the Japanese students: - Five funny fairies found five funny frogs on Mount Huji. [NOT FUJI!!!!!] - Hu had the flu, and when Hu flew the flu flew.- Fu found four frosty frappuccinos, and who did he find with them? Four fabulous females.- The foreheads of four heads were fairly hairy for foreheads. For the Koreans, who have problems with /f/ and /p/... - The four fleas are poor fleas.- Let the four poor fleas flee, please. - The four fathers found that poor fathers had forefathers who were poor fathers, too. - Puns are fun, so have some fun with five fun puns! [see my Puns Page] None of the following languages: Korean, Japanese, Chinese, have the phoneme /v/, but the Koreans use /b/ for /v/, and the Chinese use /w/ for /v/. I don't know what the Japanese do. So, for the Koreans: - I put some vile bile in a file and labeled it the "Vile Bile" file. - "Berries vary very much," said the berry fairy very well. - One should wear one's best vest for the fest. In other words, one should wear one's best fest vest. And, for the Chinese: - The best fest in the West is the Vest Fest. - I'm very wary of very scary films. - The very vile villain vied very vehemently for his village . - Valerie values volleyball very much. And, for the Spanish-speakers: - She's says she's special since she's especially smart! - She spies the special school, which is especially special because of the especially special students, who study especially studiously. My favorite all-time tongue twister: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.
After the students master that both those above, start mixing and :
- This thing and that thing are better than those things. (easy for native speakers, but not so easy for none natives).
- The thin thief went through that thicket over there. If you really want to get tricky, add /t/ and /d/...- Charles Dickens had a thick thicket, which was adorned by a thousand thorns; And those thorns were adorned by a thousand tickets. He called it the "Dickens Ticket Thicket". And, the Dickens Ticket Thicket was so thick that in the thick and thin of things, I think it was thickest ticket thicket I'd ever seen. - Timothy Thornton, the thrifty drifter, drifted into Tiffany's Thrift Shop. [Just a reminder, students: the "th" in the word "clothes" is silent]. And if you are an English teacher or English student in China, Japan, Korea, or any Spanish-speaking nation, you can really confuse the heck out of the students by doing a tongue twister with various combinations of /s/ and and and . In Korea, where students are often heard to say things like, "Sank you," and "I sink you should...", I would work on the /s/ and It is suggested to start with some easy tongue twisters, then get progressively harder (and longer): - Theodore sees a door. - Theodore sees a door and she adores Theodore. - I sank you and you thanked me. - I sank you and you thanked me; I think I'll sink you again. - I thought I shot a dot.ADVANCED TONGUE TWISTERS:- I thought I sought a shot of something super strong. But what I think I thought , and what I should have thought are surely NOT things that I like to think about for very long.- I thought I sought a shot, but I sought a thought instead. And the thought I sought was not a shot, but a thimble and a thread.- She sees the three seas, and he sees that she sees what she sees when she sees the three seas.The ultimate tongue twister of all time: - I think that a thick, sick, chic chick surely, thoroughly sank its shank into the tank and drank. How about some /f/ tongue twisters? [In Chinese, there is an /f/ phoneme, but in Korean and Japanese, there is no /f/ phoneme, which makes me wonder why they transliterate Mt. Fuji as "Mt. Fuji", instead of the correct, "Mt. Huji".] The following tongue twisters is especially for the Japanese students: - Five funny fairies found five funny frogs on Mount Huji. [NOT FUJI!!!!!] - Hu had the flu, and when Hu flew the flu flew.- Fu found four frosty frappuccinos, and who did he find with them? Four fabulous females.- The foreheads of four heads were fairly hairy for foreheads. For the Koreans, who have problems with /f/ and /p/... - The four fleas are poor fleas.- Let the four poor fleas flee, please. - The four fathers found that poor fathers had forefathers who were poor fathers, too. - Puns are fun, so have some fun with five fun puns! [see my Puns Page] None of the following languages: Korean, Japanese, Chinese, have the phoneme /v/, but the Koreans use /b/ for /v/, and the Chinese use /w/ for /v/. I don't know what the Japanese do. So, for the Koreans: - I put some vile bile in a file and labeled it the "Vile Bile" file. - "Berries vary very much," said the berry fairy very well. - One should wear one's best vest for the fest. In other words, one should wear one's best fest vest. And, for the Chinese: - The best fest in the West is the Vest Fest. - I'm very wary of very scary films. - The very vile villain vied very vehemently for his village . - Valerie values volleyball very much. And, for the Spanish-speakers: - She's says she's special since she's especially smart! - She spies the special school, which is especially special because of the especially special students, who study especially studiously. My favorite all-time tongue twister: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.
- The thin thief went through that thicket over there.
