A question about accents around the world...

RogueAgentRogueAgent Speeding in the Tumbler...Posts: 3,676MI6 Agent
edited July 2007 in Off Topic Chat
On my job, we usually get clients or employees from different parts of the world and an episode happened this morning in which one of the managers stuck his foot in his mouth trying to make a joke about a client (think an episode of The Office) in a light-hearted manner during a staff meeting. I won't repeat the joke because it's in ill taste IMO.

Instead of asking, he assumed the man was from South Africa when in fact the man was from Auckland. To no surprise, the NZ man was beet red from embarrassment/anger or both and the manager, who shouldn't have even been called in to this meeting, looked like he wanted to melt through the floor. In the end I think that the episode was repaired somewhat.

Sad thing about it all was I cringed, knowing that this guy was sitting in on this. I've heard this guy around the watercooler; he's a nice person but let's just say he's lacking a little upstairs when it comes to thinking before speaking.

Okay, I know how to distinguish a Scot's accent, an English or Welsh one pretty much and an Irish accent even though all three have various subtleties. If I'm not mistaken, alot of these other derivative tones (Austrailian, New Zealand, S. African) all originated from the UK in some form or another.


Is there something that can be discernable in manner of speak that you guys can automatically pick up? That incident just compells me to pose this question...although if I'm in the presence of someone under the circumstances, I'll just ask them instead of assuming. ;)


I have known some people getting offended when you get their nationalities wrong just from hearing them talk..like mistaking a Bavarian for German.
Mrs. Man Face: "You wouldn't hit a lady? Would you?"

Batman: "The Hammer Of Justice is UNISEX!"
-Batman: The Brave & The Bold -
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Comments

  • BarbelBarbel ScotlandPosts: 37,870Chief of Staff
    Being a Scot I can usually pick out which part of Scotland an accent comes from- John Smeaton, recently in the news for his heroism at Glasgow Airport, has a broad Glasgow accent, for example. I can make a fair stab at which part of England an accent comes from, but not an Irish one.
    I'm learning to distinguish German accents- my own German comes Berlin-flavoured (saying "Nay" rather than "Nein" for instance), since that's where my wife and her family (from whom I've picked it up) have spent much of their time- but have a lot further to go in that direction. Bride Of Barbel tells me that the Governor Of California, to pick a well-known example, speaks with an unmistakable Austrian sound even when he's speaking English but I can't distinguish it. And that's not a True Lie :s.
    I've found that Continentals can generally tell that I'm from the UK but not which part, usually assuming I'm English (England does have the highest population in the British Isles, so that's fair enough). I do have a Scots accent, as The Cat or Moonraker5 can confirm, although naturally I tone it down when abroad.
  • LoeffelholzLoeffelholz The United States, With LovePosts: 8,998Quartermasters
    edited July 2007
    Interesting topic.

    When I was stationed in Spain, from '81 to '83, I became aware (for the first time) of how a country's citizens view accents within its own border...

    (I don't know why it took me that long, since in the U.S.A. we have countless variations of just a 'Southern' accent: Texas, Tennessee, Mississippi, the Carolinas, et al...and then, elswhere in the country we have those from Minnesooota...there's the Boston/New England, the different accents even within New York City, etc...! Perhaps it was the dawning awareness that this wasn't exclusively a United States, 'melting pot' issue)

    A buddy and I frequently took weekend trips with our (native) girlfriends to the Spanish Riviera (the towns of Sitges and Salou) on the Meditteranean coast. I have vivid memories of us watching the newscasts on TV, and the girls laughing. I asked why, and Isabel replied: "Their Catalan accents are terrible!"

