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What's your "Dialect".....Canadians go elsewhere
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......I don't have one....:no:
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Northeast.
I got an entire bag of R's I'm not using if anyone wants them. I'm sure I have some G's as well. |
Thanks for the topic, bobby. I was thinking this over some last week, and I have no idea what dialect (accent), if any, my voice conveys. I've moved around quite a bit since a small child, and I think there is a period within one's youth that they begin to notice the subtle nuances and pitch of certain regional dialects when learning how to speak, and a child's mind learns how to adapt to what they hear around them. Therefore, a French baby might have the familiar accent later in life, but not if the phantom baby relocated, at maybe four years of age to Hawaii. I don't have a real firm grasp on the intracies of accent development within the scope of anthropology.
That maybe why some born and raised in Morocco for, say a period of ten years, will still continue to display their regional accent, if hypothetically, they had moved to Brazil later in life and learned both English and Portuguese to assimilate. I still maintain I don't have a verifiable accent, and I wonder if a recognized speech analyst would come to the same conclusion. |
I have the Californian accent. Though I do feel there are distinct differences between the speech patterns of the major cities within the state.
Oddly, my husband was raised in California as well. But he has a very different accent. All of his brothers share the same speech patterns, which are unique to their family alone. I have yet to come across anyone who speaks with a similar canter outside of his immediate family. It entails a hint of Inland Northern mingled with Eastern New England, but with all of the terms and slang one would find along the central coast of California. |
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Western New England... whatever the hell that is.
Houstonians tell me that I talk "different", but not one of them has been able to tell me how/why. |
My accent is fluid--get me around a bunch of Eastern Kentuckians, and I sound like I just came down off the mountain. Put me in a courtroom in Jefferson County (Louisville), and it gets flattened out considerably. None of this is consciously decided.
I sound much more Appalachian/"Southern" when I'm tired, mad, or drunk, or as I said, around people with similar accents. Long i's, dropped g's and all that. Also in certain social situations--if I'm hosting a party, I say things like, "Y'all come on in and get somethin' to eat." Not sure where that voice comes from, exactly. It's just my default setting in that sort of situation. |
Not all Canadians have the same accent or dialect if you will, there are different accents throughout the country and throughout each province, hell where I'm from someone from Renfrew has a different accent than someone 45 minutes away in Pembroke, or than someone across the river from Shawville, there may be the stereotypical 'Canadian accent', but that doesn't really represent the dialects or accents across the country.
Canadian English - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia aded: didn't realize there was a picture there, damn slow connect it didn't load when I initially made the post. |
so where does this thread leave people like me?
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In some sort of bizarre black hole. If I had to guess, you divided by zero at some point and that was the end result. |
I'm probably mostly gulf southern... grew up in houston... but went to highschool in california and college in lubbock which would be southwestern...
I definitely say Y'all... but I dont really have a heavy southern drawl. |
Baltimorese.
I warsh dishes in the zink while listening to the amblances and farngins flyin' up the rhowd over the Oreos game on the radio. (Technically it's "Eho-rhi-ehos", but I've heard people on my Oriole Park tours wonder why we named our team after the cookies. Seriously.) |
Being from NJ, there are at least two distinct accents/dialects in this tiny state and I'm from one living in another.
South Jersey (we do NOT say 'southern NJ) is heavily influenced by Philadelphia, an area with an absolutely horrid accent; we don't say long O's like most people. "Stone" becomes "ste-own" with an exagerated long O. Words like fire, while, tire become 2 full syllable words : Fy-ehr, Why-ell, etc. We don't say "like that", we say "ligat". We don't eat subs, we eat hoagies. We drink Coke, even if it's Pepsi. If someone asks us how far a place is, we talk in time. No one EVER quotes miles. North Jersey gets its language nuances from New Yawk. Even when people are trying to be nice, they sound pissed off. They talk faster and sound tougher. North Jersey folk eat subs but they know what a hoagie is. I go to Tennessee twice a year and while I don't really notice my friends southern (NC) accent, I start talking like her within minutes. Same on the phone. I use "y'all" all the time too. One time in Gatlinburg, TN with friends from NC, I remarked about some pretty "stee-ones" and my friend said, "What'd you call those? They're ROCKS, not "stee-ones." I hate my accent... My bosslady's, though, is worse. She's from Buffalo, NY. She uses this word "elsewise" all the time and drags out her short A's. It's like nails on a chalkboard. |
I guess South Western according to that. Lived in San Diego for most of my life. I've always wondered.. while I was living in Gulfport, Mississippi, did I ever have a Southern accent???
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Californian, with a light sprinkling of Southern. Although I'm such a lazy speaker that people might have a hard time placing my accent.
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Never thought about my accent, but after reading what ngdawg wrote, I'll have to see where I fit, living in the northern/central part of New Jersey.
I do notice that newscasters seem to all sound like they are from the metropolitan area. Somehow they are trained to loose any accent they may have picked up from their hometown. |
I definitely speak with the PacNW dialect. People from around here claim they have no dialect or accent, but they're wrong! People in the Pacific Northwest pronounce "for" as "fur". There are other things too, but most people here have been speaking that way for so long that they don't notice they have an accent.
