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SPEECH DRILLS MARIA MARTHA MANETTE APOSTOL MADRID, Ed.D. Professor Panpacific University North Philippines Urdaneta City, Pangasinan, Philippines

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Page 1: Speech Drills

SPEECH DRILLS

MARIA MARTHA MANETTE APOSTOL MADRID,

Ed.D.Professor

Panpacific University North PhilippinesUrdaneta City, Pangasinan, Philippines

Page 2: Speech Drills

Drill 1

Word Drill

Page 3: Speech Drills

Race, pave, shakeBale, tale, whaleBare, hare, mareTask, Dan, ladCall, halt, talkPart, star, barnRain, praise, bait

Page 4: Speech Drills

Hail, pail, failPair, hair, airHaul, maul, causeRaw, lawn, sawSay, hay, dayBe, he, meHere, mere, sphereBend, lens, tenseCell, delve, shelves

Page 5: Speech Drills

Her, nerve, herbEach, heave, leanThread, head, readyHeal, meal, sealFear, gear, nearEarn, pearl, earthKeep, sheet, tree

Page 6: Speech Drills

Heel, peel, reelBeer, cheer, peerEither, receiptFew, pew, viewFreight, feint, veinThey, obey, conveyPie, strive, arrivalDig, ring, dishSlight, child, thigh

Page 7: Speech Drills

Bill, fill, tillFir, thirst, stirChief, niece, believeField, shield, yieldTier, pier, fierceAgo, no, soFox, hop, GodLong, born, crossBolt, toll, fold

Page 8: Speech Drills

Coal, boast, toastToo, woo, zooJoint, choice, noiseHood, book, goodBoom, fool, soonDoor, floorBout, doubt, cloudBoulder, pour, fourCould, should, would

Page 9: Speech Drills

Raw, rowAnnoy, joy, destroyMuse, cur, duringBut, hull, jumpFry, apply, amplify

Page 10: Speech Drills

DRILL 2

Foreign Language Words

Page 11: Speech Drills

Tete`-a-tete´ Private conversation; familiar interview or conference of two persons.

Camouflage The method or result of concealing personnel or equipment from an enemy by

making them appear to be part of the natural surroundings.

Chanteuse A woman singer, especially a nightclub singer.

Reservoir A natural or artificial pond or lake used for the storage and regulation of water;

A receptacle or chamber for storing a fluid.

Fiasco A complete failure

Abattoir A slaughterhouse.

Entourage A group of attendants or associates;

a retinue.

Page 12: Speech Drills

Repartee A swift, witty reply.

Menu A list of the dishes to be served or available for a meal.

Gourmet A connoisseur of fine food and drink.

Sauté To fry lightly in fat in a shallow open pan.

Coup de grace The blow that kills (usually mercifully).

Rendezvous A meeting at a prearranged time and place.

Lingerie Women's underwear.

Rouge A red or pink cosmetic for coloring the cheeks or lips.

Façade The face of a building, especially the principal face.

Champagne A sparkling white wine made from a blend of grapes.

Page 13: Speech Drills

Chalet A wooden dwelling with a sloping roof and widely overhanging eaves, common in

Switzerland and other Alpine regions; A cottage or lodge built in this style.

Chic Conforming to the current fashion; stylish: chic clothes; a chic boutique;

Adopting or setting current fashions and styles; sophisticated: chic, well-dressed young executives.

Buffet A counter or table from which meals or refreshments are served.

A La Carte also à la carte; With a separate price for each item on the menu.

A La Mode In the current fashion or style  

Coquette A woman who makes teasing sexual or romantic overtures; a flirt.

Page 14: Speech Drills

Vis-à-vis Face to face with; opposite to; Compared with; In relation to.

Genre A type or class; category of artistic composition, as in music or literature, marked by a distinctive style, form, or content.

Liquor An alcoholic beverage made by distillation

rather than by fermentation.Sachet A small packet of perfumed powder used

to scent clothes, as in trunks or closets.

Chemise A woman's loose, shirt like undergarment.

Bouquet A small cluster or arrangement of flowers.

Connoisseur A person with expert knowledge or training, especially in the fine arts.

Page 15: Speech Drills

Finesse Refinement and delicacy of performance, execution, or artisanship.

Crochet Needlework made by looping

thread with a hooked needle.Faux Pas A social blunder.

Coup d'é·tat The sudden overthrow of a government by a usually small group of persons in or previously in positions of authority.

Milieu An environment or a setting.

Esprit de corps A common spirit of comradeship, enthusiasm, and devotion

to a cause among the members of a group.