If you really want to get tricky, add /t/ and /d/...- Charles Dickens had a thick thicket, which was adorned by a thousand thorns; And those thorns were adorned by a thousand tickets. He called it the "Dickens Ticket Thicket". And, the Dickens Ticket Thicket was so thick that in the thick and thin of things, I think it was thickest ticket thicket I'd ever seen. - Timothy Thornton, the thrifty drifter, drifted into Tiffany's Thrift Shop. [Just a reminder, students: the "th" in the word "clothes" is silent]. And if you are an English teacher or English student in China, Japan, Korea, or any Spanish-speaking nation, you can really confuse the heck out of the students by doing a tongue twister with various combinations of /s/ and and and . In Korea, where students are often heard to say things like, "Sank you," and "I sink you should...", I would work on the /s/ and It is suggested to start with some easy tongue twisters, then get progressively harder (and longer): - Theodore sees a door. - Theodore sees a door and she adores Theodore. - I sank you and you thanked me. - I sank you and you thanked me; I think I'll sink you again. - I thought I shot a dot.ADVANCED TONGUE TWISTERS:- I thought I sought a shot of something super strong. But what I think I thought , and what I should have thought are surely NOT things that I like to think about for very long.- I thought I sought a shot, but I sought a thought instead. And the thought I sought was not a shot, but a thimble and a thread.- She sees the three seas, and he sees that she sees what she sees when she sees the three seas.The ultimate tongue twister of all time: - I think that a thick, sick, chic chick surely, thoroughly sank its shank into the tank and drank. How about some /f/ tongue twisters? [In Chinese, there is an /f/ phoneme, but in Korean and Japanese, there is no /f/ phoneme, which makes me wonder why they transliterate Mt. Fuji as "Mt. Fuji", instead of the correct, "Mt. Huji".] The following tongue twisters is especially for the Japanese students: - Five funny fairies found five funny frogs on Mount Huji. [NOT FUJI!!!!!] - Hu had the flu, and when Hu flew the flu flew.- Fu found four frosty frappuccinos, and who did he find with them? Four fabulous females.- The foreheads of four heads were fairly hairy for foreheads. For the Koreans, who have problems with /f/ and /p/... - The four fleas are poor fleas.- Let the four poor fleas flee, please. - The four fathers found that poor fathers had forefathers who were poor fathers, too. - Puns are fun, so have some fun with five fun puns! [see my Puns Page] None of the following languages: Korean, Japanese, Chinese, have the phoneme /v/, but the Koreans use /b/ for /v/, and the Chinese use /w/ for /v/. I don't know what the Japanese do. So, for the Koreans: - I put some vile bile in a file and labeled it the "Vile Bile" file. - "Berries vary very much," said the berry fairy very well. - One should wear one's best vest for the fest. In other words, one should wear one's best fest vest. And, for the Chinese: - The best fest in the West is the Vest Fest. - I'm very wary of very scary films. - The very vile villain vied very vehemently for his village . - Valerie values volleyball very much. And, for the Spanish-speakers: - She's says she's special since she's especially smart! - She spies the special school, which is especially special because of the especially special students, who study especially studiously. My favorite all-time tongue twister: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.
If you really want to get tricky, add /t/ and /d/...
- Charles Dickens had a thick thicket, which was adorned by a thousand thorns; And those thorns were adorned by a thousand tickets. He called it the "Dickens Ticket Thicket". And, the Dickens Ticket Thicket was so thick that in the thick and thin of things, I think it was thickest ticket thicket I'd ever seen.
