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[Recreation] Challenge! A roundup of tongue twisters recommended for elementary school students

Let’s all have fun and exercise our mouths!

We’ve put together some tongue twisters we definitely want elementary schoolers to try.

When you read them, you might think, “These aren’t hard at all,” but when you actually say them, you end up stumbling… Tongue twisters are such a curious kind of game!

You can compete with friends to see who can say them properly, or challenge yourself with harder ones to test your limits—there are lots of ways to play!

Even if you can’t say them smoothly at first, if you keep at it, your articulation might get better and better!

[Rec] Challenge! A collection of tongue twisters recommended for elementary school students (41–50)

I leaned bamboo against this bamboo fence because I wanted to lean bamboo against it.

I leaned bamboo against this bamboo fence because I wanted to lean bamboo against it.

Among the many types of tongue twisters, one that is known to be especially difficult is: “Kono takegaki ni take tatekaketa no wa, take tatekaketakatta kara take tatekaketa.” Put simply, it evokes the image of bamboo being propped against a bamboo fence.

Once you understand what kind of situation it’s describing, you’ll be less likely to get confused.

That said, it’s quite a long tongue twister, so memorizing it is no easy task.

Start by reading it repeatedly to commit it to memory.

Ottotto totto-tte.

I’d like to introduce this tongue twister that feels satisfying to say: “Ottotto totto-tte tte ittotta to ni, nande totto-tte kuren katta totte itto-o to.” On the page it makes no sense at all, right? It means: “I wanted you to save some Ottotto snacks for me—why didn’t you keep them?” There are many parts pronounced ‘to,’ so be careful not to get tangled up.

The trick is to insert brief pauses at phrase breaks.

Tongue Twister Challenge

Tried a tongue twister challenge #game #tiktok #japanese
Tongue Twister Challenge

Prepare a tongue-twister script and challenge yourselves to see how many seconds it takes to read it! Announcers and voice actors use this as enunciation training, right? If you search for “tongue twisters,” you’ll find plenty, and you can also create your own.

Add furigana to the kanji so that even first-time readers can read it.

The person who reads it the fastest without stumbling wins! Tripping up, getting stuck, and struggling to say it will get everyone excited, and if you can say it smoothly, you’re sure to draw attention!

Author intraoperative

Author intraoperative

The tongue twister “chosakusha shujutsu-chu” (author undergoing surgery) gives off a somewhat serious vibe.

It makes you wonder what happened to the author, doesn’t it? This tongue twister is simply composed of hard-to-say words lined up in a row.

However, it’s trickier than it looks, so be careful.

In particular, the “shujutsu” part is where many people stumble.

Also, because it’s short, you keep running into the tricky spots as you repeat it, which is one reason it’s so difficult.

Say: “Apologize to Aya and Aya, apologize to Aya and your parents.”

Say: “Apologize to Aya and Aya, apologize to Aya and your parents.”

A tongue twister in dialogue style: “Apologize to Aya, and tell her to apologize to her parents.” There are several versions of this tongue twister, such as “Apologize to Aya, and tell her to apologize to the greengrocer,” or “Tell the greengrocer that Aya is going to the bathhouse with her parents.” All versions rhyme on ‘Aya’ (o-aya) and make the sentences complex in a similar way.

Even without small kana or voiced sounds, it’s still difficult—a rare type of tongue twister.

Give it a try!