1 simple tip to improve your accent

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  • čas přidán 23. 02. 2023
  • The technique I teach you in this video will dramatically improve your accent and how you come across!
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Komentáře • 2,9K

  • @asd-dr9cf
    @asd-dr9cf Před rokem +10537

    "You still have your accent. You'd still sound beautiful. But your clarity is enhanced". Loved that 😂

    • @rajidahae4220
      @rajidahae4220 Před rokem +69

      YES!! That piece at the end was beautiful! 🥰

    • @xlynx9
      @xlynx9 Před rokem +36

      A man who loves language

    • @micayahritchie7158
      @micayahritchie7158 Před rokem +9

      Except no you won't that's dumb it's literally removing the accent. An accent is just a way of saying words if you change how you say words you change your accent. I don't think there's anything wrong with wanting to sound native but let's not pretend it's not elitist.
      Edit: It in the previous sentence is referring to the attitude of the speaker not to the idea of sounding native. The attitude that there is a singular perfect pronunciation that one should strive to achieve is elitist is what I was saying. Why? Not only is it not true among native speakers that there's a singular correct way to say things I'd you have a big enough language. But the idea that "good enough to be understood" isn't good enough is a tool used to exclude people and discourage them. Learning languages is hard and the idea of saying to someone "hey I understood what you're saying" but I won't listen to you because your pronunciation is wrong rubs me the wrong way. The speaker didn't say that but they make it sound as if removing any trace of being non native should be your goal and says it as if oh you're not changing your accent when you clearly are changing your accent. And doing this when you can already communicate effectively can be detrimental because it's a lot of extra effort for no gains at all and might discourage the learner from speaking. It's the conforming to a singular mould of sounding correct that I'm saying is elitist. Not the trying to be understood

    • @setofreakinkaiba8553
      @setofreakinkaiba8553 Před rokem +3

      He completely got rid of the accent. That's what we call assimilation.

    • @boffy2648
      @boffy2648 Před rokem +63

      ​​@@micayahritchie7158 Right, wanting to sound like a native is elitist. You heard that guys! Trying to pronounce words the way they were supposed to be pronounced is elitist! Making your words clearer is elitist!
      Don't get me wrong I love accents, but sometimes if it's too thick, it makes it hard to understand. Literally happened today. Lady was on the phone and I couldn't understand a word she was saying, and she was speaking English. If I can understand what they're saying it's cool, and no one should FORCE someone to get rid of their accent. However, saying someone trying to perfect a language is elitist is a stretch.

  • @TheOneWhoDings
    @TheOneWhoDings Před rokem +1756

    One of the rarest public speakers that ACTUALLY gives good and practical advices.

    • @amani_drip9104
      @amani_drip9104 Před rokem +7

      omg this the best public speaker that actually i found 😮😮

    • @thabangmangaka7083
      @thabangmangaka7083 Před rokem +3

      Brav not to mention it's free😢

    • @vespasiancloscan7077
      @vespasiancloscan7077 Před rokem

      dumbest advice I've ever heard

    • @oopsieoopsie8587
      @oopsieoopsie8587 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Try this with 50-60 year olds. See how practical this shit is. You really think his dad can use this tip and change the Vietnamese accent?

    • @salamonthegreat
      @salamonthegreat Před 11 měsíci +21

      @@oopsieoopsie8587 "You'll still have your accent...but clarity is enhanced." use your ears

  • @tacobob123411
    @tacobob123411 Před 11 měsíci +1054

    “What da hell you want to be da Harry Pottah! Noooo.” Lol 😂

  • @PoorlyWrttenReviews
    @PoorlyWrttenReviews Před 11 měsíci +985

    I had no idea this guy wasn't a native english speaker, he has the most beautiful southern accent I've ever heard

    • @samanthabogen9639
      @samanthabogen9639 Před 11 měsíci +71

      Southern where?

    • @tanshievlogs
      @tanshievlogs Před 11 měsíci +13

      ​@@samanthabogen9639😅😅😅😅😅😅 i want to know too. 😅😅😅

    • @PoorlyWrttenReviews
      @PoorlyWrttenReviews Před 11 měsíci +124

      @@samanthabogen9639 southern England, his accent is quite posh so is relatively similar to that of a (posh) London accent, or Brighton, or Cambridge

    • @megaMagaManX8
      @megaMagaManX8 Před 11 měsíci +13

      yee haw?

    • @PoorlyWrttenReviews
      @PoorlyWrttenReviews Před 11 měsíci +84

      @@megaMagaManX8 you know it's not just America that has a south right 🤣

  • @orangepacker7479
    @orangepacker7479 Před rokem +5421

    Useful for most languages! Good job spreading all of this knowledge.

    • @askvinh
      @askvinh  Před rokem +159

      Cheers !

    • @Ghost____Rider
      @Ghost____Rider Před rokem +8

      Yes, I'm gonna apply this for the language I'm learning!

    • @abdullahyaseen371
      @abdullahyaseen371 Před rokem +15

      During my Engineering degree, our communication skills faculty once told us that MTI (Mother Tongue Influence) is the reason why we pronounce some letters or words differently. For example here in India in some regional languages there is no "Z" sound so the word "Zero" for instance will be pronounced Jero because that's the closest sound in the absence of a letter resembling the sound of "Z". So that is the mother tongue Influence that influences the pronunciation, and I think what he said is quite true from my experience with different languages 😊.
      The way you explained that was very good I think MTI is a technical term for what you have explained 😊👍

    • @hiwelcometochillis2579
      @hiwelcometochillis2579 Před rokem

      ​@@askvinh also say to people to imitate what people say on the news or tv or songs, imitation make me learn other lenguages when I was a kid 😅

    • @StrawberryLobotomy
      @StrawberryLobotomy Před rokem +1

      @@askvinh underrated as hell

  • @otto_jk
    @otto_jk Před rokem +5842

    This dude is the Arnold Schwarzenegger of public speaking

  • @eleanorcrawford9978
    @eleanorcrawford9978 Před 11 měsíci +882

    You speak better than many Londoners.