    Then of course there were the Basques, the Aragonese, ad infinitum...
    Check out my Amazon author page! Mark Loeffelholz
    "I am not an entrant in the Shakespeare Stakes." - Ian Fleming
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  • Dan SameDan Same Victoria, AustraliaPosts: 6,054MI6 Agent
    Barbel wrote:
    although naturally I tone it down when abroad.
    Why is that?
    "He’s a man way out there in the blue, riding on a smile and a shoeshine. And when they start not smiling back—that’s an earthquake. and then you get yourself a couple of spots on your hat, and you’re finished. Nobody dast blame this man. A salesman is got to dream, boy. It comes with the territory." Death of a Salesman
  • Lady RoseLady Rose London,UKPosts: 2,667MI6 Agent
    The Aussie and New Zealand accents are the ones that get me. I cant distinguish them at all which I know drives Aussies and Kiwis mad!

    On the whole I'm not too bad with accents. I think working in a a city like London helps. So many nationalities to mix with.

    My own accent is rather non descript now. I was raised in Liverpool but have spent all of my adult life in London. Most people think it has a Northern twang but can never place it.

    And Rogue, just to show how confusing the whole accent thing is and why you will never totally get it, when I was 10 and had a fairly strong Liverpool accent, I went to the US. Everyone there thought I was Canadian!!

    I think in this cosmopolitan world we live in it is only going to become harder to place accents. My daughter has started developing an upward inflection in her voice at the end of every sentence which is undeniably an influence from US television programmes.The world is a smaller place and and its only getting smaller.
  • RogueAgentRogueAgent Speeding in the Tumbler...Posts: 3,676MI6 Agent
    edited July 2007
    Lady Rose wrote:
    And Rogue, just to show how confusing the whole accent thing is and why you will never totally get it, when I was 10 and had a fairly strong Liverpool accent, I went to the US. Everyone there thought I was Canadian!!


    :)) That's funny.

    I get teased quite abit here in the south because my Brooklyn accent stands out so much against the usual Texas drawl here.

    Of course when I go home, my family just laughs at my son's proper, Southern speak as if he doesn't want to succumb to it totally. They think it's hilarious.
    Mrs. Man Face: "You wouldn't hit a lady? Would you?"

    Batman: "The Hammer Of Justice is UNISEX!"
    -Batman: The Brave & The Bold -
  • BarbelBarbel ScotlandPosts: 37,870Chief of Staff
    Dan Same wrote:
    Barbel wrote:
    although naturally I tone it down when abroad.
    Why is that?

    It keeps things simple, Dan. Certain vowel sounds have distinct regional pronounciation which foreigners may not be familiar with. I don't have the kind of Scottish accent which renders the word "house" as "hoose" (cf "Oor Wullie", fellow Scots!), but having lived mainly in Scotland for nearly 50 years there's no way I've avoided sounding like what I am, and nor would I normally want to.

    However... being used to speaking and singing in public, as well as being on radio fairly often (yesterday was the latest time for that) and spending a fair chunk of time abroad (usually Germany) I've become quite adept at modifying my tones as appropriate to ensure clear communication.
  • RogueAgentRogueAgent Speeding in the Tumbler...Posts: 3,676MI6 Agent
    Barbel wrote:
    Dan Same wrote:
    Barbel wrote:
    although naturally I tone it down when abroad.
    Why is that?

    It keeps things simple, Dan. Certain vowel sounds have distinct regional pronounciation which foreigners may not be familiar with. I don't have the kind of Scottish accent which renders the word "house" as "hoose" (cf "Oor Wullie", fellow Scots!), but having lived mainly in Scotland for nearly 50 years there's no way I've avoided sounding like what I am, and nor would I normally want to.

    However... being used to speaking and singing in public, as well as being on radio fairly often (yesterday was the latest time for that) and spending a fair chunk of time abroad (usually Germany) I've become quite adept at modifying my tones as appropriate to ensure clear communication.


    Funny you should mention that, Barbel when last year I watched a Scottish film on IFC one night.

    The brough was sooo heavy that they apparently had to subtitle it. I couldn't understand a word that they were saying and I knew that they were Scottish.

    I cannot recall the film unfortunately...
    Mrs. Man Face: "You wouldn't hit a lady? Would you?"

