accentamazing
Accent Amazing!
Do people misunderstand you when you speak? Are you annoyed by questions about where you’re from? You’ve come to the right place! Make your accent amazing is a podcast about accents, language, and linguistics. We’ll talk about what makes your pronunciation and accent sound non-native and how to improve it. While this podcast mainly deals with the English language, we will also talk about how your mother tongue influences your pronunciation and may even touch upon how to pronounce the sounds of other languages!
Author
accentamazing
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Podcast website
Latest episode
Jun 15, 2026
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Episodes
American Dialects: The Mid-Atlantic region (featuring Linguistics Professor David Wilson) 15.06.2026 24:09
Did you know that there isn't just a single "American English" but several? In today's episode, I talk with Dr. David Wilson, a former Linguistics classmate of mine during undergrad who has since gotten his PhD. We talk about various dialects of the American Mid-Atlantic region and how they differ from dialects around the country and the world.
Why you sound the same in every language 30.09.2025 13:42
When someone has an accent, why can we often tell his/her origin? And why is it that we can hear that person’s origin no matter what language they speak? Why can we tell a French accent in English or in Spanish or in Chinese? More fundamentally, why can we even hear accents? In this episode, I analyze a content creator who created a humorous take on the same Chinese phrase but said in various acce...
Why don’t dictionaries don’t give the exact pronunciation? 23.07.2025 10:55
When you check a word in the dictionary, the transcription it gives is not the full picture. It's just the general reading. If you were to read it exactly as it was transcribed in the dictionary, people would understand you, but you would in no way have a native accent. But why? In this episode, let's find out some reasons why dictionaries can't and won't give you the full phonetic pronunciation o...
Analyzing a Polish AI influencer’s accent (vowel length, final devoicing, slavic voicing) 02.07.2025 12:20
I found a Polish AI influencer that speaks with a pretty convincing Polish-accented English. Let’s analyze her accentǃ Learn about how Polish vowels differ from English vowels, and how Slavic consonants behave in different waysǃ Join the free Amazing Accenteers Discord community https://discord.gg/N9FDjxS7aB
Contract "Not" to sound more natural 11.06.2025 10:30
"Not" — just three little letters, but one of the most common words in English. And yet, many non-native speakers pronounce it in a way that sounds unnatural. In this episode, we break down why that happens, how native speakers actually use and pronounce "not" (hint: they almost always contract it), and how mastering this tiny word can make a huge difference in how natural your English sounds. We'...
"Can" or "Can't" - Why people keep mishearing you 22.05.2025 11:50
Do people keep mishearing you say "can't" when you say "can"? Are you unsure if you're even pronouncing it correctly? That's probably because there are TWO pronunciations of "can"- the most common version and the less common version, and you're probably using the less common version when you should be using the other version. In this episode, I'll teach you how and when to use the right form!
The two types of "that" - when and how to pronounce them 08.05.2025 7:34
The word "that" is a super common word, yet many English learners stress it incorrectly, especially if their native tongue is a language with a rhythm that's different from English's. Speakers of syllable-timed languages such as Spanish, French, Polish, Chinese languages, and other East Asian languages, will pronounce it as the full version but it is often pronounced as a reduced version. In this...
Voicing /b, d, g/ sounds if your language lacks them (e.g. Chinese accents) 28.04.2025 16:16
A subtle feature of certain accents is the lack of /b, d, g/ sounds, the voiced counterpart to /p, t, k/. In addition, various languages devoice /b, d, g/ sounds as a feature of their accent in English. In this episode we examine what voicing is and how to do it so you can sound more native when speaking English and other languages with these sounds you may lack
Affrication: why TR and DR are not pronounced how you think they are 15.04.2025 17:39
In many languages the letter sequences "tr" and "dr" are fairly simple: it's just a /t/ or /d/ sound followed by an /r/ sound. In English? Not so. Instead, these sounds "affricate", changing to a whole other sound. In today's episode, let's learn what affrication is, show you how to do it, and learn about how this is actually natural process in many languages historically and presently.
Is changing your accent betraying your culture? 13.04.2025 20:54
Is improving your accent a betrayal of your culture—or just a form of adaptation? In this episode, I dive into the complex relationship between language, identity, and mindset. From stories about my Russian language partner, my British ex, and a college confrontation over pronunciation, to my own struggles with Cantonese and shifting accents, we explore what it really means to change the way we sp...
Aspirated consonants in English (how to do them and why you need them) 07.04.2025 20:08
Lack of aspiration is one of the biggest non-native accent features that English learners lack, especially those who speak Slavic or Romance languagesǃ In this episode, learn how to make this sound and where it occursǃ
Pronunciation vs Accent 06.04.2025 15:07
What is the difference between pronunciation and accent? In today's episode, we will learn how they differ and how it matters to you if you want to speak in a more easily understandable way, or even if you want to pass as a native speaker of your target language!
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