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Hi everyone
I need some help to write a sentences of each of these words
oral: Fluency: Gesture: Non-verbal communication: Intermediate: Advanced: Clarification: Dialogue: Accent: Body posture: Comprehension: Speech emergence:
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Unfortunately, I don't think I have the material you want, but it depends on what kind of English you are interested in. If you are interested in British English rather than in American English, you can find a lot of free stuff on the BBC
English Audio: Speech and Pronunciation
by
kooyeen
1 yr 54 days ago
Accents, American Accents, American English, Pronunciation, British English, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Speeches, Sentences, Languages, Training
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You need to learn to speak from scratch, as if you were a child. That means you should start to learn the vowels and the consonants, then put them together to create phonemes, then connect them to form words, then learn to join words and say short
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The Brits do indeed have a problem with 'gotten'. Shakespeare ... quibbles about 'got/gotten' can only be classified as misbegotten -:) Well, Americans went one way on "gotten," the British went another. I've spent
misc.education.language.english
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john ramsay
3 yr 300 days ago
Accents, Speaking, Sentences, Chat, Friendships, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Animals, United States, Usages, Speeches, American, Languages, ESL
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In an entirely literal sense, we owe our existence, as large and reasoning animals, to our lucky stars." And so ... an inversion like this is possible. On the other hand, the structure itself seem toindicate he prays for our extinction...
alt.usage.english
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voice_imitator
5 yr 32 days ago
Regards, Accents, Commas, Clauses, Adverbs, Sentences, Speaking, Writing, Punctuation, Speeches, Auxiliaries, Semantics
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"Lexeme." "All right" consists of a single lexeme when it means "okay," as in "All right, let's get going," two lexemes in a sentence such as "The answers were all right." This leads some to
alt.usage.english
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raymond s. wise
5 yr 69 days ago
Accents, Spelling, Dialects, Pronunciation, British People, British English, Sentences, Great Britain, United States, American, Speaking, Writing, Speeches, British Accents
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The thing about Indian English is less the actual accent than the non-English stress patterns and timing of sentences. Bringing ... and destressing much of the rest of a word can make an utterance unintelligible to an American etc native speaker.
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I'm watching a show on the Discovery Times channel, "Thomas L. Friedman Reporting" on the topic "The Other Side of Outsourcing." The reporter is visiting Bangalore to see the effects of the outsourcing phenomenon on the
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If you think Fran Drescher's stage persona is typically American, you have a lot of American-studying to do. She's probably a persiflage, but the real thing is almost as bad. I don't see that you've provided any examples of
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On television (in television? prepositions are a nightmare in English). ... The Nanny. One of the ugliest voices I've ever heard. Sat, 06 Nov 2004 12:32:47 GMT: "Peter T. Daniels" (Email Removed): in sci.lang: If you think Fran
alt.usage.english
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ruud harmsen
5 yr 135 days ago
Accents, Prepositions, Marriage, Sentences, Relationships, Friendships, United States, American, Speaking, Chat, Speeches, American Accents
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