5 Unconventional Ways to Improve Your Spoken English
Imitating native speakers’ pronunciation can help improve your English. Watching movies with subtitles is an ideal way to do this, or you could record yourself and play back your recording as practice.
Pronunciation is one of the cornerstones of spoken English and with practice will come improvement. By practicing your pronunciation more frequently and mastering it you’ll become better at speaking it.
1. Sing
Music can be an enjoyable way to develop relationships with English speakers and expand your vocabulary. Additionally, listening to popular artists who will be recognized by most will allow you to access lyrics written in an English dialect that most will comprehend.
Singing can also help you pick up English colloquialisms and slang words quickly and effortlessly. Since songs tend to focus on local populations, their lyrics will likely contain plenty of everyday expressions and slang terms which makes learning the language through music much more fun than simply reading books or watching movies.
Make an effort to sing along and memorize its lyrics; additionally, looking them up in your native language may help. Doing this will enable you to better grasp their rhythm and cadence while helping to remember them more quickly.
2. Dance
Dance can help students in English classes meet various learning objectives. Not only can it boost vocabulary and writing skills, but dance can also help your pupils articulate and exemplify literary concepts more clearly. If your class is studying figurative language and lines of poetry, having students collaborate improvising choreographing phrases based on each line’s content could further deepen students’ comprehension. Or they could practice different high/low level shapes (space) representing various elements in sentences read aloud by your teacher might also prove beneficial.
3. Listen
Non-native English speakers often struggle to understand native English speakers due to pronunciation differences, accents or idiomatic expressions; yet another source may be their insufficient practice listening in on actual English conversations regularly.
Speech shadowing is an effective way to strengthen your listening. Simply watch an English video with subtitles and copy along while reading along as the spoken language plays; if something doesn’t make sense, pause the video and write down exactly what was unclear; this will allow you to become more familiar with English sentences and vocabulary; for instance it may help identify articles which make up meaning within sentences.
An excellent way to practice listening is to play podcasts or audiobooks in the background while cooking, cleaning or doing other household tasks. This will force you to listen without reading aloud and can strengthen hearing muscles so that new words and phrases become easier for you to remember when speaking English with other native speakers.
4. Imitate
As with learning any skill, speaking English takes practice, feedback, and repetition – imitation being one of the most efficient means.
Imitating native speakers’ pronunciation will allow you to learn to link sounds together into sentences, hear rhythm of language usage and comprehend word usage patterns. Videos or audio clips like songs or movie dialogue can also provide useful resources – record yourself while listening back then compare results later.
At least for English language practice, speaking to other native English speakers as often as possible – even if only briefly each day – is beneficial. If no one else is available to talk with you in English, practicing speaking the language to yourself will do wonders to your ability to form and deliver sentences. You could even use apps that connect you with native speakers and record conversations so you can review them later.
5. Write
Writing is a core component of English language learning, whether you are writing an essay, blog post or even just sending messages to friends and loved ones. Writing allows you to express yourself freely while honing spelling, grammar and sentence structure skills – this practice helps develop fundamental English knowledge that lays a firm foundation for spoken communication.
Reading can also help to develop your English speaking abilities. Be it reading slowly and carefully from a book, or listening to podcasts while trying to jot down key points from conversations you hear; try retelling stories as you hear them for added fluency.
At its core, written English requires daily practice. Although at first it may seem insignificant, over time your ability to express yourself clearly through writing will become much clearer as well as helping to correct spelling errors which might otherwise go undetected when reading aloud.