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Here are some exercises based on the six areas English learners should consider practicing:

1. Intonation:
- Read short passages aloud and focus on varying your intonation to convey different emotions (e.g., excitement, sadness, surprise).
- Practice asking and answering questions with rising and falling intonation patterns.

2. Stress:
- Choose a list of words and practice saying them aloud, emphasizing the correct syllable.
- Try stressing different words in a sentence to see how it changes the meaning and emphasis.

3. Vowel sounds:
- Listen to recordings of native speakers pronouncing words with different vowel sounds, and try to mimic their pronunciation.
- Practice minimal pairs exercises where you contrast words with similar vowel sounds (e.g., ship/sheep, bit/beat).

4. Consonant sounds:
- Focus on pronouncing challenging consonant sounds in isolation and in words (e.g., "th," "r," "zh").
- Practice tongue twisters that target specific consonant sounds you find difficult.

5. Word linking:
- Read sentences aloud and focus on smoothly linking words together without pausing between them.
- Listen to natural speech and transcribe sentences, paying attention to where words are linked together.

6. Reduced forms:
- Practice using contractions in sentences (e.g., "I'm," "you'll," "they've") and pay attention to how they change the rhythm of your speech.
- Listen to recordings of native speakers using weak forms in connected speech and try to imitate them.

You can incorporate these exercises into your daily practice routine to gradually improve your pronunciation skills in each of these areas.



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Here are some exercises based on the six areas English learners should consider practicing:

1. Intonation:
- Read short passages aloud and focus on varying your intonation to convey different emotions (e.g., excitement, sadness, surprise).
- Practice asking and answering questions with rising and falling intonation patterns.

2. Stress:
- Choose a list of words and practice saying them aloud, emphasizing the correct syllable.
- Try stressing different words in a sentence to see how it changes the meaning and emphasis.

3. Vowel sounds:
- Listen to recordings of native speakers pronouncing words with different vowel sounds, and try to mimic their pronunciation.
- Practice minimal pairs exercises where you contrast words with similar vowel sounds (e.g., ship/sheep, bit/beat).

4. Consonant sounds:
- Focus on pronouncing challenging consonant sounds in isolation and in words (e.g., "th," "r," "zh").
- Practice tongue twisters that target specific consonant sounds you find difficult.

5. Word linking:
- Read sentences aloud and focus on smoothly linking words together without pausing between them.
- Listen to natural speech and transcribe sentences, paying attention to where words are linked together.

6. Reduced forms:
- Practice using contractions in sentences (e.g., "I'm," "you'll," "they've") and pay attention to how they change the rhythm of your speech.
- Listen to recordings of native speakers using weak forms in connected speech and try to imitate them.

You can incorporate these exercises into your daily practice routine to gradually improve your pronunciation skills in each of these areas.

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Start with a fresh view of investing strategy. The combination of risks and fads this quarter looks to be topping. That means the future is ready to move in.Likely, there will not be a wholesale shift. Company actions will aim to benefit from economic growth, inflationary pressures and a return of market-determined interest rates. In turn, all of that should drive the stock market and investment returns higher.

Spiking bond yields driving sharp losses in tech stocks

A spike in interest rates since the start of the year has accelerated a rotation out of high-growth technology stocks and into value stocks poised to benefit from a reopening of the economy. The Nasdaq has fallen more than 10% over the past month as the Dow has soared to record highs, with a spike in the 10-year US Treasury yield acting as the main catalyst. It recently surged to a cycle high of more than 1.60% after starting the year below 1%. But according to Jim Paulsen, the Leuthold Group's chief investment strategist, rising interest rates do not represent a long-term threat to the stock market. Paulsen expects the 10-year yield to cross 2% by the end of the year. A spike in interest rates and its impact on the stock market depends on the economic backdrop, according to Paulsen. Rising interest rates amid a strengthening economy "may prove no challenge at all for stocks," Paulsen said.

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