Tongue Twister Practice
Warm up your mouth before you speak. Get a random twister, start slow, and build speed while keeping every word crisp.
Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers.
Warmups help. Coaching compounds it.
Orai turns every practice run into feedback on clarity, pace, filler words, and confidence.
Why speakers use tongue twisters
Actors, broadcasters, and speakers use tongue twisters as a vocal warm-up because they force your lips, tongue, and jaw through their full range of motion. A minute or two before you speak loosens up your articulation, so your first sentences come out clear instead of mumbled. They also train precision: the only way to say a twister cleanly is to hit every consonant deliberately.
The trick is to prize accuracy over speed. Say each twister slowly and correctly first, then gradually build pace while keeping every sound distinct. If you stumble, slow back down. Do a few before your next presentation and you'll notice the difference in your opening lines.