- Timothy Thornton, the thrifty drifter, drifted into Tiffany's Thrift Shop. [Just a reminder, students: the "th" in the word "clothes" is silent]. And if you are an English teacher or English student in China, Japan, Korea, or any Spanish-speaking nation, you can really confuse the heck out of the students by doing a tongue twister with various combinations of /s/ and and and . In Korea, where students are often heard to say things like, "Sank you," and "I sink you should...", I would work on the /s/ and It is suggested to start with some easy tongue twisters, then get progressively harder (and longer): - Theodore sees a door. - Theodore sees a door and she adores Theodore. - I sank you and you thanked me. - I sank you and you thanked me; I think I'll sink you again. - I thought I shot a dot.ADVANCED TONGUE TWISTERS:- I thought I sought a shot of something super strong. But what I think I thought , and what I should have thought are surely NOT things that I like to think about for very long.- I thought I sought a shot, but I sought a thought instead. And the thought I sought was not a shot, but a thimble and a thread.- She sees the three seas, and he sees that she sees what she sees when she sees the three seas.The ultimate tongue twister of all time: - I think that a thick, sick, chic chick surely, thoroughly sank its shank into the tank and drank. How about some /f/ tongue twisters? [In Chinese, there is an /f/ phoneme, but in Korean and Japanese, there is no /f/ phoneme, which makes me wonder why they transliterate Mt. Fuji as "Mt. Fuji", instead of the correct, "Mt. Huji".] The following tongue twisters is especially for the Japanese students: - Five funny fairies found five funny frogs on Mount Huji. [NOT FUJI!!!!!] - Hu had the flu, and when Hu flew the flu flew.- Fu found four frosty frappuccinos, and who did he find with them? Four fabulous females.- The foreheads of four heads were fairly hairy for foreheads. For the Koreans, who have problems with /f/ and /p/... - The four fleas are poor fleas.- Let the four poor fleas flee, please. - The four fathers found that poor fathers had forefathers who were poor fathers, too. - Puns are fun, so have some fun with five fun puns! [see my Puns Page] None of the following languages: Korean, Japanese, Chinese, have the phoneme /v/, but the Koreans use /b/ for /v/, and the Chinese use /w/ for /v/. I don't know what the Japanese do. So, for the Koreans: - I put some vile bile in a file and labeled it the "Vile Bile" file. - "Berries vary very much," said the berry fairy very well. - One should wear one's best vest for the fest. In other words, one should wear one's best fest vest. And, for the Chinese: - The best fest in the West is the Vest Fest. - I'm very wary of very scary films. - The very vile villain vied very vehemently for his village . - Valerie values volleyball very much. And, for the Spanish-speakers: - She's says she's special since she's especially smart! - She spies the special school, which is especially special because of the especially special students, who study especially studiously. My favorite all-time tongue twister: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.
- Timothy Thornton, the thrifty drifter, drifted into Tiffany's Thrift Shop.
[Just a reminder, students: the "th" in the word "clothes" is silent]. And if you are an English teacher or English student in China, Japan, Korea, or any Spanish-speaking nation, you can really confuse the heck out of the students by doing a tongue twister with various combinations of /s/ and and and . In Korea, where students are often heard to say things like, "Sank you," and "I sink you should...", I would work on the /s/ and It is suggested to start with some easy tongue twisters, then get progressively harder (and longer): - Theodore sees a door. - Theodore sees a door and she adores Theodore. - I sank you and you thanked me. - I sank you and you thanked me; I think I'll sink you again. - I thought I shot a dot.ADVANCED TONGUE TWISTERS:- I thought I sought a shot of something super strong. But what I think I thought , and what I should have thought are surely NOT things that I like to think about for very long.- I thought I sought a shot, but I sought a thought instead. And the thought I sought was not a shot, but a thimble and a thread.- She sees the three seas, and he sees that she sees what she sees when she sees the three seas.The ultimate tongue twister of all time: - I think that a thick, sick, chic chick surely, thoroughly sank its shank into the tank and drank. How about some /f/ tongue twisters? [In Chinese, there is an /f/ phoneme, but in Korean and Japanese, there is no /f/ phoneme, which makes me wonder why they transliterate Mt. Fuji as "Mt. Fuji", instead of the correct, "Mt. Huji".] The following tongue twisters is especially for the Japanese students: - Five funny fairies found five funny frogs on Mount Huji. [NOT FUJI!!!!!] - Hu had the flu, and when Hu flew the flu flew.- Fu found four frosty frappuccinos, and who did he find with them? Four fabulous females.- The foreheads of four heads were fairly hairy for foreheads. For the Koreans, who have problems with /f/ and /p/... - The four fleas are poor fleas.- Let the four poor fleas flee, please. - The four fathers found that poor fathers had forefathers who were poor fathers, too. - Puns are fun, so have some fun with five fun puns! [see my Puns Page] None of the following languages: Korean, Japanese, Chinese, have the phoneme /v/, but the Koreans use /b/ for /v/, and the Chinese use /w/ for /v/. I don't know what the Japanese do. So, for the Koreans: - I put some vile bile in a file and labeled it the "Vile Bile" file. - "Berries vary very much," said the berry fairy very well. - One should wear one's best vest for the fest. In other words, one should wear one's best fest vest. And, for the Chinese: - The best fest in the West is the Vest Fest. - I'm very wary of very scary films. - The very vile villain vied very vehemently for his village . - Valerie values volleyball very much. And, for the Spanish-speakers: - She's says she's special since she's especially smart! - She spies the special school, which is especially special because of the especially special students, who study especially studiously. My favorite all-time tongue twister: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.
[Just a reminder, students: the "th" in the word "clothes" is silent].