    Batman: "The Hammer Of Justice is UNISEX!"
    -Batman: The Brave & The Bold -
  • BarbelBarbel ScotlandPosts: 37,870Chief of Staff
    RogueAgent wrote:
    Funny you should mention that, Barbel when last year I watched a Scottish film on IFC one night.

    The brough was sooo heavy that they apparently had to subtitle it. I couldn't understand a word that they were saying and I knew that they were Scottish.

    I cannot recall the film unfortunately...

    Gregory's Girl, perhaps? Trainspotting?

    I can understand where you're coming from, Rogue- sometimes Scottish comedy shows ("Chewing The Fat", "Rab C.") are unintelligible to our Southern neighbours. Admittedly those are pretty extreme examples, especially the latter.

    To show it works both ways- a few years ago I was watching TV in my mother-in-law's house in Leipzig (she's moved since) one evening. First up, the news. No problems, understood every word. Next, a romantic comedy (three girls, three guys)- I got most of that. Then, a detective show- I was completely lost! Strong accents, lots of slang...
  • RogueAgentRogueAgent Speeding in the Tumbler...Posts: 3,676MI6 Agent
    Barbel wrote:
    Gregory's Girl, perhaps? Trainspotting?


    No I understand Trainspotting even if I got lost in the venacular of the region; the dialect in that film was tame compared to this one.
    This film came out sometime in the 90s I'm sure and soccer was the basis of it I believe.


    If it weren't for the subtitles I would've been totally lost. The english was annuciated so extreme that I had to strain just to make out what they were saying.
    Mrs. Man Face: "You wouldn't hit a lady? Would you?"

    Batman: "The Hammer Of Justice is UNISEX!"
    -Batman: The Brave & The Bold -
  • John DrakeJohn Drake On assignmentPosts: 2,564MI6 Agent
    RogueAgent wrote:
    Barbel wrote:
    Gregory's Girl, perhaps? Trainspotting?


    No I understand Trainspotting even if I got lost in the venacular of the region; the dialect in that film was tame compared to this one.
    This film came out sometime in the 90s I'm sure and soccer was the basis of it I believe.


    If it weren't for the subtitles I would've been totally lost. The english was annuciated so extreme that I had to strain just to make out what they were saying.

    Is it My Name is Joe? I think the protagonist in that has 5-a-side team. Been a while since I've seen it. The only Scots soccer movie I can think of is A Shot at Glory.

    I honestly can't tell the difference between a NZ and an Aussie accent though I'm told there is one. I work with a South African and her accent is difficult to place. Most people tend to think she is Australian. As far as my own accent goes, foriegners tend to have a hard time placing it. A Dutchman thought I sounded American. A Swedish guy thought I was German, ?:) :)) Irish probably comes up the most. I'm rarely mistaken for an Englishman though.
  • RogueAgentRogueAgent Speeding in the Tumbler...Posts: 3,676MI6 Agent
    edited July 2007
    John Drake wrote:
    Is it My Name is Joe? I think the protagonist in that has 5-a-side team.



    That could be the name of it because the main guy in it, was dropping F-bombs that I couldn't quite make out was in a horror film titled Session 9 I recently saw for the first time. That's one of the things I remember about that movie was this guy. So you may be right.


    As far as my own accent goes, foriegners tend to have a hard time placing it. A Dutchman thought I sounded American. A Swedish guy thought I was German, ?:) :)) Irish probably comes up the most. I'm rarely mistaken for an Englishman though.



    Hmmmm....that's what you want us to believe, J.D.? Or is it Martin? Bruno?

    I mean when you're not stealing formulas or microfilm, huh? :v :D


    Saint9.jpg
    Mrs. Man Face: "You wouldn't hit a lady? Would you?"

    Batman: "The Hammer Of Justice is UNISEX!"
    -Batman: The Brave & The Bold -
  • John DrakeJohn Drake On assignmentPosts: 2,564MI6 Agent
    edited July 2007
    RogueAgent wrote:
    That could be the name of it because the main guy in it, was dropping F-bombs that I couldn't quite make out was in a horror film titled Session 9 I recently saw for the first time. That's one of the things I remember about that movie was this guy. So you may be right.