I'd be interested to know what Chinook jargon loanwords they're talking about. I don't really see the PacNW dialect having a particular influence from California; I think the influence is more from Canada. Where did you get this article, bobby? |
I guess I am in the Virginia Piedmont section, but most people say I don't sound like I'm from my hometown at all. Most of my close friends growing up were from PA/NY area so my accent is distorted by them as well. Right now if I go back to my hometown and talk to the natives they are like WTF is wrong with you.
I do still say ya'll and stuff like that though. 3 people at my current job say I sound like I'm from "out west" oddly enough. |
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As far as I know, I don't have an accent.
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Rocky Mountain...
Which is nothing. So I make up my own. I've adopted pieces from across the country. It keeps people guessing. |
bobby gets awarded 100 internets for the correct use of Dialect vs Accent. :D
Dialect: Differences in how native speakers speak a language in different regions (Boston dialect, California dialect) Accent: Differences in how non-native speakers pronounce words differently than native speakers, based on their native language (German accent, Italian accent, Arnold Schwarzenegger accent) Also I would argue that the Southwest is new enough that we speak pretty close to the textbook 'correct' Standard American English...no extra vowels where they shouldn't be or extra/dropped consonants on either end of our words...at least in Arizona and NM, anyways. I can't speak for Texas. Edit: Wikipedia confirms that there is no listing for an 'Arizona' dialect, even in the southwestern region: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of...glish_language |
Inland North American with a touch of the Fargo, but I've lost most of the Fargo aspects since leaving the area.
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San Francisco baby! We are an island unto ourselves, nowhere else like it.
I can't quite read what it says. urtan, urtain, urtian??? |
lostgirl, I believe it says: San Francisco Urban.
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I have no idea what my accent sounds like.
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I and my Hubby have lived our whole lives in Michigan, half the suburbs of Detroit and the other half in West MI. I think that we and most everyone here sound like the "standard" movie actor or national TV anchor. The U.P. of MI is a different story, they (Youpers) sound more like the stereotypical Fargo accent (not quite though).
We have been together for 20 yrs. and yet DH still makes fun of me for the way I pronounce things. I say eggs and legs with a hard A, Aggs and lAgs (a very good childhood Canadian friend teased me for this and I gave it back to her on ut and abut). He says them with a soft A which to me sound like they are spelled but not what I grew up with. I can't explain that, we grew up in the same area! It can only be influence from our parents. His grew up in Ohio (their parents too) and are a decade older than mine who grew up here but who's parent's were from Kentucky (Dad) and the Ukraine (Mom). The funny thing is, his Dad has always said words like video "vidga" and since my Dad has recently entered his 60's, he's slipping into pronouncing words very similar to that and the way my Grammpa used to. He never has before! Strange. Dialect's confuzzle me. |
I'm in Snowy's neck of the woods. If yer ever in the area, I'll make a cup-u-coffee fur you. I spelled it the way I pronounce it. I never thought about it before, but I guess I pronounce 'your' as 'yer' , 'of' as 'u' , and 'for' as 'fur' (Snowy mentioned that one). And I'm in the Portland area.
Head over to North Eastern Oregon (still Pacific NW) and we have family members that sound like a cross between Texas and Kansas. And they pronounce 'no' as 'nah' , and 'going to' as 'go-nah' (as in 'gonna' ... I say 'gunna'). |
I guess I would qualify at Coastal Southern having been raised in Florida. Florida is such a melting pot that no one dialect comes to dominate. I've been told by a number of people that I have no 'accent' at all... or that I sound like a Nightly News anchor.
I now live in Kentucky, and my wife says that she'll notice that I will put on a bit of Kentuckiana pronunciation in my speech. I'm not surprised that that might happen as I've noticed adopting certain phrases and tones from areas that I visit for a week or less. Traveling to Australia or England, I'll catch myself using vernacular speech after just a few days there. I usually try to stop myself from doing it, as I figure it might be offensive... like I was mocking their language. It's not meant that way at all. It is nearly involuntary. |
I grew up in LA, so I relax back into a California dialect dude. Now I've spent almost 18 years in the NYC area, 5 living in the Lower East Side.
People have a very hard time picking out where I'm from by my vocal accent. |
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I say "Nah" as well-most New Jerseyans do. I think if you want to pin down an accent/dialect, ask the person to pronounce "Orange"-that word has more pronunciations than any, I think. |
I've lived on both coasts and a few stops in between. I also interviewed a professor who makes good change consulting moving picture entertainment on how various southern dialects are different. Gullah is more of a pidgin than a dialect, and it's fascinating.
Although that article puts it on the southern SC, GA, and northern FL shores, it's common up to the outer banks. If we had any Emerald Coast TFPers here, they could confirm, "e speak true mout". |
I got the Philadelphia accent and plenty of people who talk weird from other parts of the U.S. have told me so.
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How many of you use the "needs fixed" construction?
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...excuse my Philly accent correction to your grammar |
I'm originally from California, but I have 4 years of New York sneaking into my tongue. I can't stand it when I hear myself talking like a New Yorker.
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I have Coastal Southern (raised in FL), although now I'm living in CO, so we'll see where that takes me.
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