    • @Tomeixx
      @Tomeixx Před 11 měsíci +1

      Cause most Londoners are migrants.

    • @dj858
      @dj858 Před 11 měsíci +40

      id go as far as saying he's better at the English language and speaking it better than most English people, especially those here in Bristol and myself for that matter

    • @ethem8284
      @ethem8284 Před 11 měsíci +8

      ​@@dj858there's nothing wrong with how you speak, language changes and evolves like anything else human related it's normal and natural

    • @lukaradtke1991
      @lukaradtke1991 Před 11 měsíci +3

      When I once went to london I didnt understood a word those people in the stores asked me

    • @dj858
      @dj858 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@ethem8284 i know thanks for the comment, in all fairness myself and all other bristolian's embrace are accent and the way we talk its part of are identity and culture of are city, its kind of like the southwest version of cockney rhyming slang 👌

  • @NineNineOne
    @NineNineOne Před 11 měsíci +166

    He sounds Australian born/english as a first language. That’s amazing

    • @kelsey_roy
      @kelsey_roy Před 11 měsíci +3

      i could still hear 20% of his nammer accent.

    • @mrgacha_VODS
      @mrgacha_VODS Před 11 měsíci

      People from GB crying right now

    • @Chew81
      @Chew81 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Because English is his first language. I don't know his age but his parents came to Australia in 1981. He must have been very young at that time.

    • @NineNineOne
      @NineNineOne Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@Chew81that’s not what he says in the video. He said “when I learnt the english language, I used Vietnamese mouth movements”. That is not what happens if you’re Aussie born or even an in fact coming to a new country. I think your facts about Old Mate might be wrong.

    • @gonkong5638
      @gonkong5638 Před 10 měsíci

      @@Chew81 It's his third language, after chewtew and vietnamese.

  • @alejrandom6592
    @alejrandom6592 Před rokem +3152

    As a polyglot I love the fact that he can speak so passionately about such a simple concept. I wish I had his communication skills

    • @youtubestroller5549
      @youtubestroller5549 Před rokem +126

      As a west African hippopotamus I love the fact he has such great advice on this topic.

    • @pineapples8503
      @pineapples8503 Před rokem +27

      polyglot 😭😭

    • @diemyfriend
      @diemyfriend Před rokem +6

      You can do it! Just practice, and follow his advice, it's incredible and it works.

    • @Kamil987987
      @Kamil987987 Před rokem +31

      As a firetruck I agree

    • @renes3360
      @renes3360 Před rokem +14

      More like poly"not". 😂

  • @ariban
    @ariban Před rokem +1562

    I often have to remind my Japanese students of this. And you can see their eyes light up when they say the words well and they hear themselves. It's joyful to experience. 🥰

    • @MarinaFrancesca
      @MarinaFrancesca Před rokem +23

      Please wish me luck applying this to Japanese, Sensei. 🙏

    • @asparrow9876
      @asparrow9876 Před rokem +9

      How fluent in Japanese do you have to be to get a job teaching English? I want to live in Japan for a few years and that seems like the most likely job I could get fast.

    • @genericyoutubeuser8957
      @genericyoutubeuser8957 Před rokem +20

      ​@@asparrow9876 You just need a bachelor's degree and not be a criminal.

    • @asparrow9876
      @asparrow9876 Před rokem +12

      @@genericyoutubeuser8957 That is the first time someone mentioned a college degree for an entry level language position.... This isn't a job translating for diplomats... It's teaching basic English to non-speakers....

    • @genericyoutubeuser8957
      @genericyoutubeuser8957 Před rokem +13

      @A Sparrow That's the requirement for being an ALT in Japanese schools. It has been for two decades. If you want to teach at a juku or language school, they might not have the same requirements, but I've never met anyone who enjoyed it in the private EFL sector without first being a sponsored ALT.

  • @erickaparicio6118
    @erickaparicio6118 Před 11 měsíci +18

    I love it. I say this ALL the time. It's not that people are incapable of speaking with a more "natural" accent for the language, it's that they just need a simple reframing of what it means to speak, which is really a physical activity, and which therefore requires certain physical movements.

  • @Skyscraper2015
    @Skyscraper2015 Před 11 měsíci +2

    This guy is genius. He is really good. I have seen 4 separate shorts of him giving advice. But genuinely profound. He is a profound guy.

  • @definitelynotobama6851
    @definitelynotobama6851 Před rokem +623

    This is very true. I also speak Spanish and I’m frequently told that my accent is very close to that of a native speaker. It’s because I understood that Spanish is spoken with a different part of the vocal system than English is. English comes from the back of the mouth and from the throat, Spanish comes from the tongue and lips. When I made that realization and adjusted my pronunciation accordingly, my issues with having an American accent went away.

    • @j10001
      @j10001 Před rokem +10

      💯 Exactly. And as one Spanish teacher said about producing crisp vowels - each vowel should “sound like a pin dropping,” or precise like a tuning fork.

    • @AZPapa25
      @AZPapa25 Před rokem +11

      I am glad you worked conscientiously. There are several Spanish speakers on Facebook who are teaching other non native speakers English. The problem is they are teaching people how to speak English with a Spanish accent placing the stress of some words on the wrong syllable and using the wrong vowels. I know that the short vowels are difficult, but if one puts enough effort into learning this skill they will succeed.

