How to Understand Fast Speech in English - Improve English Comprehension
Welcome to Oxford Online English!
In this lesson, you can learn how to understand fast speech.
You’ll see how to understand fast English speakers more easily.
You’ll also get a simple, step-by-step plan to improve your ability to understand fast
Before we start, you should take a look at our website: Oxford Online English dot com.
You can use our free English lessons to practise, including many listening lessons.
You can also take online classes to improve your English with our professional teachers.
But now, let’s see one of the most useful things you can do if you want to understand
fast speech better in English.
Imagine a situation: you’re going to the airport to meet someone who’s arriving.
You’ve never met this person before, but you have a photo.
The photo does not look *anything* like the person you’re supposed to meet.
Will you be able to recognise this person?
There’s a similar connection between understanding spoken language and pronunciation.
If you don’t know how to pronounce words and sentences correctly, then you won’t
recognise them when you hear them.
More specifically, if you don’t know about the features of native English pronunciation,
then you’ll find it difficult to understand any natural speech.
So, what are these ‘features’ of native English pronunciation?
Let’s look at an example: ‘That house looks smaller from the outside.’
‘That house looks smaller from the outside.’
Even in this short sentence, a lot is happening.
First, the ‘t’ at the end of ‘that’ is generally not fully pronounced.
In British English, it would be reduced to a glottal ‘t’, which means that you start
pronouncing a /t/ sound, but you never fully release it.
In American English, the /t/ might also be softened to a /d/ sound.
Next, the words are all joined together.
‘House looks’ sounds like ‘how slooks’.
In fact, all of the words are linked, so that the whole sentence is pronounced as one sound.
‘From’ is pronounced weakly, so you say /frəm/ and not /frɒm/.
The last two words—‘the outside’—are linked by adding a /j/ sound in the middle:
There are many pronunciation points to be aware of here.
We won’t go into more detail, because we’ve covered many of these points in other videos.
However, here’s the main point: if you don’t know about these pronunciation features, you’ll
struggle to understand *any* English speech.
You might feel like all speech is “too fast”.
Actually, the speed might not be the problem.
Connected, fluent speech can sound much faster if you’re not aware of these pronunciation
You don’t need to be able to use these pronunciation features perfectly, but you should know about
them and be able to use them at least sometimes.
Then, you’ll find it much easier to understand native English at any speed.
The most important points are weak forms, linking, stress, and schwa sounds.
There are others, but if you have a good understanding of these four pronunciation topics, your listening
Check out our pronunciation videos for more details on these points.
If you want to go into more depth, we can recommend the Pronunciation in Use series
You can find links in the video description.
Working on your pronunciation is the most useful way to improve your ability to understand
fast English speech, but what else should you think about?
There’s a proverb in English: you have to learn to walk before you can learn to run.
In the same way, many English learners who say they can’t understand fast speech also
have problems understanding slower speech.
We hope it’s obvious that if you can’t understand slower speech well, then you’ll
struggle with faster speakers.
However, many English learners realise that they have difficulties understanding fast
speech, but don’t realise that they also have problems with slower speech.
First, you need to test your ability to understand slower speech.
To do this, you’ll need four things.
One: you need a video or audio file which is not too easy and not too difficult.
English textbooks often have listening exercises which are carefully designed for a specific
If you don’t know where to find good listening materials, then use English textbooks as a
We also have many listening lessons on our website: Oxford Online English dot com.
Two: you need a way to control the playback speed.
You can use a YouTube video, where you can use the speed controls to set the playback
speed to point seven-five or point five.
Or, you can use VLC media player, which has speed controls, so you can play something
at 90 per cent speed, 80 per cent, and so on.
VLC is probably better, because you can control the playback speed more precisely.
By the way, if you have other suggestions for tools to listen at variable speeds, let
Three: you need an accurate transcript of the audio or video.
For example, you could use a YouTube video which has subtitles, or a song where you have
Be careful with YouTube subtitles, as many of them are automatically generated, and these
Four: you need a pen and paper.
Your goal is to test how well you understand slow speech.