    That sounds right. Peter Mullan is the name of the actor and he's in both those movies.
    As far as my own accent goes, foriegners tend to have a hard time placing it. A Dutchman thought I sounded American. A Swedish guy thought I was German, ?:) :)) Irish probably comes up the most. I'm rarely mistaken for an Englishman though.


    Hmmmm....that's what you want us to believe, J.D.? Or is it Martin? Bruno?

    I mean when you're not stealing formulas or microfilm, huh? :v :D


    Saint9.jpg

    You've nailed me. I am Val Kilmer, man of a hundred accents. :)) OMG I forgot that he dressed up like that in The Saint. What a daftie. :))
  • highhopeshighhopes Posts: 1,358MI6 Agent
    Personally, I can only distinguish maybe 2 types of Eastern U.S. (New York, New England or Boston) accents, one Southern. I'm amazed that some people can make finer distinctions.

    Incidentally, speaking of the U.K. as origins for a number different accents, it is also, in a roundabout way, supposed to have led to the New York accent of "toity-toid and Vine" fame. I read somewhere that it was the result of Northerners, a more immigrant-heavy culture, wanting to emulate the speech of Southerners (who derive their accent from U.K. countries) in the pre-Civil War South. I guess you could say they were not entirely successful.
  • RogueAgentRogueAgent Speeding in the Tumbler...Posts: 3,676MI6 Agent
    edited July 2007
    John Drake wrote:
    What a daftie. :))



    It's UK sayings like this that just cracks me up! :)) :)) :))

    It reminds me of when I saw the original GET CARTER some years ago and a guy asked his mistress if she had... "gut trouble". :)) :)) :))
    Mrs. Man Face: "You wouldn't hit a lady? Would you?"

    Batman: "The Hammer Of Justice is UNISEX!"
    -Batman: The Brave & The Bold -
  • 72897289 Beau DesertPosts: 1,691MI6 Agent
    I have always lived in Sunny California, and the people here have NO accents!

    I have always admired a "Brit" accent ( I'm sure oo7 has nothing to do with it) and love listening to a British speaker. I can deduce a Scot and an Aussie.

    My best pal just returned from Europe. The only language he could not make out on the TV was a broadcast from Scotland!!!

    We also just had a visitor from the UK. She hails from Birmingham - and is a delight to the ears! I had the honor of screening her first viewing of Casino Royale. She loved the movie, but thought DC sounded very American?
  • highhopeshighhopes Posts: 1,358MI6 Agent
    RogueAgent wrote:
    John Drake wrote:
    What a daftie. :))



    It's UK sayings like this that just cracks me up! :)) :)) :))

    It reminds me of when I saw the original GET CARTER some years ago and a guy asked his mistress if she had... "gut trouble". :)) :)) :))

    Although I like the sound of it anyway, when Michael Caine really gets down to his roots in a role, I can barely understand a word out of his mouth. And that's just his accent. From what I understand, his people were Cockney. I saw him explain Cockney rhyming slang once on a talk show. It's creative as hell, but I'm still not quite sure how they communicate even among themselves.
  • Lady RoseLady Rose London,UKPosts: 2,667MI6 Agent
    edited July 2007
    highhopes wrote:
    From what I understand, his people were Cockney. I saw him explain Cockney rhyming slang once on a talk show. It's creative as hell, but I'm still not quite sure how they communicate even among themselves.

    I have a friend that uses it all the time ( London born and bred) so I'm quite fluent these days . Its also great to use as code infront of the 'saucepan lids'

    Here is a guide to all you need to know ... even contains the rude one :D


    http://www.phespirit.info/cockney/english_to_slang.htm
  • Moonraker 5Moonraker 5 Ayrshire, ScotlandPosts: 1,821MI6 Agent
    edited July 2007
    Accents around the UK and Ireland I have no trouble placing, though when you get down to specificying a small geographical area I can only do that with Scots. I'm told that there's a variation between Newcastle and Sunderland accents...pass, it's all unintelligible Geordie to me (one of two accents I have difficulty understanding in the UK, there's a Geordie regular at my gym and honestly I'm just smiling and nodding most of the time when he's talking. The other is Orcadian).