    • @peterfromla7505
      @peterfromla7505 Před rokem

      Wow

    • @mangomonngo
      @mangomonngo Před rokem +4

      I knew a guy who had the most American white kid you could think of but he also knew Spanish and spike like a native.
      Sometimes when we spoke in Spanish and I couldn't see him, I just assumed there was a native Spanish speaker nearby. Haha
      Always got a kick out of it when he spoke with Spanish speaking customers. They loved how good he was and never expected it

    • @SOLIDSNAKE.
      @SOLIDSNAKE. Před 11 měsíci +3

      Wow dude I'm full blown Mexican as Spanish as my first language and didn't know this just tried ima go ☠️ now

  • @misspriss2482
    @misspriss2482 Před rokem +990

    Dude. You just helped me with my Korean pronunciation. THANK YOU!

    • @traveller4987
      @traveller4987 Před rokem +6

      As an Australian, my Korean sonsaengnim is always getting up me for using a heavy s sound, rather than a sigh. Such a hard habit to get out of doing.

    • @Sukkulents_
      @Sukkulents_ Před rokem +8

      @@traveller4987 bestie if you’re gonna say ‘sonsaengnim’ just either say ‘선생님’ or ‘teacher’ 😭
      I genuinely don’t see the point of romanising it other than for explaining pronunciation

    • @StephenFasciani
      @StephenFasciani Před rokem +19

      @@Sukkulents_ In Japanese it's called Romanji to convert the sounds of characters into roman letters. He's doing it for the benefit of those who don't speak the language and therefore wouldn't be able to pronounce it.

    • @blumoo9938
      @blumoo9938 Před rokem +14

      ​@@Sukkulents_ you explained why they did it in your last sentence 💀💀💀 it's obviously just to help us understand the pronunciation

    • @MBJK_baby
      @MBJK_baby Před rokem +3

      I got a heavy accent when speaking English after learning Korean and Spanish 😂 the funniest part is my l’s and r’s they basically sound the same unless I forcibly roll my r like in Spanish. My friends find it endearing since it’s midwestern English with a twist

  • @pilgrim4781
    @pilgrim4781 Před 11 měsíci +14

    THANK YOU. FINALLY I FOUND A VIDEO THAT UNDERSTANDS ME!!

  • @stephanginther9051
    @stephanginther9051 Před 11 měsíci +16

    Interesting stuff. I speak Chinese and I often shock people with my lack of accent. What he's saying is 100% true, its mouth movements and its rhythm. In Chinese, everything is broken up into individual syllables. Most syllables in Chinese are a word by themselves. They have compound words just like we do, but since each part of the word is itself a word, the cadence treats each part with more emphasis than compound words have in English.
    The cadence of Chinese seems sped up to English speakers because of tones as well. In English we use tone over a sentence to imply further meaning. Like a rising tone to a statement to ask a question. In Chinese each syllable has its own tone so to an English speaker it almost seems like each word is a sentence.

  • @skeingamepodcast5993
    @skeingamepodcast5993 Před rokem +827

    I was trying to learn Japanese. My Japanese friend said "you're moving your mouth too much". When I watched my Japanese co-workers talk they almost mumbled because their lips barely moved. Made so much sense.

    • @bulldozer8950
      @bulldozer8950 Před rokem +69

      I actually had a friend who could speak japanese, French, and English. He said he liked japanese the most because he could mumble and that’s just kinda how it was spoke. So ya, it’s really close to mumbling for sure

    • @r1pperduck
      @r1pperduck Před rokem +7

      ​@Bulldozer Japanese and french are my primary goals in duo lingo. I have way more hours in Japanese, but its so difficult for me compared to french, which is basically Spanish.

    • @May16Joe
      @May16Joe Před rokem +6

      I like having accent when I speak english, it makes me unique and people are always interested where are you from. Not having accent is boring.

    • @echelon2k8
      @echelon2k8 Před rokem +22

      @@May16Joe Everyone has an accent when they speak English. What you want is just to have one that is different from everyone else around you.

    • @chenanigans
      @chenanigans Před rokem +3

      That's very true. I love languages and observing the different nuances within each one like the mouth movements and tones and part of the mouth that they speak from, and I have definitely noticed this about Korean and Japanese. I work with people who were born and raised in different Asian countries. I worked with two Japanese ladies last night on my crew and I just loved every time I walked by and heard them communicating in their native language and hearing those little nuances 🤗 it's so relaxed sounding and soft too. Lots of extended notes that kind of caress the ear lol

  • @marianorberg3410
    @marianorberg3410 Před 11 měsíci +7

    You speak English BEAUTIFULLY!

  • @AonGuardian
    @AonGuardian Před 11 měsíci +37

    Man sounds better than many native English speakers

  • @boku4ever
    @boku4ever Před rokem +542

    i will also add "the pitch of your voice" to that as well. I am chinese and i speak english like i am from South Park.

  • @sarahhussein1899
    @sarahhussein1899 Před rokem +156

    That's sooooooo cool...it has never ever been explained like that before! You are soooo amazing!!!

    • @askvinh
      @askvinh  Před rokem +9

      Thank you! 😃 Just speaking from my experience!

    • @rishivardhan5720
      @rishivardhan5720 Před rokem +1

      ​@@askvinh can you post the link here I am unable to open the description I really want to know more how to improve my communication❤

    • @G_moneyy
      @G_moneyy Před rokem +1

      @@rishivardhan5720 you can open the description by holding down on the video. Something will come up and you can tap on the description

  • @whatthe3711
    @whatthe3711 Před 11 měsíci +2

    what I also often do is mimic people in videos or movies. What it does is it allows you to have a guide and on top of that it teaches you casual sentences that native speakers use instead of formal textbook English

  • @benjaminjane93
    @benjaminjane93 Před rokem +8

    This is actually a good tip! I have always spoken with a bit of a british accent, but when I went to acting school in the states my teachers told me to work on my "Standard American Accent". And I had such a difficult time with it because to me the palate feeling was completely different between the two. So whenever I try learn a different accent for my job I think about things like where the words lie in my mouth.

