World Wide Webb
Wayne went to Wales to watch walruses
Wetter weather never weathered wetter weather better
What veteran ventriloquist whistles
yes
One popular Oklahoma tongue twister is "How much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck would chuck wood?" This phrase is challenging to say quickly because of the repetition and alliteration of the "w" sound.
The Tagalog term for "tongue twister" is "balabalakit."
twisting your tongue
The first word in a tongue twister about seashells is typically "She sells."
First make it funny. Have maybe a tongue with the tongue twister coming off in a swiggly pattern or something. Be creative.
twisting your tongue
"Fiona the firefighter felt afraid fighting the fierce flames."
Sure! Here's a tongue twister for Ohio: "Olive owned an old owl, in Ohio, oh my!"
"Washington's washing machine washed Washington's washed-out shirts" is a tongue twister related to Washington.
The tongue twister is:How much wood would a woodchuck chuckif a woodchuck could chuck wood?And in reply:He would chuck, he would, as much as he could,and chuck as much wood as a woodchuck wouldif a woodchuck could chuck wood.Words containing a w in the question are these:woodwouldwoodchuckwoodchuckwoodIn the reply:wouldwouldwoodwoodchuckwouldwoodchuckwood.So in the primary question, 5 w's, and in the reply, 7 w's, for a total of 12.
a poet
of his tongue twister