And if you are an English teacher or English student in China, Japan, Korea, or any Spanish-speaking nation, you can really confuse the heck out of the students by doing a tongue twister with various combinations of /s/ and and and . In Korea, where students are often heard to say things like, "Sank you," and "I sink you should...", I would work on the /s/ and It is suggested to start with some easy tongue twisters, then get progressively harder (and longer): - Theodore sees a door. - Theodore sees a door and she adores Theodore. - I sank you and you thanked me. - I sank you and you thanked me; I think I'll sink you again. - I thought I shot a dot.ADVANCED TONGUE TWISTERS:- I thought I sought a shot of something super strong. But what I think I thought , and what I should have thought are surely NOT things that I like to think about for very long.- I thought I sought a shot, but I sought a thought instead. And the thought I sought was not a shot, but a thimble and a thread.- She sees the three seas, and he sees that she sees what she sees when she sees the three seas.The ultimate tongue twister of all time: - I think that a thick, sick, chic chick surely, thoroughly sank its shank into the tank and drank. How about some /f/ tongue twisters? [In Chinese, there is an /f/ phoneme, but in Korean and Japanese, there is no /f/ phoneme, which makes me wonder why they transliterate Mt. Fuji as "Mt. Fuji", instead of the correct, "Mt. Huji".] The following tongue twisters is especially for the Japanese students: - Five funny fairies found five funny frogs on Mount Huji. [NOT FUJI!!!!!] - Hu had the flu, and when Hu flew the flu flew.- Fu found four frosty frappuccinos, and who did he find with them? Four fabulous females.- The foreheads of four heads were fairly hairy for foreheads. For the Koreans, who have problems with /f/ and /p/... - The four fleas are poor fleas.- Let the four poor fleas flee, please. - The four fathers found that poor fathers had forefathers who were poor fathers, too. - Puns are fun, so have some fun with five fun puns! [see my Puns Page] None of the following languages: Korean, Japanese, Chinese, have the phoneme /v/, but the Koreans use /b/ for /v/, and the Chinese use /w/ for /v/. I don't know what the Japanese do. So, for the Koreans: - I put some vile bile in a file and labeled it the "Vile Bile" file. - "Berries vary very much," said the berry fairy very well. - One should wear one's best vest for the fest. In other words, one should wear one's best fest vest. And, for the Chinese: - The best fest in the West is the Vest Fest. - I'm very wary of very scary films. - The very vile villain vied very vehemently for his village . - Valerie values volleyball very much. And, for the Spanish-speakers: - She's says she's special since she's especially smart! - She spies the special school, which is especially special because of the especially special students, who study especially studiously. My favorite all-time tongue twister: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.
And if you are an English teacher or English student in China, Japan, Korea, or any Spanish-speaking nation, you can really confuse the heck out of the students by doing a tongue twister with various combinations of /s/ and and and . In Korea, where students are often heard to say things like, "Sank you," and "I sink you should...", I would work on the /s/ and
It is suggested to start with some easy tongue twisters, then get progressively harder (and longer):
- Theodore sees a door.
- Theodore sees a door and she adores Theodore. - I sank you and you thanked me. - I sank you and you thanked me; I think I'll sink you again. - I thought I shot a dot.ADVANCED TONGUE TWISTERS:- I thought I sought a shot of something super strong. But what I think I thought , and what I should have thought are surely NOT things that I like to think about for very long.- I thought I sought a shot, but I sought a thought instead. And the thought I sought was not a shot, but a thimble and a thread.- She sees the three seas, and he sees that she sees what she sees when she sees the three seas.The ultimate tongue twister of all time: - I think that a thick, sick, chic chick surely, thoroughly sank its shank into the tank and drank. How about some /f/ tongue twisters? [In Chinese, there is an /f/ phoneme, but in Korean and Japanese, there is no /f/ phoneme, which makes me wonder why they transliterate Mt. Fuji as "Mt. Fuji", instead of the correct, "Mt. Huji".] The following tongue twisters is especially for the Japanese students: - Five funny fairies found five funny frogs on Mount Huji. [NOT FUJI!!!!!] - Hu had the flu, and when Hu flew the flu flew.- Fu found four frosty frappuccinos, and who did he find with them? Four fabulous females.- The foreheads of four heads were fairly hairy for foreheads. For the Koreans, who have problems with /f/ and /p/... - The four fleas are poor fleas.- Let the four poor fleas flee, please. - The four fathers found that poor fathers had forefathers who were poor fathers, too. - Puns are fun, so have some fun with five fun puns! [see my Puns Page] None of the following languages: Korean, Japanese, Chinese, have the phoneme /v/, but the Koreans use /b/ for /v/, and the Chinese use /w/ for /v/. I don't know what the Japanese do. So, for the Koreans: - I put some vile bile in a file and labeled it the "Vile Bile" file. - "Berries vary very much," said the berry fairy very well. - One should wear one's best vest for the fest. In other words, one should wear one's best fest vest. And, for the Chinese: - The best fest in the West is the Vest Fest. - I'm very wary of very scary films. - The very vile villain vied very vehemently for his village . - Valerie values volleyball very much. And, for the Spanish-speakers: - She's says she's special since she's especially smart! - She spies the special school, which is especially special because of the especially special students, who study especially studiously. My favorite all-time tongue twister: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.
