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well you've got 3 main American accents. I imagaine the Mid West accent( the "standard", blank accent to us) sounds a bit sharp with the a and ah's, oo and ohs if you know what I meanDivergeUnifyi think we actually have 5 or six.. there is the southern accent, nothern accent, da hood, western and cajun and then normal which is a mix of southern and northern
[QUOTE="DivergeUnify"]well you've got 3 main American accents. I imagaine the Mid West accent( the "standard", blank accent to us) sounds a bit sharp with the a and ah's, oo and ohs if you know what I meanishoturfacei think we actually have 5 or six.. there is the southern accent, nothern accent, da hood, western and cajun and then normal which is a mix of southern and northern I believe normal is actually a North Western dialect. "da hood" accent is just a cultural following. It's not really linked to any specific region. I read about all this stuff in a book for school.
Depends where in America you're from.Funky_LlamaPretty much, I doubt that your accent sounds any more different to me than it does to a person who lives on the other side of the States... If you're asking what American sounds like to a person that can't speak English... I can't answer that, it was too long ago. But americans who try to speak Swedish have a very funny accent that's hard to describe, it's kinda robotic and all the vowels are lengthened in a way that makes it sound like they're talking in a room with an echo... but it's not unpleasant to listen to it.
"Wat ur talkin bout boy! Wait 'ere whilst I go n git mah shautgaun!" Something like that.jointedhell yea, boy. *high5* I have no idea how I sound.
[QUOTE="jointed"]"Wat ur talkin bout boy! Wait 'ere whilst I go n git mah shautgaun!" Something like that.dmc333
Too stereotypical.
There's too little stereotype in it, in my opinion. Aha.[QUOTE="jointed"]"Wat ur talkin bout boy! Wait 'ere whilst I go n git mah shautgaun!" Something like that.dmc333
Too stereotypical.
Indeed.I asked a girl with a British accent and she said "Nasally."
Of course, I get that from other people as well so maybe it's just me. :|
And the friends characters are from New York..........LeePearceThe Friends accent is not like the general NY accent. I call it the "TV" accent. It's what I sound like, mostly.
[QUOTE="LeePearce"]And the friends characters are from New York..........JandurinThe Friends accent is not like the general NY accent. I call it the "TV" accent. It's what I sound like, mostly. True, the accent seems to be the same across alot of American TV but they, don't sound like any particular area like a neutral american accent
[QUOTE="Jandurin"][QUOTE="LeePearce"]And the friends characters are from New York..........markop2003The Friends accent is not like the general NY accent. I call it the "TV" accent. It's what I sound like, mostly. True, the accent seems to be the same across alot of American TV but they, don't sound like any particular area like a neutral american accent Yep. It's weird, but it's how a lot of the East and West coasts sound.
[QUOTE="ishoturface"][QUOTE="DivergeUnify"]well you've got 3 main American accents. I imagaine the Mid West accent( the "standard", blank accent to us) sounds a bit sharp with the a and ah's, oo and ohs if you know what I meanDivergeUnifyi think we actually have 5 or six.. there is the southern accent, nothern accent, da hood, western and cajun and then normal which is a mix of southern and northern I believe normal is actually a North Western dialect. "da hood" accent is just a cultural following. It's not really linked to any specific region. I read about all this stuff in a book for school. Well also aren't there New York, New Jersey, Massachusets and Rhode Island accents- they main characteristic of these is their omission of the "r", ie. give me the keys to the cah, I have to drive because it's too fa to walk. Also I think "da hood" is properly termed ebonics or black english vernacular, and I think there are urban (more slangy and "gangsta"ish) and rural (with more vowelic stretching, ie. Kids pronounced as Keedz, skill as skeel, and drawn out U as in Run), also nowadays white folk do speak ebonics (although most of them are emulating blacks and buy into "black culture"- usually hip-hop urban black culture as opposed to raisin in the sun rural black culture.
Dang, now I'm curious about my accent. What does an Irish accent sound like to the rest of the world? Any mention of alcohol = death by exploding kamikaze flaming ninja-pirates.karristonIn Ireland what is the official language and what is most common- English or Gaelic? Do you say "my car" or "me car". I like the Irish accent, but it's hard to describe. It sounds funny and somewhat rustic.
"Wat ur talkin bout boy! Wait 'ere whilst I go n git mah shautgaun!" Something like that.jointed
Only in the south and americans NEVER say "whilst" we say "while".