  • @adhils9633
    @adhils9633 Před rokem +227

    bro you know a lot....this is the right tips to improve language...you teach the right things..noone else does that... you are the great and you deserve more subscribers...💕

  • @likatchup
    @likatchup Před rokem +62

    this is the best advice for learning a new language that I've ever seen

    • @gobbollino2688
      @gobbollino2688 Před rokem

      Theoretically
      Try it in practice 🙄

    • @neonch1
      @neonch1 Před rokem +4

      @@gobbollino2688n god. This sounds like bullshit. vowels change with mouth movements, but consonants don’t. And consonants are usually the bigger problem when learning languages, at least in my experience. No matter how you contort your mouth, a rolled R isn’t gonna turn into a guttural one (like in French, German), or into the english one. For that you need to learn how to move your tongue (or uvula) in the manner required to produce the sound.
      And, in any case, he talks about this like it’s a quick fix. ‘Oh!! Why didn’t I just think of moving my mouth like the natives!’ *starts speaking with a perfect accent*, when it’s really just the same shit but reframed to sound revolutionary. If you want to learn a language’s phonology, just look it up on wikipedia, and see which sounds you can pronounce and which you can’t. Look up tutorials to learn those sounds, then just practice pronouncing words. That’s all there is to it. No vague-ass handwavy “mouth movement” bullshit.

    • @yanj111
      @yanj111 Před rokem

      @@neonch1 thanks, that's very excellent explaining, great information!

    • @brendon2462
      @brendon2462 Před rokem

      ​@@neonch1 Then why is his accent this good. I'm a native speaker of American english. He speaks really good but sounds like an England accent not American.

  • @asparrow9876
    @asparrow9876 Před 11 měsíci +1

    His energy is so captivating.... I could listen to him explain anything because he has such a magnetic passion behind his demeanor & vibe. He's so sophisticated. I love all his advice.

  • @obwon12345
    @obwon12345 Před 8 měsíci +1

    This guy is so positive and good. Id like to be his friend.

  • @rachellereeve494
    @rachellereeve494 Před rokem +89

    You've cultivated a top-notch Aussie accent there!

    • @BigSirZebras
      @BigSirZebras Před rokem +2

      you say the number 3 as "free" don't you?

    • @asd-dr9cf
      @asd-dr9cf Před rokem +8

      @@BigSirZebras where is this hostility coming from?

    • @Dazed_04
      @Dazed_04 Před rokem +3

      ​@@asd-dr9cf his ass

    • @okbro97
      @okbro97 Před rokem +2

      @@BigSirZebras Huh? Got something against Aussie accents? Or do you just randomly insult people online because your real life is too mundane for you lol.

    • @BigSirZebras
      @BigSirZebras Před rokem

      @@okbro97 do aussies say 3 like free?

  • @joeqb5992
    @joeqb5992 Před rokem +85

    I’m from Hawaii. When I first moved to California for school I had a thick accent and only few people could understand me. This is exactly what I did as he’s recommending. Now I can switch my accent in or off depending if I’m talking to someone from Hawaii. Great recommendation.

    • @DrSebby
      @DrSebby Před 11 měsíci

      Did you notice how no one beat you up bcuz you're "NOT Californian"? Try to learn from that when you go back to Hawaii. And as much as you complain about being annexed by the USA... like it was some horrible fate, just realize that remaining independent was NEVER an option. It was either the USA or Japan... the only midway point between the two.... someone was going to make it a part of their nation.

    • @joeqb5992
      @joeqb5992 Před 11 měsíci

      @@DrSebby are you in the right thread? Beat me up? Lol You’re totally off topic. This is an educational post. If you want to talk about Hawaii history bring it.

  • @orion5964
    @orion5964 Před rokem +1

    This is true, each language has syllables and different parts of a word or sentence are accented differently, some parts are overemphasized and some parts are tuned down, best way is to read a book up laud this way you will eventually get the melody of any language.

  • @Matt00ias
    @Matt00ias Před rokem +1

    That makes so much sense

  • @lghjsdtugfkgfjgtru
    @lghjsdtugfkgfjgtru Před rokem +61

    the Harry Potter part cracked me up 😂😂😂😂 but yeah, it’s absolutely true. I used to exaggerate the accent from Friends and it helped me speak better and clearer

  • @k8schmate
    @k8schmate Před rokem +163

    I was thinking (before I knew he wasn't a UK native), he has such a gorgeous ENGLISH accent! wow good job

    • @reez1728
      @reez1728 Před rokem +46

      He has a very obvious Australian accent.

    • @stephenmani8495
      @stephenmani8495 Před rokem +18

      He is Australian.

    • @Dave_of_Mordor
      @Dave_of_Mordor Před rokem +1

      @@stephenmani8495 I can't tell the difference

    • @thehoneyeffect
      @thehoneyeffect Před rokem +8

      @@Dave_of_Mordor if English isnt your first language it might be hard to tell.

    • @user-zc8sq3wr9f
      @user-zc8sq3wr9f Před rokem

      @@reez1728that’s not Australian. I’m from Australia

  • @nitin_kumar_mazumder
    @nitin_kumar_mazumder Před rokem

    Wow! You made everything crystal clear

  • @popcornparam
    @popcornparam Před 11 měsíci +2

    Invisible camera man has been spotted 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @kiwimotion
    @kiwimotion Před rokem +483

    As a Korean guy who taught himself English, the best thing you can do to improve your accent/speaking skills is to listen a LOT and talk a LOT in whatever language you want to acquire. In my case, I watched a ton of videos on CZcams. Language was built to be a practical skill. Acquiring a language takes DAILY use to become anywhere near fluent. Accents are formed in the initial stages of language acquisition and is very difficult to fix or modify, so make sure to listen to and talk like a native.

