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Things you often Wonder


mjmooney

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17 minutes ago, mjmooney said:

New York/New Jersey

Boston

Minnesota/Wisconsin

'The south'

Texas

California 

That's it for me.

California I was going to say, but it’s a stereotype Valley Girl “Like, Oh my God, Totally!” voice I imagine. I’m not sure I can discern a male Californian accent in quite the same way. So I wasn’t certain that I’m just hearing a generic US teenage girl.

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I was in my usual haunt in Istanbul a few years ago and across from our table was a group of Brummie tourists. Young lads, around mid twenties. Now, I have this weird skill where I could probably guess which part of Birmingham you're from. So anyway, I said to mate 'I can tell you exactly in Birmingham those boys are from'. 

So I introduced myself and said to them 'You've just missed the number 1 to Acocks Green'. They all looked at me dumbfounded as 4/5 of the group were from Acocks Green and one from Moseley. 

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26 minutes ago, Mark Albrighton said:

California I was going to say, but it’s a stereotype Valley Girl “Like, Oh my God, Totally!” voice I imagine. I’m not sure I can discern a male Californian accent in quite the same way. So I wasn’t certain that I’m just hearing a generic US teenage girl.

Think Clint Eastwood. 

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12 hours ago, il_serpente said:

I'm a bit late to the party here, but another myth about badgers is that they're good at football:

 

They didn't even qualify for the SIFF WC finals. 

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7 hours ago, Mark Albrighton said:

To add to your list of US accents, I think that there’s a New Jersey accent I might be able to pick out. 

 

 

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7 hours ago, Wainy316 said:

Conversely to my ear there is only 4 US accents.

New York, Boston, Deep South, then everything else is just American.  I'm sure there's major differences throughout though.

Probably not too far off if we're generalizing, though I would rename "Deep South" as "Southern", as it's definitely not exclusive to the Deep South.   Though perhaps not as heavily accented, I knew plenty of people in Kansas who most of you would probably assume were from the South if you heard them speak.   It's probably as much  a south/Midwest rural vs. urban thing rather than strictly geographic.  You could perhaps argue there's a rural Midwest accent distinct from Southern.

There are definitely regional accents associated with other areas, but in most cases you're just as likely to find people there who just sound "American."   I'd count Minnesota and Chicago among those.   I lived in Minneapolis for a couple of years as a kid and don't remember anyone with an accent like those in "Fargo."   I'd be curious if @maqroll considers "Mainer" to be a distinct accent/dialect.

I live in California now and notice little difference from many people in Kansas City, though a lot of people in KC will have a hint of southern twang in comparison.  In general, the Midwest was always considered to be the place with no accent.   News and other hosts on national TV networks used to always be from the Midwest because their accents wouldn't turn anyone off.

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8 hours ago, villa4europe said:

what we dont do is write the way we talk so i think a lot of the slang and colloquialisms might come as a shock, especially those of us that lean towards the black country

i watched grealish yesterday in an england video with declan rice, he talks in a way that i dont, both in terms in which side of the city he originates from and his age and therefore slang 

I don't sound anything like Grealish and i think I have quite a soft Brummie accent, but when I was in a bar (remember those) a couple of years back, on the other side of the world, the barmaid, who was English, tried to guess where I was from based on my accent. She said Wolverhampton 😢 

 

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19 minutes ago, il_serpente said:

 I'd be curious if @maqroll considers "Mainer" to be a distinct accent/dialect.

What's left of it definitely is. Most people here under the age of 50 and who live southwest of Augusta won't have much of a trace of it at all. The Boston accent is more common here than the old Maine accent.

As for other American regional accents, I can usually detect the following:

Rhode Island (cross between Boston and NY)

NY/NJ

Eastern Pennsylvania/Delaware

Baltimore

North Carolina

Louisiana

Texas

S. Cal

N. Cal

Chicago

Minn/Wisc/Mich

But give it another 50 years and we will all sound the same.

 

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5 minutes ago, maqroll said:

Whatever became of this guy?

 

jpfc2.jpg

I go out on the hoy in petersfield sometimes ( pre covid at least) with an old school friend ... used to see him there quite a lot as he runs a bookshop there , believe it or not 

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I was paying the bill in a restaurant in Virginia, and the waitress noticed my accent and asked where I was from. "England", I replied. She then lowered her voice, looked shiftily around, and whispered "Don't you think that the people round here are weird?" A bit nonplussed, I gave a noncommital answer, and asked where she was from. "Ohio", she said. 

Edited by mjmooney
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24 minutes ago, mjmooney said:

I was paying the bill in a restaurant in Virginia, and the waitress noticed my accent and asked where I was from. "England", I replied. She then lowered her voice, looked shiftily around, and whispered "Don't you think that the people round here are weird?" A bit nonplussed, I gave a noncommital answer, and asked where she was from. "Ohio", she said. 

Maybe Virginia is too liberal for her! Those states have sort of "switched sides" politically.

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18 hours ago, il_serpente said:

What would my reaction be if I actually heard posters on VT speak?  I think when I read posts I generally hear them in my mind as though they were being spoken by an American using British idiom.  I suspect my overall mental picture of people on here would be different.   Perhaps I'll try reading posts out loud using a poor attempt at a Brum accent to see.   Or I'll just imagine it's Grealish saying it.   Would that be accurate?

We're all from the shires with country piles so think Downton Abbey. 

But seriously Jack Grealish would sound like many on here, or if you are a fan of Peaky Blinders I think Arthur Shelby does a great Brummie accent compared to most who tend to fluctuate towards scouse. 

If you like your guitars listen to an interview with Geezer Butler. 

After that lot you should pretty well have it. 

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