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I have no idea why you Texans and shit think "coke" is unique to your area. Up here in the entire northeast (not just New England), we all say "coke." In fact, I was under the impression that only the midwest and surrounding areas say "pop."
I have a pretty notable accent, when I get angry or loud. I try to repress it most times, since it can make a person look shitty when they say "wheah ah ya pahkin' d'cah?" Not too classy. ^_^ But yea, I've got the accent. |
I have an accent - like every human being does. Specifically, I like my drinks shaken, not stirred if you catch my drift >_>. When i'm happy or otherwise being loud, i'll break into a far more local Shropshire accent that some americans confuse with a London accent for some strange reason. I also find myself subconciously adapting my accent to match the people around me depending on which part of the country i'm in; it is a reflex that has evolved I think to help people with very thick local accents understand me better.
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People ask me where I'm from every once and a while. Although, rarely do they identify my slight accent as anything. Normally, I'm asked if I come from more northern regions, or am told I speak to proper to be from this region. I guess that would be a complement.
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I have a typical Michigan nasaly voice/fast talking. There's some website out there that describes how people from Michigan talk. I never realized the accent until I saw that site, and I definitely follow that description.
Here's the site that describes how people from around here talk. http://www.michigannative.com/ma_home.shtml |
I've been told that I have a "lack" of an accent, apparently. Everyone expects me to speak Hawaiian-Pidgin and say "braddah" and shit all the time. I grew up learning perfect English in school so I don't really speak Pidgin outside of my own home if I can help it. If anything, it's your standard "mainland" English + common local loan words from other languages like Japanese or Filipino. I totally know I have a Pidgin accent when I speak to my parents, I just snuff it whenever I'm elsewhere. And I look local, so whenever I go out somewhere like the post office, the person at the desk always hears me speak and exclaims "wow, you're so well-spoken! Are you from here??" and I get a typical NO WAI response when I inform them that I was born and raised here. Funny to see people respond that way, if not embarrassing.
When I talk to people from the internet on the phone, they're disappointed that I have no accent. Then they ask me to say something in Pidgin, and I feel weird saying it and then it comes out weird, because I feel like I'm just forcing myself to do it. Just an odd thing with me. The same thing happens if they ask me to say some crazy combo of swear words. Just won't happen if I have to do it on cue. |
Despite never having been told I have an accent, I notice myself when I speak sometimes that 1 in like 500 words comes out with a filipino tinge, despite not knowing a how to properly speak tagalog. This happens especially when I'm speaking too fast, too excitedly, or saying too much at once. I attribute it to my parent's use of tagalog when talking to each other and all the exposure, despite never making an attempt to speak it.
ADD: I probably also have a Canadian accent. Just reminded me of when I saw a video in Linguistics last year. Apparently Canadians don't produce certain sounds as hard as Americans do. Eg. "about" We apparently sound like we are saying "aboot" since Canadians don't pronounce the "OW" as hard. My friend speaks fluent English and Vietnamese, and once in a while I notice her a's have a slight accent to them, being pronounced as in the relaxing kind of "ah" but not as noticeable. She doesn't notice it herself though. |
I've mostly got the standard US television accent. Having grown up in New Jersey, New York, and Virginia, and having been around people with many different accents, I guess I just pulled through with the boring stuff. Having all that around me means I can (on a good day) pull off some halfway decent mimicry.
People in Utah say "pop" for everything. From the mappings I've seen, "coke" is predominantly southern with a strong front in part of New England, "pop" is mostly midwest through to about Nevada, and "soda" is strongest in the non-coke parts of New England (including most of New York), California, and most of the east coast through to about South Carolina (and much of Florida). I wonder where that polling site went; it was quite informative. |
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Though I must say, maybe we're in for another dialect migration. |
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That reminds me... The girl I dated in college used to refer to ALL soft drinks as "sodapop", which is something she got from reading The Outsiders in the 6th grade and never really grew out of. |
Accent? No, but Philadelphians pronounce certain words differently than everyone like water.
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Filipino accent. Sounds awfully funny at times and am proud of it.
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Whenever I'm around the local flavor, Nobody seems to bring it up but I know they notice my northern accent. I've refused to assimilate the southern accent. Of course I could be just saying BS, but I still refuse to assimilate the accent.
