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Ken Xiao M.S.

Talk English: The Secret To Speak English Like A Native In 6 Months For Busy People, Learn Spoken English From The Success

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  • allsafehas quoted7 years ago
    Look at me in these two situations:
    1. If I can speak English like a native speaker, I have a college degree in information technology, I have a graduate degree in space studies, I live in the United States of America, a free society where everything is possible.
  • allsafehas quoted7 years ago
    Here is the formula!
    It's called Myfluentenglish Formula. Myfluentenglish Formula has three steps.
    Step 1: Set Your Goal
    Step 2: Take Action
    Step 3: Follow Through
    Step 1: Set Your Goal
    Setting your goal is deciding what you want.
  • allsafehas quoted7 years ago
    Clarity is power. The more clear you are on what you want, the more precise your brain takes you to your target. You must know exactly what you want so that you know exactly where to go.
    When I used Myfluentenglish Formula to learn to speak English, I decided that I wanted to speak fluent English. With the target set in place, I started working to reach the target. I worked only on my spare times, but with a target set in sight, I aimed at the target and knew exactly where to go.
    If you decide to speak fluent English, go for it. If you decide to speak English like a native, go for it! These are very clear targets.
    Once you've decided on exactly what you want, it's critical that you continue focusing on your target. That's "focusing" on your target.
  • allsafehas quoted7 years ago
    Three months later...
    As you may have guessed, I recorded my speaking again and the results were surprising! My accent was gone, my voice was clear, my pronunciation was correct, and my flow was smooth. In other words, my English was fluent!
    It was a total of six months that I had spent practicing my English, but the result was overwhelming.
  • allsafehas quoted7 years ago
    The energy flow and the way of speaking make a huge difference. To do this, you must open your throat, let the air flow through, and talk with energy from your stomach. You should feel your stomach tighten when you talk.
    So bring your energy up all the way from your stomach, let the air flow from your lungs
  • allsafehas quoted7 years ago
    Three months later...
    I decided to record my own speaking to see how much I had improved because I had heard some people (at least three that I remembered) saying that I spoke good English. So I wrote down some daily conversational phrases and recorded my voice saying them. To my surprise, I DID speak what I wrote down pretty fluently! I could still hear my accent but the accent was much lighter. Compared to other ESL learners, my English was even better!
    I got excited about the results and decided to slightly adjust my approach.
  • allsafehas quoted7 years ago
    I was even almost able to recite everything on the tape including words, sentences, tones, flow...
    The next week, I recorded a new tape and did the same things for the rest of the week. I did it for a month and mastered four tapes of English taught by native speakers. On week five, I went back to practice the previous four weeks' English with one tape per day. For the remaining days of the week, I practiced the tapes that I had the hardest time with.
    Within a month, I'd mastered speaking four tapes of English taught all by native speakers. Each tape was 60 minutes long.
  • allsafehas quoted7 years ago
    I started by whispering the news, but then I began saying it louder. New York subway trains were as noisy as thunders, and thanks to that! The noise created the perfect opportunity for me to work on my strategy – even the person sitting next to me couldn't hear what I was talking about. So I got to practiced the entire train rides both ways.
    In the beginning, there were lots of words I didn't understand, but I repeated them anyway
  • allsafehas quoted7 years ago
    I repeated what I heard even if I couldn't catch up. Often when there was a word or a phrase I couldn't say, I would rewind the tape and listen to it again. This time, I only listened to it. If I still couldn't say it, I would rewind the tape again and listen again until I could say it. Then I would repeat the word or phrase once, twice, three times … until I could correctly say the new word or phrase. It helped a lot! The next time I heard that same word or phrase, I could correctly say it.
  • allsafehas quoted7 years ago
    Instead of picking books written by native speakers, all the books I picked this time were written by successful non-native English speakers who had made their English fluent
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