    • @THEREALSEVEN
      @THEREALSEVEN Před rokem +4

      Very sound advice

    • @emirminder6784
      @emirminder6784 Před rokem +2

      It was exactly same for me. Would recommend the same things

    • @CelestisForgeUK
      @CelestisForgeUK Před rokem +6

      Take it to the next level and don’t speak your own language for a few years. It changes your thinking and how you process information, until, eventually, even your own thoughts will be in that language. Do it too long, though, and you might forget how to speak your own language. I’m at the point where my English is orders of magnitude better than my first language. Bit annoying when you’re talking with a relative and you struggle to string a sentence together 😂

    • @FinePrintKR
      @FinePrintKR Před rokem +1

      ​@@CelestisForgeUK can confirm, after a few years of basically speaking only English, I started dreaming in English.

    • @TheZebinator
      @TheZebinator Před rokem

      @@CelestisForgeUK I'm bilingual by birth and learned english at a very young age so I think in three languages and it can be quite confusing. Still have a horrible english accent since I didn't learn it from native speakers

  • @blackman7186
    @blackman7186 Před rokem +20

    When people are actually knowledgeable and are sharing legit stuff out here.

    • @jaredf6205
      @jaredf6205 Před rokem

      How is “an accent is how you move your mouth” useful information? Where else did people think accents come from?

  • @ex0stasis72
    @ex0stasis72 Před rokem +70

    Several of my university professors need to watch this video.

    • @ShacklefordR
      @ShacklefordR Před rokem +3

      I also think not every university professors should be in a teaching profession. They’re a fine researcher / academic but oratory and instructional skills are not a soft skill you pick up overnight…

    • @astridpintar-fuchs3944
      @astridpintar-fuchs3944 Před rokem

      Some people don't simply hear the differences! Or don't care....

    • @ex0stasis72
      @ex0stasis72 Před rokem +4

      @@astridpintar-fuchs3944 It's not that I don't like the hear the differences. It's that the pronunciation of certain words is so bad that words become ambiguous with other words that change the entire meaning of the sentence.

    • @deadmanswife3625
      @deadmanswife3625 Před rokem +1

      ​@@ex0stasis72 nice of you to explain this guy's never been to school if he didn't get those professors that you had to work so hard to understand

    • @annapatton4544
      @annapatton4544 Před 11 měsíci +3

      I had an English teacher who we called Sink, because that is how he used to pronounce the word "thing" (not in an English speaking country)

  • @L0llyZee
    @L0llyZee Před rokem +6

    as a polyglot this strategy was the key on my foreign language learning but I kept forgetting to speak to people and skipped the vocab day

  • @hennessy_magic4717
    @hennessy_magic4717 Před rokem +1

    yo, this is so simple, yet so important which goes unnoticed

  • @kareemalmond
    @kareemalmond Před rokem +30

    i just tried this with arabic because my arabic is so wack, bro it works so well. 10/10

    • @naj1650
      @naj1650 Před rokem

      That’s my aim 💯👏🏾

  • @goatpower321
    @goatpower321 Před rokem +26

    Dude. My final Spanish project is a speaking assessment and you just saved my grade. THANK YOU!!!!!!

  • @I_Love_Lord
    @I_Love_Lord Před rokem +1

    Thats true. I speak 6 languages fluently and 5 of them with native fluency. But I taught my self only 2 of them, because I have two mother languages (dads native language, moms native language), one my country's second official language and one our regional language. So them 4 languages were my native, I just grew up and was speaking them. But when I learned my new two languages and had accent problem, then one day it just fell in my head that the way mouth dances in my 4 natives is different. So I started practicing my mouth movements the way natives do. So its kinda same thing this guy telling, and Lord bless me that really worked greate.
    So my story backs this guys method. It really works and fast way to get there

  • @muralist_
    @muralist_ Před rokem

    Best tip in learning correct speech ever!

  • @ErroneousBox
    @ErroneousBox Před rokem +15

    Dude speaks better English then I do as a native

    • @midgetwars1
      @midgetwars1 Před rokem

      I mean, it's kinda his job.

    • @ErroneousBox
      @ErroneousBox Před 11 měsíci +1

      @midgetwars1 I had a Spanish teacher who's Spanish was dog shit. Your point is?

  • @Ajia_No_Envy
    @Ajia_No_Envy Před rokem +13

    I would have never expected he spoke English as a second language, that is simply amazing, the perfectness and native level of his speech is actually so inspiring

    • @emceeboogieboots1608
      @emceeboogieboots1608 Před rokem

      But could you pick the Australian accent?

    • @boboften9952
      @boboften9952 Před rokem

      He speaks Australian
      Ostrailin
      Constants are swapped
      Vowels are dropped
      Words are shortened
      O is added to the list of favorite places , names , items ,
      I saw Dav o , at the bottle o , ...... he fell o , we called the Ambo ...
      The lazy slang Australian Speaking

    • @Tony32
      @Tony32 Před rokem

      He has a slight accent, I can tell he's not native.

    • @katsurakotaro
      @katsurakotaro Před rokem

      @@Tony32 exactly

  • @phunsukh_wangdoo
    @phunsukh_wangdoo Před rokem +3

    100% true....I practiced it...day in day out...The problem is that when u r surrounded by prople who have incorrect accent...they look at you in a very uncomfortable way..even though ...u have the tight accent

  • @BukkaLevy
    @BukkaLevy Před 11 měsíci +1

    Brilliant insight 🎉

  • @masterbaraman9372
    @masterbaraman9372 Před rokem +30

    This dude sounds more English than I do.

