is it famous in english country?? - /bant/ (#22890037) [Archived: 1242 hours ago]

Anonymous ID: zmSnFtpXJapan
7/2/2025, 2:41:31 PM No.22890037
Screenshot_2025-07-02-21-17-58-99_f9ee0578fe1cc94de7482bd41accb329
were most of children in english cunt hearing this??
Replies: >>22890169
Anonymous ID: zmSnFtpXJapan
7/2/2025, 2:50:14 PM No.22890057
This video is me reading it out loud, but how does it sound to people from English-speaking countries?

https://youtube.com/shorts/wZxZfdvS_x8?si=I2yMVAjyCVcvtru5
Replies: >>22891990
Anonymous ID: zmSnFtpXJapan
7/2/2025, 3:23:45 PM No.22890118
how about that
Anonymous ID: wun1gCR5Denmark
7/2/2025, 3:31:00 PM No.22890126
I think Japan should be a puppet state of xin jinping
Anonymous ID: xHTsD8YUUnited States
7/2/2025, 4:02:22 PM No.22890169
>>22890037 (OP)
yes it is common, it's what we refer to as a tongue twister
はい、それはありふれたことです
われわれは 舌のツイスターと呼びます
Anonymous ID: 9LG22FTfUnited States
7/2/2025, 10:29:01 PM No.22891973
i'm certainly aware of it but i can't remeber hearing it any time recently. the "she sells sea-shells" one is far more popular
Anonymous ID: OE2twoZ6United Kingdom
7/2/2025, 10:46:40 PM No.22891990
>>22890057
pronunciation is good—your voiced dental fricative on "THis butter's bitter" is completely comprehensible and fine, but is slightly dropped to my ear; go harder on the 'TH' sound (with your tongue touching your teeth and using your vocal cords at the same time)
enunciation is very good, well done
the pitch you're speaking with is a little high

good work