    But in the county I'm from (of 390,000 people), there's subtle differences and different terms used in the north, south and east. There's a distinct difference in the Fife accent to Edinburgh or Tayside, despite only separated from each by rivers.

    As for English-speaking Commonwealth countries, I think South African is very distinctive. Their accent sounds like it's a bit of an effort to overcome (I don't mean that as an offense, just mean that certain vowels sound like they don't come naturally). Kiwis are softer and and milder in their accents than Aussies, likewise Cannucks to Americans. Not that long ago a woman I met locally squeeled with delight when I asked her what part of Canada she was from, she'd been taken as an American for her whole trip.
    Barbel wrote:
    Dan Same wrote:
    Barbel wrote:
    although naturally I tone it down when abroad.
    Why is that?

    It keeps things simple, Dan. Certain vowel sounds have distinct regional pronounciation which foreigners may not be familiar with.

    Same here. Though I'm told (and Barbel might clarify or reject this) I don't have a strong west of Scotland accent. I'm apparently well spoken and not heavily regionalised (Barbel, would you believe I've been accused in the past of having a "Largs accent"? :)) For those not familiar, it's a town of about 11000) but like every other Scotsman I do speak quickly. Mix that with our own dialect, and foreigners get lost quite quickly.

    Similar to JD (wherabouts are you in Scotland, by the way? I'm assuming somewhere north of Perth! :) ) I'm rarely taken as English. In the US I've had Irish, South African and Australian, but curiously never English. In Europe though it tends to be English, which as Barbel points out is understandable - I can't tell the difference between a German or an Austrian, or identify a Swiss person.

    (Alex has seen it, but how many from beyond these shores - indeed, beyond this wee nation's borders, understands this lot... Taysiders In Space)
    unitedkingdom.png
  • BarbelBarbel ScotlandPosts: 37,870Chief of Staff
    I'm told (and Barbel might clarify or reject this) I don't have a strong west of Scotland accent. I'm apparently well spoken and not heavily regionalised (Barbel, would you believe I've been accused in the past of having a "Largs accent"? :)) For those not familiar, it's a town of about 11000) but like every other Scotsman I do speak quickly. Mix that with our own dialect, and foreigners get lost quite quickly.

    No, you don't have a strong accent. That's a Scottish accent I mean, not a Largs one! A LARGS accent :))? Where did your interlocutor hail from? And are there really as many as 11000 people in Largs :o?

    (Quick plug- The Skunnered return to The Sheiling, Largs, on November 17th. Now back to our regular program.)

    You're quite right about speaking quickly making translation difficult, but it's not limited to Scots.
  • Tee HeeTee Hee CBT Headquarters: Chicago, ILPosts: 917MI6 Agent
    After I went away to college, I learned that I have a Chicago accent. I guess it has something to do with the way that we pronounce our "A's." :s

    Ah well, it could be worse. I could have a Brooklyn accent! No offense Rogue! :))
    "My acting range? Left eyebrow raised, right eyebrow raised..."

    -Roger Moore
  • Moonraker 5Moonraker 5 Ayrshire, ScotlandPosts: 1,821MI6 Agent
    edited July 2007
    Barbel wrote:
    No, you don't have a strong accent. That's a Scottish accent I mean, not a Largs one! A LARGS accent :))? Where did your interlocutor hail from? And are there really as many as 11000 people in Largs :o?
    Weegieworld. Not much exists outside that world for Weegies :D Largs is a foreign holiday for them remember :))

    (And maybe 11000 is just on a sunny day! :)) But I'm sure I read that...it does seem quite high though)
    Barbel wrote:
    (Quick plug- The Skunnered return to The Sheiling, Largs, on November 17th. Now back to our regular program.)
    Come out of The Shieling and walk straight up the road facing you, and I'm about 200 yards on the right ;) So I might wander down if I can be ar5ed ;) :))
    unitedkingdom.png
  • BarbelBarbel ScotlandPosts: 37,870Chief of Staff
    edited July 2007
    Weegieworld. Not much exists outside that world for Weegies :D Largs is a foreign holiday for them remember :))

    "Doon the watter..." I'm not exactly a Weegie, Neilston is pretty much the sticks (cue banjo playing "Duelling Banjos"), although I appreciate that to you coasties it must be bright lights, big city :D.

