PPS Framework Teaches IT Pros to Speak English at Native Speed
A linguistic technique called the 'Gapless Function Word Run,' part of the PPS framework, aims to help non-native English speakers sound more fluent in professional IT settings. Acoustic analysis suggests native speakers do not actually talk faster but instead eliminate tiny pauses between structural grammar words. Standard English training often conditions non-native speakers to insert micro-pauses between function words, creating a staccato rhythm. The PPS method compresses word strings like 'should have been able to' into a single continuous sound by removing glottal stops and blending vowel boundaries. Proponents claim this builds muscle memory that allows professionals to deliver sprint reviews and technical presentations with native-level fluency.
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