    • @iamapokerface8992
      @iamapokerface8992 Před rokem

      wow pretty cringe for u tbh

    • @masterbaraman9372
      @masterbaraman9372 Před rokem +1

      @@iamapokerface8992 Don't unda estamate mai cringe levals.

    • @proallnighter
      @proallnighter Před rokem +3

      He’s an Aussie, mate

    • @flowerpower8722
      @flowerpower8722 Před rokem

      Aussie. 100%

    • @randomdude4669
      @randomdude4669 Před rokem

      ​@@flowerpower8722 yeh hes a tad disingenuous when he says english isn't his first language when he himself on his website says he was born and raised in aus

  • @davidhaas3111
    @davidhaas3111 Před rokem +12

    I’m a native English speaker and was given the same advice when I was learning Spanish.

  • @kittycat3959
    @kittycat3959 Před 10 měsíci

    I have an American accent and I tried this while learning Chinese, and it works! I was having trouble pronouncing Chinese characters and this improved my pronunciation by a lot. Thank you so much! :)))))))

  • @maritahartmann591
    @maritahartmann591 Před 10 měsíci

    Your impressions of your dad is THE best. Hilarious to me. 😂 He sounds so cute!! And fierce at the same time.

  • @cmonster67
    @cmonster67 Před rokem +4

    BRILLIANT!!! There are hundreds if not THOUSANDS of call center that could desperately use your help!!!

    • @diatomicfawn1141
      @diatomicfawn1141 Před rokem

      LMAO yes, I worked at a call center in Mexico that required you to speak English and I don’t consider my English level the best but I have enough clarity speaking, but the rest of the guys couldn’t even speak properly at a lower pace and I was wondering how did they got in

  • @shoezomaku
    @shoezomaku Před rokem +4

    I teach Japanese students and this is something that I tell them constantly. Most native speakers of languages don't realize how important mouth/tongue movement is (it's not just English that I've observed this behavior in). If you want to be a better language teacher to your students, regardless of language, learn your language's mouth movements and teach that alongside your curriculum. You'll notice a huge boost in clarity in your students.

  • @yoblackdaddy1
    @yoblackdaddy1 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Him saying three was right instead of free made all the cockney accented people offended 😂

  • @josephmartinez15
    @josephmartinez15 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Thanks for this❤

  • @DCfreerunner
    @DCfreerunner Před rokem +20

    What's crazy is most people have a different personality depending on what language they are speaking. Like a fluent bilingual will seem like a totally different person when they talk to you in another language.

  • @luckyplier
    @luckyplier Před rokem +9

    Hey Vinh
    Im a vietnamese too
    That accent of ur father extremly well done!! 😆

    • @askvinh
      @askvinh  Před rokem +2

      😂 slight exxageration

  • @hemeraldhappy7166
    @hemeraldhappy7166 Před 11 měsíci

    In half minute I LEARN SOMETHING SO GREAT THAT NOBODY TELL ME BEFORE.
    Great and Thank you very much.

  • @JustinSgalio
    @JustinSgalio Před rokem +5

    Kids should do this as early as possible. Think of how many speech issues this would solve! Brilliant

    • @askvinh
      @askvinh  Před rokem

      Great idea!

    • @joost1183
      @joost1183 Před rokem

      I do/did this with my son, now 2.5 years old, spoke clearly a few months before turning 2 for around 90% of his vocabulary. In my native language that is. It works (anecdotal at best) when looking at his peers. Wondering when I should start with English - now I feel its too early and would confuse him since we do not speak English in our household.
      It might fix my accent as well when Im teaching him new words with the same technique ;-)

  • @sm_artx
    @sm_artx Před rokem +14

    I am an Indian tutor who teaches American students on a daily basis. Growing up watching Hollywood movies, I would often emulate the mouth movements that the actors made and try to pronounce the words correctly. Although I still have what some would call an Indian accent, my pronunciation and diction is almost identical to Americans to the extent that it's almost indistinguishable. The sad part, though, is that Indians who speak English like the way I do are often ridiculed as putting on a fake accent when the truth is that I trained myself to sound this way.

    • @lelin3984
      @lelin3984 Před rokem

      which subject do you teach?

    • @sm_artx
      @sm_artx Před rokem

      @@lelin3984 I am a psychology tutor and writing coach.

    • @leechrec
      @leechrec Před rokem

      No lie non Indians who speak good English make fun of the way Indians sound. It's not a good thing but if more Indians knew that maybe they would feel differently about how you talk and how they talk.

  • @johnlott518
    @johnlott518 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Having learned a fair amount of Korean, I can appreciate what he's saying about speaking with the right shape of the mouth in order to pronounce things better in a foreign language. It's the little things that make a difference.

  • @cdyn5480
    @cdyn5480 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Thanks for that. I was always wondering why I sound fluent in my mind but I speak with a heavy accent. Though I'm not that much of a talker for the past few years.

  • @Khorne_of_the_Hill
    @Khorne_of_the_Hill Před rokem +4

    That's really true. I don't really know much Spanish, but my pronunciation is excellent because I paid attention to this

  • @0u73rh34v3n
    @0u73rh34v3n Před rokem +12

    I’m English and need these mouth exercises

  • @Sumiyeco_boutique
    @Sumiyeco_boutique Před rokem +4

    It is also how you use air. For example, in Spanish, you use your diaphragm. You push air from your core. In English, you use your throat with little air pushing.

  • @SiilanPies
    @SiilanPies Před 11 měsíci

    This is great, because it clearly works, at least for you. My first thought when seeing this was, "is this guy Asian Australian?" After looking at your channel bio, I found out I was correct, and that goes to show how important what you're saying is.

  • @tanyahunt9476
    @tanyahunt9476 Před rokem +4

    Well done 👏🏻 your pronunciation is excellent!

