In your example the speaker does get his point across, but there are times when variances in spelling, grammar, and pronunciation strain the limits of mutual intelligibility. In another forum I belong to, the topic of urban sprawl came up, and this typically leads to related issues such as urban planning and transit infrastructure, and the history of both those things. So one poster mentioned “tracks everywhere” …and I was thinking, “Tracks”? Like mass transit lines? No, he meant housing tracts. I do understand that both words sound exactly the same to this person, and, moreover, that the simplification of consonant clusters is very common in the evolution of languages; be that as it may, the writer of that post could have thrown us a bone and said “housing tracks”, at least.
Tommy Smothers sang:
Hang down your head Tom Crudely,
Hang down your head and cry, hahaha
Hang down your head Tom Hungly;
Oh boy,… you’re hung!