Get Rid of Your Accent: The English Pronunciation and Speech Training Manual

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By: Linda James and Olga Smith
(21 customer reviews)
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PRODUCT DETAILS

Publisher: Business and Technical Communication Services Limited
Pub. Date: 19th July 2006
Catalog: Book
Media: Perfect Paperback
Format: Audiobook
Number Of Pages: 140
Ean: 9780955330001
Isbn: 0955330009

ABOUT THIS BOOK

USER REVIEWS

Great Stuff
~ Written on Nov 21, 2009. out of users found this review helpful.

I purchased the item about a month ago. The book is accompanied with two audio CDs. When I first looked at it, it looked too simple ... but don't let yourself misdirected due to the simple graphics. I have to say that THIS IS A GREAT STUFF.

If you want to have fun, consequent, all-round practise of the Standard British English (RP), this is the tool!

The actors on the CD are brilliant! The sound is built up very accurately: you start from the sound, then you practise words, then sentences and - in the last exercise - you have the opportunity to see a poem (!) filled with the specific sound. And this set of exercises takes no longer than a few minutes!

I can honestly recommend it.

oliveR

Help from the #1 book
~ Written on Nov 17, 2009. out of users found this review helpful.

This book helped me reduce my American accent.

Any foreigner knows that reducing your accent is hard work, and not a matter of theory or academic fashion. Get Rid of Your Accent is the #1 book by far. It has the most Amazon sales, the most Amazon reviews, and big displays in all the big bookshops in London and elsewhere. Why? Because it's the best.

The authors have degrees in phonetics and linguistics and lots of teaching experience. Why did they not write a dry academic textbook? Because it's not what most of us need.

There are some books labeled "advanced", and those are fine for a few people who are very advanced or who like theory. And there are some books with patronizing titles like "Ship or Sheep", as if we foreigners can't tell the difference. This is the only book by experts who really want to help readers get along in the UK. And it's a big success as a result. You'll see why when you buy it.

This book is similar to Ship or Sheep!
~ Written on Nov 1, 2009. 2 out of 3 users found this review helpful.

I am half-Russian, half-German speaker of English and I am working hard to reduce my accent. I fully agree with one of the reviewers who said that the book is disappointing in the sense that it is basically your regular beginner's pronunciation course, like Sheep or Ship, Three or Tree, served under a different title (to boost sales???).

It does NOT offer any advice on how words are linked in speech and how it affects their pronunciation, neither does it say anything on intonation, sentence stress depending on the type of sentence etc., i.e. information that is vital for advanced speakers.

There are proper accent training books for actors, such as the one published by Penny Dyer who provides speech training for actors and actresses. You can tell immediately that those are the books designed for professional actors as a larger portion of the material is dedicated to longer speeches that allow one to practice complex intonation, varying pace, enunciation and sentence stress.

Also, I found English Pronunciation in Use Advanced by Martin Hewings A LOT more helpful and thorough. After all, most intermediate and advanced speakers might be able to pronounce individual words well enough, but it is often tempo, intonation and word linkages in flowing speech that may give them away as non-native speakers.

Excellent
~ Written on Aug 9, 2009. 1 out of 2 users found this review helpful.

I am an actor and have been since the 1960s and I am also a Yorkshireman and although in the past I have managed sort of to disquise my accent for shows etc, I never quite knew how to pronounce certain words in a southern accent. I have recently bought this book and I have to say that I find it so very useful and I am slowly losing my Yorkshire accent. I certainly would recommend this book to anyone who wishes to adopt a RP accent. I never thought I would but I have and I did.
Now I am living in London it helps so much and I now don't get quite so many people saying "You are not from down here are you?" But yes, an excellent book.

Maximise your time and get practical, effective results - easily and quickly!
~ Written on Aug 3, 2009. 4 out of 4 users found this review helpful.

I found this book by chance on Amazon in early 2007. I was searching for a practical and effective "hands-on" book, since I was disappointed with the academic style of "English Pronunciation in Use". To be fair
"Pronunciation in Use" is an excellent book, full of information for the students who want to progress in the study of English phonetics and phonology, but it's even too rich in details for most of non-native speakers of English who are still struggling with their pronunciation and are searching for something "practical" that can give "quick results". Many people (who would otherwise benefit from studying pronunciation) cannot simply be bothered to study the phonetic symbols, and they just think that good pronunciation is all about that: plainly wrong, because it can be much easier and fun!

This book is compact and easy to use with its 42 short lessons, each devoted to a single phoneme.
For each phoneme, a list of words containing the target sound, a list of sentences, a few verses, a few tongue-twisters and some articulation exercises. You can concentrate directly on the phonemes which pose problems you may experience as a native speaker of a particular language, and a reference in this sense is provided in the appendix.

Very simply, download the lessons onto your mp3 player, and listen to them (one part of the lesson at time!) again and again: five minutes in the morning, five minutes in the evening, for a couple of days or more.
The more you listen to, the better your pronunciation becomes, because you "get a feeling" of how words should be pronounced. After the listening phase, try to repeat after the tape as many times as you can: again, practice makes perfect! A bit every day is much better that a lot only once a week, so try to be constant and all your efforts will be repaid. You'll soon see that "the right pronunciation" will come perfectly natural to you.
Of course, I've just described the way I used the book: the authors recommend a more thorough approach, but I think that all depends on how already "good" your pronunciation already is! Typical is the case when you CAN already pronounce a difficult word - or series of words - containing a difficult phoneme when "isolated", but you CAN'T when you speak at normal speed: in this case, you'll see that your rate of progress will be much quicker.

The plus points are that you can study pronunciation whenever and wherever you are (during your commuting time, for example). Another very nice feature is that the verses and tongue-twisters are a bit silly and very amusing, so you won't get bored!

This book has been criticised for offering too little theory, and for not dedicating time to intonation exercises.
Bearing in mind that this is what I would call a very practical "exercise" book, I can say out of my personal experience that, along the pronunciation features, you will absorb also many intonation patterns, because of the many longer examples that are present. Anyway, you would want to work on your intonation only after your pronunciation of single phonemes has been sorted out! So maybe a "Get rid of your accent - Part2" with a focus on more advanced features of pronunciation would be welcomed by more advanced and experienced learners.

Since English is the official language in international business, it's especially important to develop a clear pronunciation: the aim should not be being able to "talk like the Queen", of course, but to be easily understood by other non-native speakers talking business. Everybody who often needs to take part in meetings and above all make frequent use of the phone will surely agree. An idea would be writing a book similar to this one but with a vocabulary focused on the vocabulary of business: "Get rid of your accent in business" or something similar.

I think that this book offers exactly what the authors say in the presentation: a practical, intensive approach to developing an RP accent. If the (non-native English) student is dedicated enough, it can take three months to reduce their accent with excellent results (to the point that you might still sound non-native but your accent is not a giveaway of your nationality anymore!), but of course it all depends on your starting level.
I recommend this book to any student of English who is at least at upper-intermediate level.

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