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  • American Accent Success Tip In one month, Smart Accent received 17 requests for help in achieving an American accent. We heard from actors and actresses living outside of the U.S. who want to expand their career options. We also heard from inside sales and call center representatives in India, the Philippines, and Europe, as well as business people in China, Japan and Korea.

    Experts tell us acquiring an American accent is no small task. It is down right difficult. Three things need to be mastered:

    • Intonation
    • Liasons
    • Pronunication

    The first and most important one is intonation. Intonation refers to the rise of fall of the voice to express different concepts or emotions. If English is not your first language, learning the intonation of American words to convey meaning and emotion can be vexing. In other languages, like Spanish or French, words are rearranged or the pitch is changed like in Chinese to show importance. In English, the word order is fixed.
    Liasons, the second factor, is the stringing of individual words together to indicate a complete thought. Words are not said separately in American English. They are strung together. It’s as if one word is attached to the beginning of the next. Ann Cook in her book, American Accent Training, calls it the hum of the whole sentence that only changes when you come to a comma or a period and maybe not even then.
    Finally, Pronunciation refers to saying the word correctly In American English, sounds are pronounced differently and require the lips, teeth and tongue to be in different positions than the way the syllables were learned in one’s native tongue. The [ae], [a] and [uh] are the most important and the most challenging for foreign speakers.
    As you can see, acquiring an American accent takes real effort. Experts typically recommend a coach. Universities and ESL (English as a Second Language) Programs are great for helping an individual understand and remedy his own particular issues. Should you be interested in other sources, there are lots of options available through the web. In doing a “Google Search,” the following information was uncovered. (Click on the links below.)
    Informative web sites:
    www.americanaccent.com
    www.englishconnection.com
    www.languagequest.com
    www.directenglish.com


    On-line group:
    www.groups.yahoo.com/group/ americanaccenttraining
    Free Diagnostic Test that utilizes Barron’s ESL American Accent Training Principles available on.
    www.americanaccent.com

    Interesting Books available from Amazon.com

    American Accent Training by Ann Cook
    NTC’s Dictionary of Everyday American English Expressions by Richard Spears, et al

    Speak English Like an American
    by Amy Gillet

    More From here

    By checking the sources listed above, you should be on your way mastering an American accent successfully.

    more

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American Accent Video Training

· Session 15 Reading Passages - 15a -15b

Pronunciation Lessons : Coming Soon!

1 Pronouncing /a/, /ae/, and uh Part 1
2 Pronouncing /a/, /ae/, and uh Part 2
3 Pronouncing /iy/, /i/, /uw/, /u/, and /e/ Part 1
4 Pronouncing /iy/, /i/, /uw/, /u/, and /e/ Part 2
5 Long Vowels, Short Vowels and Spelling
6 Pronouncing Glides + Vowel Review
7 The Schwa
8 The American R
9 The American L
10 The B, P, V, and F
11 The D, T and -ed
12 The S, Z and TH
13 The SH, ZH, CH and J
14 The K, G, M, N, NG
15 The H, W, and Y
16 Pronunciation Review

Accent Lessons Coming Soon!

1 Introduction to Word Intonation
2 Intonation in Words Part 1
3 Intonation in Words Part 2
4 Intonation in Words Part 3
5 Intonation in Words Part 4
6 Unusual Word Stress Patterns
7 Linking Words Together
8 Compound Nouns and Descriptive Phrases
9 Phrasal Verbs, Spelling, and Numbers
10 Content Words and Structure Words
11 Pronouncing Structure Words Part 1
12 Pronouncing Structure Words Part 2
13 Rhythm and Timing
14 Speeding up Modals
15 More on Modals
16 Asking Questions
17 Tag Questions
18 Emphatic and Contrastive Stress
19 Sequencing and Conversational Tone
20 Compound and Complex Sentences

THE AMERICAN ACCENT AUDIO COURSE Coming Soon!

If you already feel confident about your pronunciation but would like to know more about ACCENT (intonation, rhythm, timing, and mood) then our 16 hour AUDIO course is for you.

Unit One Introduction to the American Accent
1 What is Accent?
2 An Overview of the American Accent

Unit Two Breaking English into Pieces
3 Meet the Schwa
4 The American T

Unit Three Word Intonation Patterns
5 Intonation Patterns of 1 & 2 Syllable Words
6 Intonation Patterns of 3 & 4 Syllable Words
Unit Four Unusual Word Intonation
7 Words that Shift Stress
8 Missing Syllables

Unit Five Descriptive Phrases and Compound Nouns
9 Compound Nouns vs. Descriptive Phrases
10 Phrasal Verbs and More

Unit Six Linking Words Together
11 Linking Words

Unit Seven Content and Structure Words
12 Content Words
13 Structure Words

Unit Eight Rhythm and Timing
14 Rhythm and Timing
15 Reducing Modals
16 Phrasing

Unit Nine Sentence Stress
17 Normal Sentence Stress
18 Emphatic and Contrastive Stress

Unit Ten Asking Questions
19 Asking Questions
20 Tag Questions

Unit Eleven Compound and Complex Sentences
21 Sequencing
22 Complex Sentences

Unit Twelve Clear Speech
23 Emotion and Mood
24 Putting it All Together