  • @Dawson_Nate
    @Dawson_Nate Před rokem +4

    Free is actually very common in the UK so it's okay. I fink u aight

  • @finch45lear
    @finch45lear Před 10 měsíci

    Some people have a beautiful gift for teaching.

  • @hope4463
    @hope4463 Před 11 měsíci

    I love how you teach people!

  • @RobBrightBeast
    @RobBrightBeast Před rokem +5

    Exactly!! This is why in Japanese specifically and chinese zi focused heavily on the alphabet and basics of making the sounds, and seemed semi fluent or a lot more advanced, even got bit of the accent when spoke english again 😂

  • @AV-nl9gc
    @AV-nl9gc Před rokem +5

    Pronouncing Russian was easy once I started to sneer while speaking 😂 this shit really works

  • @kerriann04
    @kerriann04 Před 9 měsíci

    Very true. A lot of my natural southern accent mellowed out after three long semesters of singer's diction during college (music major).

  • @AstroPC96
    @AstroPC96 Před 11 měsíci

    Dude, this video is golden!

  • @mosiarmstrong
    @mosiarmstrong Před rokem +5

    Currently learning Vietnamese (no cap). I'm going to apply this lesson next time I practice.

  • @kevinpulver4027
    @kevinpulver4027 Před rokem +5

    I learned Spanish as an adult and hes absolutely right. They taught us phonetics and Spanish mouth movements and made us exaggerate them.

    • @Here_Today_
      @Here_Today_ Před rokem

      Where do I look for a course on Spanish mouth movements?

    • @kevinpulver4027
      @kevinpulver4027 Před rokem +1

      @@Here_Today_ Sorry, the School I went to is not open anymore. I'm not sure what to tell you except when you pronounce "A" It's always, "Ah" And you need to really open your mouth. In Spanish there's no such thing as it being pronounced like the Apple sound in English. NEVER.
      "I" is always like a long e in English (meet, beat) show your teeth when you pronounce it.
      If the course you find teaches this they'll probably have the rest of it right also.

    • @Here_Today_
      @Here_Today_ Před rokem

      @@kevinpulver4027 thank you, good tips!

  • @ynwa3573
    @ynwa3573 Před 11 měsíci

    Amazing explanation behind ACCENT.

  • @HumbledSlave
    @HumbledSlave Před 11 měsíci +1

    Never heard of this tip b4. Gotta try..

  • @seiwarriors
    @seiwarriors Před rokem +3

    I would say the tounge movement is another key component to speak in a British or other Anglo accent. Just mouth doesn’t cut it. People can still pinpoint your accent being different.

    • @BigSirZebras
      @BigSirZebras Před rokem

      Where do you think your tongue is? Do you think mouth means lips? You tongue is part of the inside of your mouth just like your teeth. Did you think they were behind your mouth?

    • @jaredf6205
      @jaredf6205 Před rokem

      @@BigSirZebras If he meant to include tongue movement when he said mouth movement, than you’d have to explain why this is even a video. He would have had to have meant lips because if he really meant your whole mouth, he would not be saying any information anymore lol, because than he’d be saying that your accent comes from your mouth, and telling people their accent comes from their mouth is like explaining to people their voice comes from their throat, which no one would have to do…

    • @BigSirZebras
      @BigSirZebras Před rokem

      @@jaredf6205 English isn't your first language is it? You've never taken a linguistics class have you? you notice that saying three correctly has nothing to do with your lips but with putting your tongue between your teeth. google "linguistics mouth diagram" or "pronunciation mouth diagram" you will see the lips are just one part of the mouth when speaking about accents and language in general.

    • @jaredf6205
      @jaredf6205 Před rokem

      @@BigSirZebras You’ve missed my point, I should have been more clear. My point is that he is making a video saying you need to move your mouth like a native speaker to sound like a native speaker… That seems like uselessly helpful advice to me. My reasoning is because mouth means well, your whole mouth, and that’s where your accent comes from anyway, that means, he is literally saying something along the lines of “you need to speak with a native accent in order to sound like a native.” I think you’ll agree that while true, that’s a ridiculous thing to say as advice because of how obvious and useless it is. It’s like saying, “just do it right” Now because this doesn’t make sense for him to say as advice, one possible explanation is he didn’t actually mean mouth when he said mouth, we are considering if maybe he actually should have specified lips and cheeks because people might only be focusing on their tongue, but I don’t know, this video didn’t actually make any sense to me, that is simply speculation too explain advice that wouldn’t otherwise make sense. Also, saying three correctly has nothing to do with my lips? What would make you say that? If I change the shape of my lips, I say the word threw. So, there goes your basis for whatever that whole point was…

  • @danitradess
    @danitradess Před rokem +5

    That’s exactly how I started reading lately. With more mouth movements 😂 feels unnatural but same time I do feel I sound more American

    • @tapishrealist2459
      @tapishrealist2459 Před rokem

      Beleive me,with a year or two of dedicated practise it becomes natural

  • @revantbhalla2457
    @revantbhalla2457 Před 11 měsíci

    Melted my fucking Mind with that! Absolutely SPOT ON! Many regards.

  • @aaronthesaxman660
    @aaronthesaxman660 Před 11 měsíci

    I did this when learning Cantonese! It totally works!

  • @PK-df1uq
    @PK-df1uq Před 11 měsíci +6

    100% agree. You're using different parts of the mouth and different muscles when you speak in another language. I'm a native German speaker. When I started to speak English all day long after moving to the US, my throat hurt for a while, as my larynx had to adjust. In my youth, I was fluent in French and locals in France usually wouldn't notice a foreign accent. Now, when I'm in France, they think that I'm from Quebec, as my mouth isn't used to the French pronounciation anymore and I'm using the "English" muscles. So I think that even with the brains of a French person, I wouldn't be able to speak French without an accent at the moment.

