Do you move your mouth when you read?
- Sarah G
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Re: Do you move your mouth when you read?
My head also moves side to side :p
- rssllue
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That being said, if there's a part of the book that's written awkwardly I will mouth it out to see where the emphasis should go, which usually makes it easier to understand. Rather than speaking aloud, I have a bad habit of stretching my neck and putting my nose so far into the book that it takes me going cross-eyed to realize how close I am!

- Jojowrites4All
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- moderntimes
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Also did this when I was working writing news copy for a major daily. Interviewing or just attending a meeting and speech as a reporter means that you cannot reveal your feelings in any way, appear totally neutral.
So no. I don't move at all, little as necessary. Breathe and blink and turn pages. That's it. As a result I'm a very fast reader with high comprehension and retention. Total focus.
- PoeticJava
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- moderntimes
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But I never, ever read aloud when I'm just reading a book. Slows me down to much, makes my mouth dry.
Thinking back, I seem to remember being coached when in primary school to read to myself silently. Naturally, in a class of 25 kids, we had our "quiet time" when we were supposed to read or draw pictures or whatever at our desks, and we were never allowed to read to ourselves aloud.
I am certain that the quiet time was a way for our teachers to get a break, too.
I also am pretty sure my Dad cautioned me to not read aloud to myself. He said that the entire event on the page should go directly into the brain.
- CataclysmicKnight
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This is 100% true for me as well. If I'm writing something for a story or game, I'll totally either mouth it or even softly speak it to hear how it flows, especially for poetry. But for just reading something, I'm a rather quick reader and mouthing it would make me go sooooooo much slower!moderntimes wrote:If I'm revising and tweaking a certain scene in my novels, I'll often read the portion out loud, even if it's just to myself. Hearing the speech patterns of the characters helps me make the dialogue more realistic.
But I never, ever read aloud when I'm just reading a book. Slows me down to much, makes my mouth dry.
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