Are you dropping your volume at the end of sentences?
It is normal to soften your volume at the end of a thought, but don’t trail your sentences into oblivion. Assess your volume by recording yourself and checking to make sure you can hear the last words of your sentences. Practice speaking or reading aloud with conscious attention on lessening the decibel drop. Use these practice sentences:
“Let’s meet in the lobby of the downtown Marriott.”
“Sarah James was finally promoted to regional manager.”
In these examples, if you don’t keep your volume up, you’ll be swallowing your main point.
Are you jumbling words together?
Some degree of assimilation, or blending sounds and words together, is normal in conversational speech. An example of assimilation is the phrase, “How are you?” The ow sound at the end of how naturally blends into the a in are, so the phrase sounds more like “Hower you?”
When sounds and words blend too much, clarity collapses in a condition specialists call over assimilation. Over assimilation makes it difficult for a listener to tell if you said “at you” or “ah choo,” “we can” or “weekend.”
You can find out if you tend to jumble your words by listening to a five-minute sample of a telephone call or conversation you recorded. If possible, ask a friend or relative to listen with you to provide objective feedback. Note any words or phrases that were difficult to understand. Pay particular attention to long words, names, and the ends of sentences.
If you are jumbling more than twice a minute, you should make an effort to reduce the frequency. Here is a list or words and phrases that are frequently assimilated. Practice saying them incorrectly, then correctly for contrast. Add additional phrases to the list as you observe yourself in everyday talking.
cancha can’t you
cudja could you
generly generally
havta have to
howzitgon how’s it going
I dunno I don’t know
probly probably
shuda should have
uzhly usually
wanna want to
wuncha wouldn’t you