    Barbel wrote:
    (Quick plug- The Skunnered return to The Sheiling, Largs, on November 17th. Now back to our regular program.)
    Come out of The Shieling and walk straight up the road facing you, and I'm about 200 yards on the right ;) So I might wander down if I can be ar5ed ;) :))

    Look forward to seeing you- and you can look forward to hearing us and becoming skunnered :))!

    PS Of the 11000 in Largs, how many are under 65? (Cue the scene in LALD when Bond & Leiter go to St. Petersburg...)
  • RogueAgentRogueAgent Speeding in the Tumbler...Posts: 3,676MI6 Agent
    edited July 2007
    Tee Hee wrote:
    After I went away to college, I learned that I have a Chicago accent. I guess it has something to do with the way that we pronounce our "A's." :s

    Ah well, it could be worse. I could have a Brooklyn accent! No offense Rogue! :))


    None taken ;) . However many people down south (quite a few but not all) don't particularly care for northern accents much; I hear that the most irritating to them are New York, Northern Illinois & Minnesota. Out of those I've noticed, the majority of them are men. The women usually like the change. B-)

    I've gotten jabs here and there but nothing too bad. Some just give me a hard time for being too "city". I didn't think one could be just from talking.
    Mrs. Man Face: "You wouldn't hit a lady? Would you?"

    Batman: "The Hammer Of Justice is UNISEX!"
    -Batman: The Brave & The Bold -
  • John DrakeJohn Drake On assignmentPosts: 2,564MI6 Agent
    Similar to JD (wherabouts are you in Scotland, by the way? I'm assuming somewhere north of Perth! :) )

    Yup. Up in the NE with the sheep and the heather. :D

    (Alex has seen it, but how many from beyond these shores - indeed, beyond this wee nation's borders, understands this lot... Taysiders In Space)[/quote]

    Brilliant. Love this sketch. "Set phasers to malkey." Although my favourite Chewin the Fat sketch involves two young boys, an ice-cream van, and a lifted skirt. :))
  • BarbelBarbel ScotlandPosts: 37,870Chief of Staff
    John Drake wrote:
    Although my favourite Chewin the Fat sketch involves two young boys, an ice-cream van, and a lifted skirt. :))

    :)) :)) Priceless.

    Do you remember the running gag about the boy entering puberty whose mother kept humiliating him in public? He was at school with my elder son (Ghost Of Barbel) and was once being teased by his schoolmates along similar lines to the show. His response? "Laugh it up, boys, I'm earning £2K a week." They didn't tease him after that...
  • FelixLeiter ♀FelixLeiter ♀ Staffordshire or a pubPosts: 1,286MI6 Agent
    Lol. I got some of that sketch, but i gotta admit - not a lot.
    I used to have real trouble distinguishing any uk northern accent, but I'm better now. I can pick out quite a few parts of lancashire as i have friends there.
    Go south and i'm completely lost though.
    My best has got to be midlands as that's where i live.
    American accents I never used to be able to get, but i've recently learnt to pick out a new york accent. TV of course. :D

    My own accent is a real mixture. I go to school ten minutes down the road but the change in accent is enourmous. Theirs is much more well spoken. I've never had any trace of it in my voice though. Mine has a bit of Cannock, that is where I currently live, but the rest is pretty much Black Country. I prefer that part. I used to live there and nearly all my family do. My parents still have their Black Country accents. However, my accent is definitely not full Walsall any more.
    Relax darling, I'm on top of the situation -{
  • John DrakeJohn Drake On assignmentPosts: 2,564MI6 Agent
    Barbel wrote:
    Do you remember the running gag about the boy entering puberty whose mother kept humiliating him in public? He was at school with my elder son (Ghost Of Barbel) and was once being teased by his schoolmates along similar lines to the show. His response? "Laugh it up, boys, I'm earning £2K a week." They didn't tease him after that...

