Leo+DadMade for Leo
Style & Voice
Rung 1 of 3 · Discover

Where Your Voice Comes From

Before you ever try to build a voice, let's see why the same handful of words sound utterly different depending on who says them — because style is a fingerprint, not a fact.

NESA EN4-URB-01 Builds on: rhetorical & persuasive devices

Play Keep one fixed idea. Flick between four personas. Watch the words, register and rhythm rewrite to match.
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Audio WalkthroughDad & Leo, Two Minutes — Coming Soon
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Here's the whole idea in one breath: style is a speaker's fingerprint. Hand four different people the exact same point to make and they won't make it the same way — the larrikin cracks a joke, the preacher lifts it skyward, the scientist measures it, the poet lingers on it. The information is identical. Everything else — the persona, the register, the rhythm — is voice.

Why Two Mouths Sound Different

Voice is built out of choices, most of them made without thinking. The words a person reaches for — do they say mate or colleague, huge or significant? How formal they pitch it — that's register, the dial between a chat at the bus stop and a speech at a funeral. The rhythm: short, blunt sentences, or long, rolling ones. The warmth: are they having fun, or deadly earnest? Stack those choices up and you get a sound that's recognisably theirs.

That fingerprint is partly who they are — their individuality, their background and habits and what they find funny — and partly the role they're playing, their persona: the larrikin, the preacher, the expert. The same person can switch personas: you talk one way to your mates and another to your nan, and both are still you.

Say it plainly: style is the how, not the what. Two speakers can carry the identical message and still sound nothing alike — because voice lives in the word choice, the register and the rhythm, not in the facts.

Hear It for Yourself

Take one plain idea: “we should look after this river.” Now listen to four voices say it.

The larrikin: “Look, the river's done us proud — least we can do is not trash the joint, eh?” The preacher: “This water has carried life since before we were born; we are its keepers now.” The scientist: “The river's health is measurable, and the data is clear: it needs protection.” The poet: “The river remembers us, even when we forget it.”

Same point, four fingerprints. Flick the personas in the toy and watch it happen line by line — that's the thing you'll learn to build on purpose next.

Us, Thinking Out Loud

Whose voice can you recognise after just one sentence — a teacher, a YouTuber, a footy commentator? What gives them away?

When you talk to your mates versus a teacher, what actually changes — the words, the speed, or how serious you sound?