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I was very fluent in English while I was still learning. After I got comfortable with it, I stutter at the same rate as in Spanish (native)...
English is my first language but I stutter less in Spanish. I sort of attribute it to the fact that there's less pressure for me to be a "perfect" speaker when it's not my native language. I can take ...
Well actually I didnt really "learn" it. I'm a Korean who has Korean parents and just happen to grow up in the US. So naturally I can speak Korean and English well. Although I have tried learning Japa...
How hard was it to learn another langue? I've been wanting to try but I feel like my stutter would get in the way too much ...
It's very common. Even the most severe stutterer can talk fluently in unison or when repeating words....
Reading out loud is a great way to practice. Read slowly for about 30 minutes every day. This helps slow down your speech. Also, consider using the technique called phrasing. It's when you pause after...
Books I Read - That I Highly Recommend!
Books I Read - That I Highly Recommend! This is a long overdue post from me. People here know me to share information that is somewhat unique to this subreddit. It's finally time to tell you all whe...
It affects me when playing music sometimes. My finger will stutter on the first note of a phrase like when I'm starting a sentence. And I get the same feeling in my head as I do when speech stuttering...
I stuttered horribly all throughout my childhood and into high school. I did seem to just simply grow out of it as I entered adulthood. I casually saw a speech pathologist once a week or so for a year...
Thank you for reading. The dog transforms into a person to accentuate the fact that the person was speaking fluently with their dog, which helps to illustrate that they can speak fluently at all. Man...
That's an interesting observation. From my understanding, it would only be when there's a flow of air that you'd struggle to speak. The same way that you'd be fluent when saying it to yourself, but ...
I didn't start speaking until I was three years old and have stuttered since that age. I've heard a lot of experiences with people saying that they didn't learn to speak as well or as quickly as other...
I have had similar experiences. I'm from Glasgow and have a really strong Glaswegian accent. I travel a lot, and when abroad and speaking to people whose first language isn't English, I have to speak ...
In school I did my whole part in a play with the Bullwinkle voice for this reason. Stuttering for me has a fair bit to do with how often I'm saying certain sounds. The more common sounds become harde...
What a coincidence. I'm American and speaking in a British accent helps me. I've particularly been mimicking the speech patterns of the little girl in [this video](https://youtu.be/xh9HK9HoRBw). ...
It's a known phenomenon among stutterers. Same thing applies to speaking in song. You don't stutter at all. If I speak with a redneck hillbilly accent I'll be fluent as ever. But in can't keep that up...
Speaking in a different accent helps my speech?
Speaking in a different accent helps my speech? Hi, I have no idea if this is the right sub for this, if it's not please tell me where! I'm so perplexed by this... So for a while now I've have probl...
Same here, I used to stutter at times then I rapped along to Em for a while and now I never stutter unless I've been up for a day or two....
Ed Sheeran says listening to Eminem and rapping along with his songs is what helped him get rid of his stammer. http://www.mtv.com/news/2182430/ed-sheeran-eminem-stutter/...
Well, I didn't even know this sub existed, I don't have a stutter or anything but, I have a friend who gets bad sometimes. I guess my advice to this would be practice as much as you can. What could al...