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English Tongue Twisters
with AUDIO!

AS OF FEB. 2008

NOW w/ AUDIO!!!!
Links:

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.