When will the lisp go away?
Good bye,
I've had my braces for three days now and the additional Turbo Bites have made my lisp particularly loud.
The "T" is pronounced very softly, and "Z," "S," and "X" are pronounced with a lisp. It was barely there on the first day, and then it got progressively worse. Plus, it constantly sounds like I'm mumbling.
I've tried reading aloud from books to retrain my tongue, but I can't seem to speak relatively normally. I was aware that I was lisping after getting braces, but I didn't realize the extent of it.
How and when will this go away or become less noticeable?
LG
Hello Viperpage,
everything that is installed in the palate or behind the OK cutting teeth is a challenge for the language. You have to change the sound. Most of the time you start reading out loud, as you, but you notice that it doesn’t work right or that it does. one concentrates on the phrases that are previously scanned in search of difficult sounds or syllables, in order to express them particularly precisely. After some starts, it usually works very well, but it doesn’t get really perfect for everyone.
For everyday life, however, the language is only suitable when all this is done automatically. And there’s only a way to talk, talk, talk, even if you get a debate accident in between.
You notice the difference significantly more than others who do not know you very well.
Good luck!
Karliename