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I didn't think I had an Australian accent, but I was told I had one by people with American ones.
However, I have a Canto accent when I speak Mando and a Mando accent when I speak Canto. Go figure |
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As far as I know, I don't have an accent. I have a dull, boring, American english voice that sounds too plain. Go me! Hope if I ever move to a different country (preferrably Australia), I'll have guys and girls asking me where I'm from alot. I could form an accent if I wanted to, but what the hell for? And for the record, I hate the southern accent. God, I've been prejudiced into thinking Texans and such are just dumber by the way they talk :( - which of course isn't true - its just a damn flaw of mine. |
Well, English being my second language, I'm told that I have an accent (of course, told by native speakers). But I have also gotten comments about how there's barely an accent in my speech by a few teachers and friends too.
The part I was wondering is: Since I live in Midwest (Missouri), people in the west coast or south said I have a midwest accent, which, I do not understand the difference between midwest and west coast accents... |
I have the most american/white sounding voice you could ever have. It's so neutral it's almost annoying. I swear i stuggle understanding anyone with an accent, and it's embarrassing because it's like "what?" every other sentence. I'm in the north-east by the way.
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[QUOTE=XSO;355745]Apparently I've been told I have a "posh london" accent. >_> I'm "well spoken" apparently and someone from the US who I spoke to thinks my English accent is awesome. @_@
I love English accents. :) They are so amAzing! I have loved England since I was a kid. If I wasn't in America, I'd be in England. That's my phrase and it's true. Most of my ancestors came from England. I LOVE English accents. That's why I like my men British. I'm sorry I had to say that. I'm completely obsessed with Harry Potter. The guys ar so amazingly Hot! Accents are a weird thing. To you, you don't have an accent because that's what you're used to. But to others it's different because they are not used to the way you speak. I'm From California, so hearing some one frome Texas or New York speak is an accent to me because that's not what I'm used to hearing. I was wondering if anyone could tell me how to delete my account. Please and Thank You. |
When I speak English I have a german accent. It´s not really nazi villain english because I´m pretty used to speak english at work.
So for my German. I live in the Ruhr area of Germany and we actually have a pretty nice accent here. So, yes, I have been told that I have an accent once or twice - but only when I speak with other people from the "Ruhrpott". We have a collection of words noone else uses. Some sound vagualy english, like "Pömms" instead of pumps, and most can be explained by the images you get in your head. Like "Luftkotelett" - "Air Cutlet" for a slim person or child. Let me verkasematuckel you the link to a dictionary, you old Kamuffels. ;) http://ruhrgebietssprache.de/glossar.html |
Saying coke for soda is incorrect. Coke is short for a name of a company (coca-cola). Saying soda or pop is fine, but saying coke is quite annoying IMO.
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I don't exactly have an accent, but i've been told by other New Jerseyans that I picked up the New Jersey accent. We tend to say words with a somewhat long emphasis...
Like water... Normally pronounced with emphasis in "ah", NJ said pronounced with emphasis on the "awe". Same thing with ball and a couple of other ah/awe words... <_< As far as that Coke thing is going, how is it possible to refer to hundreds of other soft drinks saying coke anyway? Is it supposed to be referenced to Cola or something? I don't get it. |
Philadelphians are the only people to say "wooder" for water. Everyone thinks it sounds weird that is from out of town, but to most Philadelphians "wahter" sounds weird and to me sounds a little pretentious, although I know it isn't.
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Just reading it makes me think it's a little weird. But i've never heard of it being said like that.
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I like how a word, all alone, can sound pretentious to someone!
I have a standard English sound, commonly known as bottlenose smooth, and have greatly destroyed the slight Spanish accent I had growing up as a child briefly learning two languages at once. In Spanish, however, I am ridiculed for my accent, commonly known as "stupid gringo trash" accent. |
When I speak Korean, I have a really bad English/foreign accent. Actually, I think my Japanese sounds better than my Korean (which is horrible)
I've lived in Colorado most of my life, and I've noticed that, when I travel somewhere else, no one really says that I have an accent. I think Coloradoians (how the fuck do you spell that?) typically don't have super-noticeable accents. I do stutter sometimes though -_-;; |
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