Page 16: Speech Drills

DRILL 3

Sentence Drill

Page 17: Speech Drills

1. Black block of wood and pairs of socks are in the sacks.

2. For what are the pen in the pan and the gem in the jam.

3. Is it true Ric, that the rich in this area are hard to reach.

4. Peggy’s piggy bank is on Billy’s belly.

5. The fool was full of delight as he washed his suit full of soot.

Page 18: Speech Drills

6. Paul and Pol found a ball and a bowl inside a hole in the hall.

7. The person who lurked like a lark is a person, isn’t he?

8. Ken, bring your cane down and yell for the Yales.

9. Don’t fail to pull the pail full of paint, Ted.

10. Big Vic is both a valet and a ballet dancer.

Page 19: Speech Drills

11. The thin tin sheets cannot be made into sheaths.

12. There! Don’t you dare wipe off the lather on the ladder.

13. Zed said, I see your not properly written Zosimo.

14. Don’t shut the sun! Sit on your sheet and have a tan.

15. Which witch wails like a whale.16. Did you ever hate to hear the

noise of all those who ate their meals in the hall?

Page 20: Speech Drills

DRILL 4

Tongue Twisters

Page 21: Speech Drills

1. A big black bug bit a big black bear, made a big black bear bleed.

2. Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers. If Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers, where is the peck of pickled peppers Peter Piper picked.

3. Thomas Tattertoot took taut to tie ten twigs to two tall tress.

Page 22: Speech Drills

4. Double bubblegum bubbles double. Non-double bubble gum doesn’t bubble double.

5. A sniffer of snuff is enough for a sniff for the snuffsnifeter.

6. Likeable Lilian loves lovely luminous aluminum linoleum.

7. Around the rugged rock the ragged rascal ran.

Page 23: Speech Drills

8. Harry Hugh hid the heel behind the high hill. If Harry Hugh hid the heel behind the high hill, where is the heel Harry Hugh hid?

9. I never felt feel flat like that felt feel.

10. Vern verse is well verse in every wordy verb verse.

11. Military Malarkey makes monstrous madmen into maligned martyrs.

Page 24: Speech Drills

12. If a woodchuck would chuck wood, how much wood would a woodchuck chuck, if a woodchuck would? But if a woodchuck would chuck wood, how much wood would a woodchuck chuck, if a woodchuck could and would chuck wood?

13. Suzy Schell sells sea shells on the seashore.

Page 25: Speech Drills

14. Moses suppose his toeses are roses, but Moses supposes amiss Moses knowses histoesis aren’t roses as Moses Supposes.

15. What whim led Whitey White to whittle near a wharf where a whale wheel and whirl?

Page 26: Speech Drills

DRILL 5

Speech Choir

Page 27: Speech Drills

WE BELIEVE in the God-given creativepower of speech, in dynamism unending,

and in perfect self-expression; the orderliness of ideas, the clarity of

thought, the sincerity of feeling, therichness of visualization, and the perfect

coordination of speech and action.

A SPEECH POWER CREEDO

Page 28: Speech Drills

WE BELIEVE in the internal development

and generation of confidence, in thevibrance of personality, in the

manifestation of poise, and in the fruitful rewards of mastered

speech.

Page 29: Speech Drills

And WE BELIEVE that thru out god-given

power of speech, we will be heard. InBeing heard, we will be understood.

In being understood, we will befollowed.

Page 30: Speech Drills

We now become instruments of truth and

the “light of the “world”.

ANS SO IT IS.

Page 31: Speech Drills

DRILL 6

Rhyme Songs

Page 32: Speech Drills

Twinkle, twinkle, little star,How I wonder what you are.Up above the world so high,Like a diamond in the sky.Twinkle, twinkle, little star,How I wonder what you are!

TWINKLE TWINKLE LITTLE STAR

Page 33: Speech Drills

Jack and Jill

Jack and Jill went up the hill To fetch a pail of water. Jack fell down and broke his

crown, And Jill came tumbling after.

Page 34: Speech Drills

Row, row, row your boatGently Down the stream.Merrily, merrily, merrily, merrily,Life is but a dream.

Row row your boat

Page 35: Speech Drills

Reference/s

Ursua, Leticia B. Simplified Speech Lessons in English. Las Pinas City, Philippines: C.M. Valdez Print and Sign, 2004.

Paterno, Adelaida. Handbook for Oral Readers of English. Manila, Philippines: Rex Book Store, 2003.

Dictionary, Thesaurus, and Translations - The Free Dictionary www.thefreedictionary.com/Dictionary.htm Online Dictionary - Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus, Encyclopedia; translations into Spanish, French, German, and Italian; examples from classic literature; ...

Page 36: Speech Drills