Tag Archives: Clear Alphabet

Top 20 FREE Resources for Improving English Pronunciation

Top 20 FREE Resources for Improving English Pronunciation

Top 20 FREE Resources for Improving English Pronunciation –

improve your speaking skills with these fab free resources:

Essentials –

Word Stress in English

Sentence Stress and the Sound Spine

Connected Speech

Intonation

The Schwa Sound

Glottal Stops in English [Video Class]

Tongue Twisters

Clear Alphabet

Teaching Pronunciation –

Stress, Reduce, Merge Part 1 – Sentence Stress

Stress, Reduce, Merge Part 2 – Connected Speech

5 Rules for Predicting Sounds from Spelling in English

A Tour of 17 Different British Accents by Region [Video]

Word Groups –

200 Common English Homophones – Reference + Gap-Fill Activity

100 Common English Homographs – Reference + Gap-Fill Activity

100 Common English Homonyms – Reference + Gap-Fill Activity

200 Common Minimal Pairs in English – Reference + Gap-Fill Activity

34 Cracking English Eggcorns

Free Books –

Talk a Lot Foundation Course

Clear Alphabet Dictionary

Stress > Reduce > Merge

 


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Pronounce the Most Beautiful Words in English

Here are some of the most beautiful words in English.

Which are your favourites? Why? Practice saying them out loud using the Clear Alphabet phonemic spellings. What makes them beautiful words compared to ordinary words? Try to use each word in a sentence. Do you know any more beautiful words in English? Share them with us in the comments below – or on Facebook or Twitter.

Pronounce the Most Beautiful Words in English

Pronounce the Most Beautiful Words in English

  1. aquiver  (adverb / Old English)    uh KWI v    trembling

When I saw my new boyfriend in the crowd I was all aquiver.

  1. disassemble  (verb / French)    di s SEM bl     dismantle

It took me an hour to disassemble that bookcase.

  1. ephemeral  (adjective / Greek)    i FE m rl    transient

Romantic love can be somewhat ephemeral.

  1. gossamer  (adjective / Old English)    GO s m    delicate

The butterfly spread its gossamer wings and disappeared.

  1. halcyon  (adjective / Latin)    HAL syn    carefree

I remember the halcyon days of my childhood! Great times!

  1. idyllic  (adjective / French)    i DI lik    peaceful

The hotel is located in a hundred acres of idyllic parkland.

  1. incandescent  (adjective / French)    in can DE snt    full of emotion

Daniel was incandescent with rage when he was fired.

  1. ineffable  (adjective / Latin)    i NE f bl    inexpressible

He got ineffable joy from playing football with his son.

  1. lissome  (adjective / Old English)    LI sm    lithe

Their arms were lissome from years spent picking potatoes.

  1. lullaby  (noun / Middle English)    LU l bai    children’s song

To help my daughter fall asleep I sing her lullabies.

  1. luminescence  (noun / Latin)    loo mi NE sns    light

The soft luminescence from her mobile caused Ola to wake.

  1. mellifluous  (adjective / Latin)    me LI fl ws    soothing (sound)

I could listen to my grandmama’s mellifluous voice all day.

  1. panacea  (noun / Latin)    pa n SIY    general remedy

Joanna said that the government’s latest policy was not a panacea.

  1. serendipitous  (adjective / Arabic)    se rn DI pi ts    lucky

You finding my keys on the bar was rather serendipitous.

  1. silhouette  (noun / French)    si l WET    outline

The silhouette of the trees against the sunset sky was rather striking.

 

Word origins: https://etymonline.com; image: Ralf Kunze from Pixabay