- Theodore sees a door and she adores Theodore.
- I sank you and you thanked me. - I sank you and you thanked me; I think I'll sink you again. - I thought I shot a dot.ADVANCED TONGUE TWISTERS:- I thought I sought a shot of something super strong. But what I think I thought , and what I should have thought are surely NOT things that I like to think about for very long.- I thought I sought a shot, but I sought a thought instead. And the thought I sought was not a shot, but a thimble and a thread.- She sees the three seas, and he sees that she sees what she sees when she sees the three seas.The ultimate tongue twister of all time: - I think that a thick, sick, chic chick surely, thoroughly sank its shank into the tank and drank. How about some /f/ tongue twisters? [In Chinese, there is an /f/ phoneme, but in Korean and Japanese, there is no /f/ phoneme, which makes me wonder why they transliterate Mt. Fuji as "Mt. Fuji", instead of the correct, "Mt. Huji".] The following tongue twisters is especially for the Japanese students: - Five funny fairies found five funny frogs on Mount Huji. [NOT FUJI!!!!!] - Hu had the flu, and when Hu flew the flu flew.- Fu found four frosty frappuccinos, and who did he find with them? Four fabulous females.- The foreheads of four heads were fairly hairy for foreheads. For the Koreans, who have problems with /f/ and /p/... - The four fleas are poor fleas.- Let the four poor fleas flee, please. - The four fathers found that poor fathers had forefathers who were poor fathers, too. - Puns are fun, so have some fun with five fun puns! [see my Puns Page] None of the following languages: Korean, Japanese, Chinese, have the phoneme /v/, but the Koreans use /b/ for /v/, and the Chinese use /w/ for /v/. I don't know what the Japanese do. So, for the Koreans: - I put some vile bile in a file and labeled it the "Vile Bile" file. - "Berries vary very much," said the berry fairy very well. - One should wear one's best vest for the fest. In other words, one should wear one's best fest vest. And, for the Chinese: - The best fest in the West is the Vest Fest. - I'm very wary of very scary films. - The very vile villain vied very vehemently for his village . - Valerie values volleyball very much. And, for the Spanish-speakers: - She's says she's special since she's especially smart! - She spies the special school, which is especially special because of the especially special students, who study especially studiously. My favorite all-time tongue twister: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.
- I sank you and you thanked me.
- I sank you and you thanked me; I think I'll sink you again. - I thought I shot a dot.ADVANCED TONGUE TWISTERS:- I thought I sought a shot of something super strong. But what I think I thought , and what I should have thought are surely NOT things that I like to think about for very long.- I thought I sought a shot, but I sought a thought instead. And the thought I sought was not a shot, but a thimble and a thread.- She sees the three seas, and he sees that she sees what she sees when she sees the three seas.The ultimate tongue twister of all time: - I think that a thick, sick, chic chick surely, thoroughly sank its shank into the tank and drank. How about some /f/ tongue twisters? [In Chinese, there is an /f/ phoneme, but in Korean and Japanese, there is no /f/ phoneme, which makes me wonder why they transliterate Mt. Fuji as "Mt. Fuji", instead of the correct, "Mt. Huji".] The following tongue twisters is especially for the Japanese students: - Five funny fairies found five funny frogs on Mount Huji. [NOT FUJI!!!!!] - Hu had the flu, and when Hu flew the flu flew.- Fu found four frosty frappuccinos, and who did he find with them? Four fabulous females.- The foreheads of four heads were fairly hairy for foreheads. For the Koreans, who have problems with /f/ and /p/... - The four fleas are poor fleas.- Let the four poor fleas flee, please. - The four fathers found that poor fathers had forefathers who were poor fathers, too. - Puns are fun, so have some fun with five fun puns! [see my Puns Page] None of the following languages: Korean, Japanese, Chinese, have the phoneme /v/, but the Koreans use /b/ for /v/, and the Chinese use /w/ for /v/. I don't know what the Japanese do. So, for the Koreans: - I put some vile bile in a file and labeled it the "Vile Bile" file. - "Berries vary very much," said the berry fairy very well. - One should wear one's best vest for the fest. In other words, one should wear one's best fest vest. And, for the Chinese: - The best fest in the West is the Vest Fest. - I'm very wary of very scary films. - The very vile villain vied very vehemently for his village . - Valerie values volleyball very much. And, for the Spanish-speakers: - She's says she's special since she's especially smart! - She spies the special school, which is especially special because of the especially special students, who study especially studiously. My favorite all-time tongue twister: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.
