Lesser leather never weathered wetter weather better
Lesser leather never weathered wetter weather better
Lesser leather never weathered wetter weather better
Why Is It Hard?
The w and wh sounds appear in weathered, wetter, and weather while the th sound appears in leather, weathered, and weather. The suffix -er ends every word: lesser, leather, never, weathered, wetter, weather, better. This uniform ending makes the sentence feel like one continuous sound and causes speakers to lose track of where each word ends.
History
This tongue twister belongs to the weather-leather tradition of English wordplay, a family of twisters exploiting the similar sounds of weather, leather, whether, and wetter. It has been used in British and American speech training since at least the Victorian era. The sentence makes grammatical sense — it is a genuine comparative claim about leather and weather performance.
Tips for Saying It
- Identify the pattern: every word ends in -er. Use this to keep your place.
- Distinguish the th in leather and weather from the wh in weather and wetter.
- Slow practice: lesser / leather / never / weathered / wetter / weather / better.
More English Tongue Twisters
- Whether the Weather — the classic weather twister
- Hard Tongue Twisters — more challenges
- Tongue Twisters — full collection
Find hundreds more on alltonguetwisters.com.