I adopted "british" manerisms during my David Firth phase. Salad Fingers is not a good representation of your culture my friend
[QUOTE="jointed"]"Wat ur talkin bout boy! Wait 'ere whilst I go n git mah shautgaun!" Something like that.peppersfan2
Only in the south and americans NEVER say "whilst" we say "while".
I adopted "british" manerisms during my David Firth phase. Salad Fingers is not a good representation of your culture my friend
Salad Fingers is great but i f you want to see what it's actually like in Englnd Devvo isn't far off some areas(Y)
Dang, now I'm curious about my accent. What does an Irish accent sound like to the rest of the world? Any mention of alcohol = death by exploding kamikaze flaming ninja-pirates.karriston
Im form Belfast so I have my own accent but the Irish one to anyone outside this Island is extreamly hard to understand (Especially those from Mayo ,Donegal etc.) but I mean instead of thirty three and a third you say "tirty tree and a turd"
Also American accents are very nasaly and they speak very slowly (I've spent about 8 weeks of my life in New York and New Hampshire ) I mean the Northern eastern seaboard isn't anywhere near as bad as some of the southern Americans I was talking too (They had the most annoying accent I have ever encountered) it was niether a very good sounding accent (like say New Zeland) or one that offended my ears.
[QUOTE="peppersfan2"][QUOTE="jointed"]"Wat ur talkin bout boy! Wait 'ere whilst I go n git mah shautgaun!" Something like that.markop2003
Only in the south and americans NEVER say "whilst" we say "while".
I adopted "british" manerisms during my David Firth phase. Salad Fingers is not a good representation of your culture my friend
Salad Fingers is great but i f you want to see what it's actually like in Englnd Devvo isn't far off some areasI love salad fingers but so far my impressions of english culture have been shapped from:
A : David Firth Cartoons
B : Shaun Of The Dead
C :PBS English Comedies such as "Keeping Up Appearences"
I kid i kid. I plan on studying abroad there my senior year of college
[QUOTE="jointed"]"Wat ur talkin bout boy! Wait 'ere whilst I go n git mah shautgaun!" Something like that.peppersfan2
Only in the south and americans NEVER say "whilst" we say "while".
I adopted "british" manerisms during my David Firth phase. Salad Fingers is not a good representation of your culture my friend
I say whilst sometimes. :P[QUOTE="DivergeUnify"]well you've got 3 main American accents. I imagaine the Mid West accent( the "standard", blank accent to us) sounds a bit sharp with the a and ah's, oo and ohs if you know what I meanishoturfacei think we actually have 5 or six.. there is the southern accent, nothern accent, da hood, western and cajun and then normal which is a mix of southern and northern there are potentially thousands of different accents, but the differences are subtle. America is a huge place.
[QUOTE="ishoturface"][QUOTE="DivergeUnify"]well you've got 3 main American accents. I imagaine the Mid West accent( the "standard", blank accent to us) sounds a bit sharp with the a and ah's, oo and ohs if you know what I meanquiglythegreati think we actually have 5 or six.. there is the southern accent, nothern accent, da hood, western and cajun and then normal which is a mix of southern and northern there are potentially thousands of different accents, but the differences are subtle. America is a huge place. talking about the main regional ones
[QUOTE="quiglythegreat"][QUOTE="ishoturface"]i think we actually have 5 or six.. there is the southern accent, nothern accent, da hood, western and cajun and then normal which is a mix of southern and northernDivergeUnifythere are potentially thousands of different accents, but the differences are subtle. America is a huge place. talking about the main regional ones you couldn't show me a 'southern accent'. They vary by goddamn county, if not town. a person from Tennessee talks totally differently than a person in northern Georgia, say.
[QUOTE="DivergeUnify"][QUOTE="quiglythegreat"] there are potentially thousands of different accents, but the differences are subtle. America is a huge place.quiglythegreattalking about the main regional ones you couldn't show me a 'southern accent'. They vary by goddamn county, if not town. a person from Tennessee talks totally differently than a person in northern Georgia, say. no you're just trying to argue your point when you know I'm right. there are general, regional accents which is why a "southern" accent is referred to as such and is spread across many states and counties. Of course each accent may vary by county- that's the way it is all across the world. My point still stands
I've always like the sound of the standard American accent, I've always thought it was kinda cool like I saw in the movies-Shooter-Give an example of an actor because there's really not a standard American accent.
I have this interest in a good British accent for some reason, so it must be a foreign thing. Some British accents though can annoy me to know end, such as Russel Brand, but most of the time I find them very cool.
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