- I sank you and you thanked me; I think I'll sink you again.
- I thought I shot a dot.ADVANCED TONGUE TWISTERS:- I thought I sought a shot of something super strong. But what I think I thought , and what I should have thought are surely NOT things that I like to think about for very long.- I thought I sought a shot, but I sought a thought instead. And the thought I sought was not a shot, but a thimble and a thread.- She sees the three seas, and he sees that she sees what she sees when she sees the three seas.The ultimate tongue twister of all time: - I think that a thick, sick, chic chick surely, thoroughly sank its shank into the tank and drank. How about some /f/ tongue twisters? [In Chinese, there is an /f/ phoneme, but in Korean and Japanese, there is no /f/ phoneme, which makes me wonder why they transliterate Mt. Fuji as "Mt. Fuji", instead of the correct, "Mt. Huji".] The following tongue twisters is especially for the Japanese students: - Five funny fairies found five funny frogs on Mount Huji. [NOT FUJI!!!!!] - Hu had the flu, and when Hu flew the flu flew.- Fu found four frosty frappuccinos, and who did he find with them? Four fabulous females.- The foreheads of four heads were fairly hairy for foreheads. For the Koreans, who have problems with /f/ and /p/... - The four fleas are poor fleas.- Let the four poor fleas flee, please. - The four fathers found that poor fathers had forefathers who were poor fathers, too. - Puns are fun, so have some fun with five fun puns! [see my Puns Page] None of the following languages: Korean, Japanese, Chinese, have the phoneme /v/, but the Koreans use /b/ for /v/, and the Chinese use /w/ for /v/. I don't know what the Japanese do. So, for the Koreans: - I put some vile bile in a file and labeled it the "Vile Bile" file. - "Berries vary very much," said the berry fairy very well. - One should wear one's best vest for the fest. In other words, one should wear one's best fest vest. And, for the Chinese: - The best fest in the West is the Vest Fest. - I'm very wary of very scary films. - The very vile villain vied very vehemently for his village . - Valerie values volleyball very much. And, for the Spanish-speakers: - She's says she's special since she's especially smart! - She spies the special school, which is especially special because of the especially special students, who study especially studiously. My favorite all-time tongue twister: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.
- I thought I shot a dot.
ADVANCED TONGUE TWISTERS:- I thought I sought a shot of something super strong. But what I think I thought , and what I should have thought are surely NOT things that I like to think about for very long.- I thought I sought a shot, but I sought a thought instead. And the thought I sought was not a shot, but a thimble and a thread.- She sees the three seas, and he sees that she sees what she sees when she sees the three seas.The ultimate tongue twister of all time: - I think that a thick, sick, chic chick surely, thoroughly sank its shank into the tank and drank. How about some /f/ tongue twisters? [In Chinese, there is an /f/ phoneme, but in Korean and Japanese, there is no /f/ phoneme, which makes me wonder why they transliterate Mt. Fuji as "Mt. Fuji", instead of the correct, "Mt. Huji".] The following tongue twisters is especially for the Japanese students: - Five funny fairies found five funny frogs on Mount Huji. [NOT FUJI!!!!!] - Hu had the flu, and when Hu flew the flu flew.- Fu found four frosty frappuccinos, and who did he find with them? Four fabulous females.- The foreheads of four heads were fairly hairy for foreheads. For the Koreans, who have problems with /f/ and /p/... - The four fleas are poor fleas.- Let the four poor fleas flee, please. - The four fathers found that poor fathers had forefathers who were poor fathers, too. - Puns are fun, so have some fun with five fun puns! [see my Puns Page] None of the following languages: Korean, Japanese, Chinese, have the phoneme /v/, but the Koreans use /b/ for /v/, and the Chinese use /w/ for /v/. I don't know what the Japanese do. So, for the Koreans: - I put some vile bile in a file and labeled it the "Vile Bile" file. - "Berries vary very much," said the berry fairy very well. - One should wear one's best vest for the fest. In other words, one should wear one's best fest vest. And, for the Chinese: - The best fest in the West is the Vest Fest. - I'm very wary of very scary films. - The very vile villain vied very vehemently for his village . - Valerie values volleyball very much. And, for the Spanish-speakers: - She's says she's special since she's especially smart! - She spies the special school, which is especially special because of the especially special students, who study especially studiously. My favorite all-time tongue twister: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.