    I remember those sketches and I wondered at the time if the kid would be getting the same treatment off-screen. I'm glad he was getting decent money.
  • The Sly FoxThe Sly Fox USAPosts: 467MI6 Agent
    edited July 2007
    Lady Rose wrote:
    My own accent is rather non descript now. I was raised in Liverpool but have spent all of my adult life in London. Most people think it has a Northern twang but can never place it.

    And Rogue, just to show how confusing the whole accent thing is and why you will never totally get it, when I was 10 and had a fairly strong Liverpool accent, I went to the US. Everyone there thought I was Canadian!!

    I think in this cosmopolitan world we live in it is only going to become harder to place accents. My daughter has started developing an upward inflection in her voice at the end of every sentence which is undeniably an influence from US television programmes.The world is a smaller place and and its only getting smaller.

    My accent is very nondescript. All my life I've lived in the US, but in many different parts of it. Texas, Florida, North Carolina, Michigan... Then my mother was from Wisconsin! This lead to a mixture of all kinds of accents rolled into one. I've found that I mainly speak a form of Southern, one which you pick up when having lived in northern Florida for a while (southern Florida is very different :) ). Floridian Southern is similar to Alabama, but more subtle. Mine is mostly limited to vernacular instead of pronunciation, though. Sometimes I'll find myself using things like "I'm fixin' to..." "I'm gonna chuck this out the window..."

    Mind you, I don't sound much like a 'Redneck' as they say, since I've since lived in Oregon for about four years now. I've inevitably picked up a form of the Pacific Northwest accent, which is mainly a different way of pronouncing vowels. For example, when saying something that has a long "a" sound, you'll add a long "e" sound to it. It's actually very subtle, and I have trouble noticing it. Although the most noticeable trait of this is when they say the word "measure" (usually pronounced as "mehsure"). For some reason, they like to say "maysure"... I try my hardest not to pick that one up! ;)

    I've been told that this inevitable mixture of dialects and accents leads me to sound like I'm from Seattle... Makes sense. Although the fact that I speak Japanese will undoubtedly influence my speech when I study it further at university... :D
  • AlexAlex The Eastern SeaboardPosts: 2,694MI6 Agent
    John Drake wrote:
    Brilliant. Love this sketch. "Set phasers to malkey." Although my favourite Chewin the Fat sketch involves two young boys, an ice-cream van, and a lifted skirt. :))
    M5 wrote:
    (Alex has seen it, but how many from beyond these shores - indeed, beyond this wee nation's borders, understands this lot... Taysiders In Space)

    Brilliant. Love this sketch. "Set phasers to malkey." Although my favourite Chewin the Fat sketch involves two young boys, an ice-cream van, and a lifted skirt. :))

    Set phasers to malkey. That was my sig for a while. But I had to ask M-Five what it meant first. :D

    "Stop keking (sp?) at my arse!" Had to ask what that meant as well :))

    All in all a hilarious sketch.
  • Moonraker 5Moonraker 5 Ayrshire, ScotlandPosts: 1,821MI6 Agent
    It's like hee-haw if Ah've ever seen a'fore capt'n, ken? :))

    Though apparently non-descript in Scottish accent terms, I do confess I occassionally use 'hee-haw' meaning nothing. Most of the affections from this part of the world though, adding "nae" for "n't" (isnae, doesnae, cannae) and "tae" for "to" do creep in as well. Also, I almost always use aye for yes.

    And stereotypical it may be, but och and ach are very much part of the volcabulary for oh and ah. ;)
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