Adjust the playback speed until it feels easy to you.
Listen to a few sentences to get warmed up.
Next, pause the playback at the end of a sentence.
Listen to the next sentence, pause the playback, then write the sentence down.
Check against the written transcript.
If you’re using a song, then work in lines instead of sentences.
At this stage, you need to be really strict with yourself.
Double check what you’ve written against the transcript.
Count your mistakes: every missing word is one mistake, every wrong word is one mistake,
and every extra word is one mistake.
If you want, try it right now!
It’s a good experiment.
How many mistakes did you make?
If you made more than one mistake, then adjust the playback speed down, so that the audio
Listen to the next sentence and do the same.
Repeat until you find a speed where you can write down the sentence you heard without
This is an important step, because you need to build a base for your listening skills.
That means you need to be able to hear every word, and you need to be able to hold a sentence
in your head after you’ve heard it.
Again, it’s essential to be strict with yourself and pay attention to small details.
Actually, even making one or two mistakes is a problem.
Your aim is to write down the sentences without making any mistakes.
If you can’t do this even at slow playback speeds, then you need to find something easier
Find something which you can understand at 70 per cent or 80 per cent of full speed.
Remember that ‘understand’ means that you hear every word.
It’s not enough for this to understand the general meaning.
You need to hear every single word perfectly.
Take your time on this practice, and get it right.
Once you’re comfortable with this, you’re ready for the next step.
Actually, if you’ve done the exercise from part two, then you’ve already done the most
To understand faster speech, you do the same things, but increase the playback speed gradually.
Listen to one sentence, write it down, and check it carefully against the written transcript.
If you can get three sentences in a row 100 per cent right, then adjust the playback speed
On the other hand, if you make more than one mistake in a sentence, then adjust the playback
You have the same goal: you need to hear every single word.
Try to get to a playback speed of 120% or 130%.
If you can hear every word even at these speeds, then find something more challenging to practise
For this, you need to be patient.
If you do this regularly, you *will* make good progress, but your progress will not
There will be days and weeks where you don’t feel like you’re getting anywhere.
With any work like this, it’s better to do it little and often.
Start by doing ten to fifteen minutes of practice every day.
If you’re feeling motivated, go up to half an hour a day.
Don’t try to do too much; doing it regularly is the most important thing.
As with all listening practice, you should try to use a variety of listening sources.
Listen to different sources, on different topics, and with different speakers and accents.
This is the core of your training.
If you do this regularly, your ability to understand fast speech will improve quickly.
However, you have to be consistent, and you have to be strict with yourself regarding
Otherwise, you won’t get such good results.
There’s one more point you should think about to understand fast speech better.
There’s a feeling you get sometimes when you’re listening to a foreign language.
It’s that feeling when everything is coming too fast, there are too many words you don’t
know, and you’re fighting to keep up.
But, at some point things break down, and what you’re hearing turns into soup.
It’s what happens when there is too much for your brain to process.
There are no quick fixes; there aren’t any magic solutions, and you’ve already seen
the most important points you can use to deal with this.
But, there’s one more thing you can do.
Vocabulary is a big part of understanding.
In particular, when you hear a word you don’t know, it often takes your attention.
You start wondering what it was and what it means.
While you’re paying attention to that unfamiliar word, you can’t pay attention to what you’re
hearing, so you miss more things.
This makes it more difficult to tune back in.
At some point, you get the ‘soup effect’, and you can’t understand most of what you’re
This isn’t just about vocabulary.
It also depends on pronunciation and speed, which we’ve already talked about.
It sometimes depends on grammar, too.
So, your listening practice should be supported by language work, especially vocabulary work,
but also grammar work if your grammar is weak.
If you hear a word which you don’t know or don’t understand, that will always be
You can find many other videos on our channel to help you learn vocabulary, as well as grammar
Let’s finish with a challenge.
Can you use the training techniques you saw in this lesson every day for one month?
Try to do at least ten minutes a day, every day for one month.
If you make it, tell us in the comments, and let us know if you feel a difference or not.