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How many of you have an accent?

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Originally posted by: RBachman
Originally posted by: Vic
Originally posted by: Quasmo
Umm your poll is incorrect because the accepted American accent is actually from the Mid-west. I have a midwestern accent, and plan on going into radio with it.
Correct. Text
Why does such a small portion of the country's population dictate what's considered to be the standard accent? 😕 Regardless, midwestern certainly isn't what I'd consider neutral - I never heard a newscaster say "aboot" 😉
And you'll never hear a midwesterner say "aboot" either. Unless that midwesterner is mocking a Canadian or someone from Minnesota or the Dakotas...

ZV
 
I used to have a really hard Philly accent.. but I've pretty much lost all of it now, except for a few words, but its really subtle.
 
The Shop requires their Elite members to speak at least five languages perfectly with no accent...
 
Originally posted by: GML3G0
I have an... um... NY accent? 😕

Oh, and why does it say: Edited: 02/02/2005 at 10:19 PM by AnandTech Moderator, when OP was on 11/06/2005 02:51 AM? 😕

Because that's part of her sig.
 
Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
Originally posted by: RBachman
Originally posted by: Vic
Originally posted by: Quasmo
Umm your poll is incorrect because the accepted American accent is actually from the Mid-west. I have a midwestern accent, and plan on going into radio with it.
Correct. Text
Why does such a small portion of the country's population dictate what's considered to be the standard accent? 😕 Regardless, midwestern certainly isn't what I'd consider neutral - I never heard a newscaster say "aboot" 😉
And you'll never hear a midwesterner say "aboot" either. Unless that midwesterner is mocking a Canadian or someone from Minnesota or the Dakotas...

ZV

The "aboot" thing is just some minor ribbing 😛 While it's there, it's very subtle. Californians have a very subtle difference as well, it's more in tone than pronunciation - a little laid back. Going by "newcaster" being the norm.
 
Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
And you'll never hear a midwesterner say "aboot" either. Unless that midwesterner is mocking a Canadian or someone from Minnesota or the Dakotas...

ZV

Minnesota is part of the midwest... but yeah, the rest of the midwest doesn't talk like that. Except maybe the U.P. - I've never met someone from there, but I've heard other Michigan residents make fun of them.
 
Originally posted by: mugs
Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
And you'll never hear a midwesterner say "aboot" either. Unless that midwesterner is mocking a Canadian or someone from Minnesota or the Dakotas...

ZV
Minnesota is part of the midwest... but yeah, the rest of the midwest doesn't talk like that. Except maybe the U.P. - I've never met someone from there, but I've heard other Michigan residents make fun of them.
Geographically Minnesota's kind of an odd-ball that gets lumped into the Midwest. Midwest is more Nebraska, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, and northern Ohio (Southern Ohio falls linguistically into Appalachia (sp?))

Regarding the person who noticed a difference between Midwestern "about" and Californian "about", I haven't noticed that. Both use the same "ow" pronounciation of the "ou" in "about".

ZV
 
Originally posted by: Captante
I've been told I have a slight English/British accent by folks on the West Coast which is strange since I've always lived in the USA.


Like Patrick Stewart? Except he was actually born in England.




I have a general American accent, meaning what you see on TV most of the time. However, I do say a few vowels on certain words southern because I've lived in the south since I was 8. But I've lived in more developed areas where accents, if any, are very small.
 
Originally posted by: Chaotic42
Remember: After the first fatality, everyone listens to the man with the tazer.

The taser doesn't kill. 😕

Originally posted by: Chaotic42
I think by midwest they mean things like Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, etc.

I've never heard anyone from those places say "aboot".

That's because they're not Canadian.
 
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