Clear speech is an intelligibility-enhancing mode of communication often used when speakers have trouble being understood. Previous work has established that both native and non-native listeners can receive a clear speech perception benefit, though possibly to differing degrees (Bradlow and Bent, 2002). Few studies have looked at whether nonnative talkers can induce this clear speech benefit (e.g., Smiljanic and Bradlow, 2007; Rogers etal., 2010). The current study examined English clear and conversational speech by nonnative speakers from three language backgrounds (Japanese, Portuguese, and Turkish) and two proficiency levels to determine their effect on the inducement of a clear speech benefit. Native English listeners repeated back semantically anomalous sentences. The signal to noise ratio was adjusted to the level at which they could correctly repeat 50% of the words using an adaptive test similar to the Hearing in Noise Test (Nilsson etal., 1993). The results suggest that the speaker's native language may play a role in the size of the induced clear speech benefit independently of proficiency level. Additionally, accent ratings indicated a dissociation of intelligibility and accentedness. These results are consistent with the notion that variability in intelligibility is subject to language-specific knowledge by both the talker and the listener.