by sandy82 » August 25th, 2005, 12:30 pm
Junko,
I agree entirely with Cardigan. I would add two additional thoughts.
First, the recorded voice has at least two aspects. Repetition and reassurance. A recording of your own voice could easily meet the repetition test: how many times can you listen. Files also tend to work best when the voice is reassuring and authoritative, rather like a parent figure. Most people, I think, would find it difficult to consider their own voices as authoritative and reassuring...to themselves.
Your English is quite good. You will understand the following description. I suspect that the ideal recorded voice is reassuring, supportive, and disarmingly authoritative. The iron fist in the velvet glove, so to speak.
Second, even a very good speaker of a second language may misconstrue connotations and intonations. Words like "dude" can sound friendly, hostile, uneducated, or silly--depending on context. As for intonation, questions in spoken American English have two tone patterns. When the answer is yes-no, the last word in the question is at a higher pitch. When the question begins with what, who, where, when, why, how, etc., the pitch of the last word is usually much lower. I really notice the difference when watching DW-TV in English. The German announcers speak English very well, but some of them use a rising tone at the end of a what, who, where, etc., question. In fact, the whole question goes uphill and, when it's long, I wonder whether the announcer will strangle himself before the end of it. :)
My feeling is that you may want to balance your knowledge of English against the desirability, for you, of the parent-type voice.