ADVANCED TONGUE TWISTERS:
- I thought I sought a shot of something super strong. But what I think I thought , and what I should have thought are surely NOT things that I like to think about for very long.
- I thought I sought a shot, but I sought a thought instead. And the thought I sought was not a shot, but a thimble and a thread.- She sees the three seas, and he sees that she sees what she sees when she sees the three seas.The ultimate tongue twister of all time: - I think that a thick, sick, chic chick surely, thoroughly sank its shank into the tank and drank. How about some /f/ tongue twisters? [In Chinese, there is an /f/ phoneme, but in Korean and Japanese, there is no /f/ phoneme, which makes me wonder why they transliterate Mt. Fuji as "Mt. Fuji", instead of the correct, "Mt. Huji".] The following tongue twisters is especially for the Japanese students: - Five funny fairies found five funny frogs on Mount Huji. [NOT FUJI!!!!!] - Hu had the flu, and when Hu flew the flu flew.- Fu found four frosty frappuccinos, and who did he find with them? Four fabulous females.- The foreheads of four heads were fairly hairy for foreheads. For the Koreans, who have problems with /f/ and /p/... - The four fleas are poor fleas.- Let the four poor fleas flee, please. - The four fathers found that poor fathers had forefathers who were poor fathers, too. - Puns are fun, so have some fun with five fun puns! [see my Puns Page] None of the following languages: Korean, Japanese, Chinese, have the phoneme /v/, but the Koreans use /b/ for /v/, and the Chinese use /w/ for /v/. I don't know what the Japanese do. So, for the Koreans: - I put some vile bile in a file and labeled it the "Vile Bile" file. - "Berries vary very much," said the berry fairy very well. - One should wear one's best vest for the fest. In other words, one should wear one's best fest vest. And, for the Chinese: - The best fest in the West is the Vest Fest. - I'm very wary of very scary films. - The very vile villain vied very vehemently for his village . - Valerie values volleyball very much. And, for the Spanish-speakers: - She's says she's special since she's especially smart! - She spies the special school, which is especially special because of the especially special students, who study especially studiously. My favorite all-time tongue twister: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.
- I thought I sought a shot, but I sought a thought instead. And the thought I sought was not a shot, but a thimble and a thread.
- She sees the three seas, and he sees that she sees what she sees when she sees the three seas.The ultimate tongue twister of all time: - I think that a thick, sick, chic chick surely, thoroughly sank its shank into the tank and drank. How about some /f/ tongue twisters? [In Chinese, there is an /f/ phoneme, but in Korean and Japanese, there is no /f/ phoneme, which makes me wonder why they transliterate Mt. Fuji as "Mt. Fuji", instead of the correct, "Mt. Huji".] The following tongue twisters is especially for the Japanese students: - Five funny fairies found five funny frogs on Mount Huji. [NOT FUJI!!!!!] - Hu had the flu, and when Hu flew the flu flew.- Fu found four frosty frappuccinos, and who did he find with them? Four fabulous females.- The foreheads of four heads were fairly hairy for foreheads. For the Koreans, who have problems with /f/ and /p/... - The four fleas are poor fleas.- Let the four poor fleas flee, please. - The four fathers found that poor fathers had forefathers who were poor fathers, too. - Puns are fun, so have some fun with five fun puns! [see my Puns Page] None of the following languages: Korean, Japanese, Chinese, have the phoneme /v/, but the Koreans use /b/ for /v/, and the Chinese use /w/ for /v/. I don't know what the Japanese do. So, for the Koreans: - I put some vile bile in a file and labeled it the "Vile Bile" file. - "Berries vary very much," said the berry fairy very well. - One should wear one's best vest for the fest. In other words, one should wear one's best fest vest. And, for the Chinese: - The best fest in the West is the Vest Fest. - I'm very wary of very scary films. - The very vile villain vied very vehemently for his village . - Valerie values volleyball very much. And, for the Spanish-speakers: - She's says she's special since she's especially smart! - She spies the special school, which is especially special because of the especially special students, who study especially studiously. My favorite all-time tongue twister: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.
- She sees the three seas, and he sees that she sees what she sees when she sees the three seas.
