I still struggle to pronounce natural ...
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The Subtly Exasperating "Unshakable Sounds" No amount of ability you may have will preclude a couple of extraneous sounds from your mouth — they simply don't appear to fit in anywhere. It is strange: you can write essays, plead cases, or tell stories with the best of them, but one little sound betraRead more
The Subtly Exasperating “Unshakable Sounds”
No amount of ability you may have will preclude a couple of extraneous sounds from your mouth — they simply don’t appear to fit in anywhere. It is strange: you can write essays, plead cases, or tell stories with the best of them, but one little sound betrays you at once. Maybe it is the rolled Spanish “r,” English’s “th,” or the Japanese’s subtle matching of its short and long vowels.
They’re not just technical errors — they’re emotional cues. You can feel that they “out” you as a non-native speaker, despite you doing everything else right. That gnawing pain compels you to transform into this giant, hypersensitive to your voice when all you want is to become invisible and melt among the crowds.
Why These Sounds Persist
It has nothing to do with work ethic or intelligence. It usually boils down to:
The Emotional Tug-of-War
What’s hard is not the sound itself but what the sound symbolizes. You can be two opposing feelings:
The Myth of “Perfect Native Pronunciation”
The truth is that few people manage native pronunciation completely flawless on all of the sounds — and even they do this to the cost of proof to what they’re talking about. Sometimes we’re walking around with shame looming over a sound as if it were evidence of “failure,” when it’s simply just the natural indicator of where we’re from.
Keep in mind: everyone adores accents as charming and fascinating. That one “off” note that gets under your skin can be adorable or go unnoticed to the person next to you. The fellow you’re talking to typically is more interested in hearing you than whether your “th” is flat or sharp.
Growth Beyond Perfection
Instead of viewing that intransigent sound as a failure, you can begin to think of it as an ongoing practice partner. It makes you humble, keeps you practicing, and reminds you that language is not about being proficient — it’s about communicating your message.
You may never sound just like a native.
Or perhaps one day, years after carelessly just flinging it about, you look and observe that it has turned out stunningly, and no one wincs — not even you.
Either way, however, the question remains: Does this silence me or does it only silence me from being capable of taking myself in?
And finally, the ones that you fight with the hardest aren’t barriers — they’re breadcrumbs on your own path. They’re tiny reminders of where you started that you carry with you into your new voice. And maybe, and that’s only a maybe, they’re not something to be left behind but something to be worn with modest pride.
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