  • @AaronMetallion
    @AaronMetallion Před rokem +8

    I moved to Canada when I was 18, sounded totally Indian, and in 1-2 years I sounded totally Canadian. I realized I used to subtly imitate to try and fit in, but my tongue movements started changing. And I'd catch myself, and feel awkward for it. But I gave myself permission and pushed myself along / encouraged myself to listen & imitate more, and it overwrote my muscle memory entirely. In fact, my Chinese roommate told me I keep speaking in my sleep, and the first thing I asked is "What accent?", he said "What you do mean? No accent..." "You sound Canadian". That's when I knew it permeated my subconscious. Down side though after a decade is, I go back to India and I sound foreign when I speak Hindi, and get charged tourist prices for stuff. 😂

  • @chelsea6539
    @chelsea6539 Před 5 měsíci

    Im an American in France, i took a class with some other immegrants. Everyone kept complementing me on my pronunciation. I explained I practiced by reading to my children (who are ages 3-7). I told them, get a childrens book and then over dramatize your reading as if youre trying to engage in small children. It works. I get told so frequently how beautiful my french is.

  • @Elsa-qy9hr
    @Elsa-qy9hr Před rokem

    Unbelievable insight of the technicals❤

  • @Listenclearly1979
    @Listenclearly1979 Před rokem +5

    Movement of lips, tongue placement and other vocal differences. Australians have a different tounge placement when speaking to many other English speaking nations. We tend to sound a little nasal and naturally sound like bogans even though we may be high on the social scale 😂

    • @marccas10
      @marccas10 Před rokem +1

      Good day cobber ya big gala strewth ....me dead! 😂😂😂😂

    • @randomdude4669
      @randomdude4669 Před rokem

      This dude is australian born and raised, the tongue place should be the same as the uk unless your being a lazy speaker(like many do in aus), and this guy is just proof of that, if you speak nasally and inflectious that's your own fault same with the pitch which comes from throat speaking.

  • @aronabraham4657
    @aronabraham4657 Před rokem +6

    I’m multilingual and I could definitely feel the difference every time I switched languages in my mouth. (home, school dorm) sometimes i stutter for the first day switching languages and it only goes well if I slow down. Next day I’m fluent. Muscle memory is dope.

  • @anevabay9771
    @anevabay9771 Před 9 měsíci

    I love this!! I'm 27, raised in Texas with an American family..I'm starting this today to help clean up my audio

  • @JustMe-gw3eo
    @JustMe-gw3eo Před 10 měsíci +2

    He does speak very clearly. I understand him fine. And I'm from Texas everyone sounds strange to me. Can't hardly make out a single word Cajuns say. And they're just a couple hundred miles away. This guy came from the opposite side of the planet with an entirely different language and sounds fine. Good job 👍

  • @keithahlstrom176
    @keithahlstrom176 Před rokem +9

    I have been given grief by Chinese speakers when I speak because I don’t have an English accent on my mandarin. They felt I was making fun of them somehow. Imagine an English speaker telling any other person that they must have a funny accent when speaking English.

    • @tehCostHD
      @tehCostHD Před rokem

      I would just take that as a compliment honestly lol

    • @NewsWeeklyThe
      @NewsWeeklyThe Před rokem +3

      If Native speakers are making fun of you, it's likely because you're overcompensating for the accent and thus speaking in a manner that's too exaggerated. I guarantee you if you spoke without an accent, they wouldn't even notice, just as when you go to the store and stranger says hi to you, you don't think about their accent because it's within the range of the accepted standard, so you correctly assume they're a native speaker. So just try dialing back your accent a bit and see what happens. Accents are unfortunately a very fickle thing

    • @yous2244
      @yous2244 Před rokem +1

      It's because your native accent that you tried to imitate and thought got correctly was actually horribly wrong and seemed like you were mocking them

    • @keithahlstrom176
      @keithahlstrom176 Před rokem

      @@NewsWeeklyThe interesting. This is certainly possible. But all a person can do is try their best. I have found it interesting that of all the places I have traveled and all the people I have met from other places travelling in North America. English speakers are unique in accepting others use of English and even adopting the broken English the other person is using. Italians are the worst. They will correct the most minor mistake with disdain in their eyes, but not even realize their English is worse than my Italian. But I’d never even think to correct them or anyone else.

  • @adamsolomon2087
    @adamsolomon2087 Před rokem +7

    Instead he's got an Australian accent.

  • @dereksmithabroad
    @dereksmithabroad Před rokem

    This is some advice I have been giving students for years. It works!

  • @gaberodriguez7938
    @gaberodriguez7938 Před rokem

    This is the first step in theatre speech training. Helps with clarity and projection so people can understand what you’re saying from the back of a theater

  • @alexc1105
    @alexc1105 Před rokem +13

    I had no idea that English wasn't his first language. Or his parents...
    He sounds like he's from just round the corner from me!

  • @gabor222
    @gabor222 Před rokem +2

    That was the reason why we had to write the phonetics in our dictionary copybooks when I was a kid. I was shocked when I saw my son's English copybook and realized that their teachers don't make them write the phonetics anymore. When I spent 2 weeks in the US on a work-related trip we couldn't understand the Chinese workers there so their Russian and Bulgarian colleagues translated their Chinese-English to our Eastern-European English :D They had a completely different pronunciation set.

  • @MayorSom
    @MayorSom Před 10 měsíci

    ngl he’s a valid point

  • @laimaravillon895
    @laimaravillon895 Před 5 měsíci

    This is AMAAAZING!

  • @thienpham911
    @thienpham911 Před rokem +6

    I almost piss my pants when did the vietnamese accent 😂🥲🤣 you nailed it 👌