Work with a speech therapist, they know what to do to help you stop stammering. Also, stammering may be a symptom of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) which can be diagnosed and treated by a psychiatrist (Psychiatrists have Medical Degrees). In the mean time, I have heard that if you start to breath out just before you begin vibrating your vocal cords to make sound, that establishes momentum that helps reduce stammering. Good luck!
AnswerSTUTTERING - STAMMERING : The word "stuttering" is mostly used in the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. The word "stammering" is usually preferred in the United Kingdom, Eire, India and most other Commonwealth countries. Try deliberately slowing your speech. You could try several different talking speeds: 85%, 90%, 95%, and 100% Consider your current rate of speech as being 105%, a rate at which you stutter frequently.Go back to 85%, then slowly increase, in stages, until you begin to stutter noticeably: then go back to 85%, and work your way up to the rate before you began stuttering at a rate that you find unacceptable. Keep at that rate, for a good while, maybe later, risking stepping it up one more notch; confident that you can always work your way back up from 85% again.
Think of it in terms of modem speeds on your computer: if that speed is set too high for the connection to the ISP, there will be problems. You may well be currently "overclocking" your speech modem: the difference between your brain speed, and the rate at which you are able to speak clearly and distinctly, without stuttering markedly, is the issue. A different suggestion is putting some marbles in your mouth.
Uta Stammer was born in 1948.
He was deemed as unfit to be the vocalist because of his stammer.
The word Stammer is a synonym for the word Stutter
Lisa Stammer died in March 1985.
if youre looking for a sentence using the word stammer,... the president's stammer kept him from giving speeches
Hans-Jürgen Stammer died in 1968.
Hans-Jürgen Stammer was born in 1899.
Emil Stammer was born on June 15, 1858, in Potsdam, Germany.
Emil Stammer died on December 30, 1976, in Berlin, Germany.
He would stammer whenever he had to give a speech in front of a large group.
No, "stumble" and "stammer" are not onomatopoeic words. Onomatopoeia refers to words that imitate the sound they represent, like "buzz" or "clang." Stumble and stammer do not directly imitate the sounds they describe.
Stammer (noun)