You are on page 1of 1

P.E.

and HEALTH
The temporalis muscle originates above your temple and connects to the jaw. It assists in the side-to-
side movement during chewing, closing the mouth, and grinding movements. There is an area in the frontal
lobe of the left hemisphere called Broca's area. It is next to the region that controls the movement of facial
muscles, tongue, jaw and throat.

Tongue twisters are the best way to strengthen your English skills. It has been proven that when you
try tongue twisters it helps to clarify the pronunciation of words. Furthermore, it strengthens and stretches
the muscles which you use to talk. It also shows you what sounds and words you have difficulty pronouncing.
It warms up your speaking skill. You will notice that public speakers and performers always speak tongue
twisters before they enter the stage. This implies that tongue twisters are hard because the representations in
the brain greatly overlap, Chang says. 'Sss' and 'Shh' are both stored in the brain as front-of-the-tongue
sounds, for example, so the brain probably confuses these more often than sounds that are made by different
parts of the tongue. ‘Sally sells seashells’ is tricky. ‘Mally sells sea-smells’ is not.

P.E. and HEALTH


The temporalis muscle originates above your temple and connects to the jaw. It assists in the side-to-
side movement during chewing, closing the mouth, and grinding movementsThere is an area in the frontal
lobe of the left hemisphere called Broca's area. It is next to the region that controls the movement of facial
muscles, tongue, jaw and throat.

Tongue twisters are the best way to strengthen your English skills. It has been proven that when you
try tongue twisters it helps to clarify the pronunciation of words. Furthermore, it strengthens and stretches
the muscles which you use to talk. It also shows you what sounds and words you have difficulty pronouncing.
It warms up your speaking skill. You will notice that public speakers and performers always speak tongue
twisters before they enter the stage. This implies that tongue twisters are hard because the representations in
the brain greatly overlap, Chang says. 'Sss' and 'Shh' are both stored in the brain as front-of-the-tongue
sounds, for example, so the brain probably confuses these more often than sounds that are made by different
parts of the tongue. ‘Sally sells seashells’ is tricky. ‘Mally sells sea-smells’ is not.

You might also like