Arts & Literature1 min ago
Mumbling Generation
20 Answers
Has anyone else noticed how the young ones of today mumble when speaking.hardly moving their mouths.Plus,no intonation just one long stream of "mm.mm.mm."
Maybe,I notice it more as I was an English teacher abroad and thus had to speak loudly and clearly.
I find it so irritating .when my grandson speaks to me...I can`t understand a word he says!!!!
Surely ,they should teach them in schools to speak properly and parents too.
Maybe,I notice it more as I was an English teacher abroad and thus had to speak loudly and clearly.
I find it so irritating .when my grandson speaks to me...I can`t understand a word he says!!!!
Surely ,they should teach them in schools to speak properly and parents too.
Answers
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No best answer has yet been selected by kloofnek. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.you are right kloofnek and back to the other thing - met my neighbour's daughter last week who approached me and her mother talking on the street - she walked up mumbling to the mother as to take baby out of her mother's arms - meanwhile I would have liked a little thanks as to the money I put into a wedding card for her about 3 weeks ago - and didn't go to the wedding. No, nothing at all. Just blankety blank.
I'm convinced the "mumbling teenager" trope goes back more than a few decades. Usually used to indicate the character is lacking in self-confidence generally or just not proud of themselves with regard to something a bit more specific.
e.g.: - Gran enquires as to how well they are getting on at school/have they got a girlfriend/boyfriend yet?
Teenager responds with "wulllwudvebtmmmmbbblbllbbermmmumbblewurr", which - in all probability - denotes failure to live up to gran's expectations.
The cognitive effort of simultaneously producing a stream of words without hesitation (where hesitancy leads the average listener to deduce that a lie is being formulated) whilst also thinking up excuses for aforementioned failure is enough to overload the typical, preoccupied, teen brain, resulting in muffled indistinct speech.
:O)
e.g.: - Gran enquires as to how well they are getting on at school/have they got a girlfriend/boyfriend yet?
Teenager responds with "wulllwudvebtmmmmbbblbllbbermmmumbblewurr", which - in all probability - denotes failure to live up to gran's expectations.
The cognitive effort of simultaneously producing a stream of words without hesitation (where hesitancy leads the average listener to deduce that a lie is being formulated) whilst also thinking up excuses for aforementioned failure is enough to overload the typical, preoccupied, teen brain, resulting in muffled indistinct speech.
:O)
"when my grandson speaks to me...I can`t understand a word he says!!!!"
Maybe its a combination of their mumbling and your hearing in old age.
Get an ear trumpet.
http:// johnesi mpson.c om/imag es/eart rumpet_ dual_wa cky_03. jpg
Maybe its a combination of their mumbling and your hearing in old age.
Get an ear trumpet.
http://
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