Enunciation in a sentence as a noun

> There's no "wrong" enunciation in linguistics though. Yes there is.

Your enunciation sounds a little mushy, by which I mean your words seem to slightly blur together. 2.

There is a specific accent that they pick up, which basically amounts to a lack of enunciation. Now, all that being said.

Words offer the means to meaning, and for those who will listen, the enunciation of truth. And the truth is, there is something terribly wrong with this country, isn't there?

Words offer the means \n to meaning, and for those who will listen, the enunciation \n of truth. And the truth is, there is something terribly \n wrong with this country, isn't there?

The mailing list can't help you with your enunciation, but it can help you turn a one paragraph thought into a structured outline.

A good net control operator or phone contester never has to say a call sign twice because his enunciation was bad.

As long as you are accomplishing this, your volume, enunciation, tonality, etc. doesn't matter.

I've found that Google's speech to text works surprisingly well for me, and I'm not the very best at clarity and enunciation. I generally know what it's going to mess up in advance so I can just fix that.

Anyone else think his "presentation" enunciation is strikingly similar to that of pg?

Being able to read along took the stress out of having to cope with enunciation and understanding meaning at the same time. Translated subtitles on the other hand were just a distraction.

Interestingly Eminem whom I would have thought would rank pretty highly for his clever method of word bending and enunciation is only in the middle of the scale. Still a whole lot better than some of his counterparts, but still surprising.

The video needs to be redone with better enunciation and a presentation volume as if speaking to room not a pillow mate. I am somewhat hard of hearing in one ear and it took me three tries to get the above URL. It looks to be worth investigating as a site search tool.

I could get the same results from Dragon's voice recognition software with careful enunciation and a bit of practice 10 years ago. It is also well-known how to get very good accuracy on a restricted dictionary.

As far as enunciation, volume, thinking of the next sentence: I think the suggestions to try Toastmasters could be a great answer there. So I guess my suggestion is: empathy is what makes people approachable, so find an environment like sales or service, where empathy is tightly tied to the goal, as a place to practice it.

This can lead to amusing results in languages where enunciation, word choice or even choice in grammar forms are more strongly biased by a speaker's gender. Not that breaking down those barriers a little isn't interesting in its own right, of course, but depending on the language you should expose yourself to speakers from either gender to get the full range.

Pronunciation is also a problem: He showed a plucky disregard for the tones that Mandarin has—one tonal slip-up had him saying that Facebook boasts eleven mobile users instead of 1 billion—and his enunciation was roughly on par with the clarity possible when someone’s stepping on your face. Still, I'm impressed.

I haven't seen any research in this, but anecdotally I'm finding that the people who very connected to the Internet and not speaking to other people directly, are becoming more socially awkward and show lack of enunciation. These are things that aren't noticeable over the Internet when people type and read all day to each other.

While a strict interpretation of your statement technically evaluates as true, it’s worth noting that volume, enunciation and tonality can themselves carry information which alters the meaning of your communication.

Enunciation definitions

noun

the articulation of speech regarded from the point of view of its intelligibility to the audience

See also: diction