Thursday, October 1, 2015

Write A Tongue Twister

Language twisters are a favourite liveliness among children. They defiance children to enunciate and expect approximately their passage as they say and, Sure, they're enjoyable. Succeed the steps below to put in writing your own Language tornado with or for your kids.


Instructions


1.2. Read examples of tongue twisters (see Resources) to familiarize yourself with the format. Famous tongue twisters include "Sally sells seashells by the seashore," and "Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers."3.


Explain alliteration. Alliteration is the repetition of consonant sounds at the basis of contents or stressed syllables in a phrase. It is the pivotal ingredient of an adequate tongue twister.


Pick a consonant to use in your tongue twister. The easiest are b, d, l, m, p, s or t. Tongue twisters tell a story, which means they have a character. Write down a name for the character of your tongue twister that starts with the consonant you chose.


4. Determine the following, using the consonant you chose, about your tongue twister character: what the character did or does, where and when your character performs this task, and a number of reasons why.


5. Include at least one noun (your character), one verb, one adverb and several adjectives to make your tongue twister more interesting.


6. Put the information you came up with in Step 4 and the words you listed in Step 5 into a story and complete sentence format. Tongue twisters tell silly stories.