After a bit, he found me in the kitchen working on fixing lunch and said; "Grandma! I just read, Fox in Socks and my tongue is NOT numb!!!" If you have not read this classic book lately, on the back cover it asks, "Is Your Tongue Numb?" My sweet grandson was pretty happy he had read all those tongue twisters out loud and did not end up with a numb tongue! It made this grandma happy, too, and remembering this today it makes me happy again - because of the wonderful memory and because today is International Tongue Twister Contest Day!
National Today (dot) com says - "International Tongue Twister Contest Day has the goal to celebrate good-natured tongue twister contests." Let's look at a few tongue-twister fun facts and then ways to enjoy this with the children you love. Did you know . . .
- Tongue twisters are phrases that are difficult to pronounce by design. They function as a word game alongside exercises to improve pronunciation and articulation.
- John Harris published his book “Peter Piper’s Practical Principles of Plain and Perfect Pronunciation,” which included a tongue twister for every letter of the alphabet.
- The term ‘tongue twister’ was first coined in 1895. A considerable portion of tongue twisters rely on alternating similar but distinct phonemes to create the difficulty in articulation.
- The world's toughest tongue-twister is - “Pad kid poured curd pulled cod,” as declared by MIT.
- Some easier tongue twisters include “She sees cheese” and “He threw three balls.”
- The tongue is the only muscle that works without any support from the skeleton.
You will find more information about International Tongue Twister Contest Day at this link.
So, how might you celebrate today? Whether the children you love live near or far, connect and share some tongue twisters! Have your own contest to see who is able to say them the best - have fun together, this is a great day to do so!
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