The ultimate tongue twister of all time: - I think that a thick, sick, chic chick surely, thoroughly sank its shank into the tank and drank. How about some /f/ tongue twisters? [In Chinese, there is an /f/ phoneme, but in Korean and Japanese, there is no /f/ phoneme, which makes me wonder why they transliterate Mt. Fuji as "Mt. Fuji", instead of the correct, "Mt. Huji".] The following tongue twisters is especially for the Japanese students: - Five funny fairies found five funny frogs on Mount Huji. [NOT FUJI!!!!!] - Hu had the flu, and when Hu flew the flu flew.- Fu found four frosty frappuccinos, and who did he find with them? Four fabulous females.- The foreheads of four heads were fairly hairy for foreheads. For the Koreans, who have problems with /f/ and /p/... - The four fleas are poor fleas.- Let the four poor fleas flee, please. - The four fathers found that poor fathers had forefathers who were poor fathers, too. - Puns are fun, so have some fun with five fun puns! [see my Puns Page] None of the following languages: Korean, Japanese, Chinese, have the phoneme /v/, but the Koreans use /b/ for /v/, and the Chinese use /w/ for /v/. I don't know what the Japanese do. So, for the Koreans: - I put some vile bile in a file and labeled it the "Vile Bile" file. - "Berries vary very much," said the berry fairy very well. - One should wear one's best vest for the fest. In other words, one should wear one's best fest vest. And, for the Chinese: - The best fest in the West is the Vest Fest. - I'm very wary of very scary films. - The very vile villain vied very vehemently for his village . - Valerie values volleyball very much. And, for the Spanish-speakers: - She's says she's special since she's especially smart! - She spies the special school, which is especially special because of the especially special students, who study especially studiously. My favorite all-time tongue twister: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.
The ultimate tongue twister of all time:
- I think that a thick, sick, chic chick surely, thoroughly sank its shank into the tank and drank.
How about some /f/ tongue twisters? [In Chinese, there is an /f/ phoneme, but in Korean and Japanese, there is no /f/ phoneme, which makes me wonder why they transliterate Mt. Fuji as "Mt. Fuji", instead of the correct, "Mt. Huji".] The following tongue twisters is especially for the Japanese students: - Five funny fairies found five funny frogs on Mount Huji. [NOT FUJI!!!!!] - Hu had the flu, and when Hu flew the flu flew.- Fu found four frosty frappuccinos, and who did he find with them? Four fabulous females.- The foreheads of four heads were fairly hairy for foreheads. For the Koreans, who have problems with /f/ and /p/... - The four fleas are poor fleas.- Let the four poor fleas flee, please. - The four fathers found that poor fathers had forefathers who were poor fathers, too. - Puns are fun, so have some fun with five fun puns! [see my Puns Page] None of the following languages: Korean, Japanese, Chinese, have the phoneme /v/, but the Koreans use /b/ for /v/, and the Chinese use /w/ for /v/. I don't know what the Japanese do. So, for the Koreans: - I put some vile bile in a file and labeled it the "Vile Bile" file. - "Berries vary very much," said the berry fairy very well. - One should wear one's best vest for the fest. In other words, one should wear one's best fest vest. And, for the Chinese: - The best fest in the West is the Vest Fest. - I'm very wary of very scary films. - The very vile villain vied very vehemently for his village . - Valerie values volleyball very much. And, for the Spanish-speakers: - She's says she's special since she's especially smart! - She spies the special school, which is especially special because of the especially special students, who study especially studiously. My favorite all-time tongue twister: How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? A woodchuck would chuck as much wood as a woodchuck could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.
How about some /f/ tongue twisters? [In Chinese, there is an /f/ phoneme, but in Korean and Japanese, there is no /f/ phoneme, which makes me wonder why they transliterate Mt. Fuji as "Mt. Fuji", instead of the correct, "Mt. Huji".]
The following tongue twisters is especially for the Japanese students:
- Five funny fairies found five funny frogs on Mount Huji. [NOT FUJI!!!!!]
- Hu had the flu, and when Hu flew the flu flew.
- Fu found four frosty frappuccinos, and who did he find with them? Four fabulous females.
- The foreheads of four heads were fairly hairy for foreheads.
For the Koreans, who have problems with /f/ and /p/...
- The four fleas are poor fleas.
- Let the four poor fleas flee, please.
- The four fathers found that poor fathers had forefathers who were poor fathers, too.
- Puns are fun, so have some fun with five fun puns! [see my Puns Page]
None of the following languages: Korean, Japanese, Chinese, have the phoneme /v/, but the Koreans use /b/ for /v/, and the Chinese use /w/ for /v/. I don't know what the Japanese do.
So, for the Koreans:
- I put some vile bile in a file and labeled it the "Vile Bile" file.
- "Berries vary very much," said the berry fairy very well.
- One should wear one's best vest for the fest. In other words, one should wear one's best fest vest.
And, for the Chinese:
- The best fest in the West is the Vest Fest.
- I'm very wary of very scary films.
- The very vile villain vied very vehemently for his village .
- Valerie values volleyball very much.
And, for the Spanish-speakers:
- She's says she's special since she's especially smart!
- She spies the special school, which is especially special because of the especially special students, who study especially studiously.
My favorite all-time tongue twister: