Do you stutter a lot?

<p>I actually think I've develop a minor stuttering problem.. if it's even considered one in the first place.</p>

<p>Basically I still talk in the same speed as I did before, but now with all the grammar rules and crap, I've been correcting myself before I even finish the sentence!</p>

<p>Ha.</p>

<p>Yeah, after studying for the SAT, I learned to use</p>

<p>“Alpha’s IQ is greater than Beta’s.” instead of</p>

<p>“Alpha’s IQ is greater than Beta.”</p>

<p>I always correct myself too, but (not trying to sound arrogant) I don’t make that many verbal mistakes, so I don’t really stutter.</p>

<p>I don’t know but for some reason I’ve been finding that I trip over my words a little more than before. I’m not exactly sure I’d call it a stutter, though. I’m just going to start thinking about what I say before I say it and slow down the speed.</p>

<p>I have a minor stuttering problem. I had a big problem when I was in elementary school. I fumble on a few words here and there. It’s really embarrassing. You kind of know when you are about to stutter, so when I feel it coming I would pause for a moment and pretend I forgot the word I was trying to say lol.</p>

<p>I stutter all the time. I talk too fast and then I can’t get the words out without stumbling all over them. It’s horrible, but eventually you get used to it and try to remember to talk slower/clearer.</p>

<p>I did have some relatively minor speaking problems when I grew out of it, but when I got older, I started to speak more and I kind of got over it.</p>

<p>I took speech classes, I’d recommend it in high school or college. You’ll learn to turn places where you’d want to stumble over words or use fillers like “um” into pauses, and you can use the pauses to think about what you’re going to say next.</p>

<p>Speech classes really do help. They’re brutal, but they help a ton. When I got too excited about something, I started to talk too fast, then I’d trip over a word, or backtrack and restart a sentence if I thought I was about to make a mistake. I don’t really mind it, but then, it doesn’t happen very often anymore. There’s a sort of ebb and flow, and a kind of rhythm that helps your speaking, once you figure it out and get into it.</p>

<p>I’ve had a serious stutter since I was a child, apparently. I don’t remember it that much until about seventh grade. Now it’s pretty bad though. It bothers me to no end. It’s the worst in interviews, I basically can’t say a single sentence without stuttering. But the weird thing is, when I speak in front of a crowd, I stutter almost not at all.</p>

<p>I have a minor problem with stuttering, slurring my words, talk so fast that its unintelligible, mix up words, say the first thing that comes to mind, and use odd euphemisms that aren’t real. It makes presenting hell, especially as I get nervous in front of anyone who isn’t really my friend.</p>

<p>I just have a deep voice so when I talk to somebody one on one, it’s hard to find that intermediary between whispering and talking, so I usually involuntarily switch between the two. Sometimes it sounds really bad and I always try to correct myself if it didn’t sound right the first time. Then again, I get nervous when I talk to certain people anyways…</p>

<h1>6 is what I do. I really should speak more calmly though.</h1>

<p>I do when I present projects. I suck at that stuff -__-</p>

<p>Sent from my iPhone using CC</p>