Everrday I talk to you guys not physically, but you get the point
#21
Posted 18 February 2009 - 04:37 PM
Not nearly enough accents for South Africa. 11 national languages, each of which has it's own regional variance and effect on english means we get some pretty crazy accents
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With great power comes a great integral of energy over time.
With great power comes a great integral of energy over time.
#22
Posted 18 February 2009 - 06:55 PM
Well I'm happy they do have Bari accent in the Italian dialects
Adept of Team Quick Ben
I greet you as guests and so will not crush the life from you and devour your soul with peals of laughter. No, instead, I will make tea-Gothos
I greet you as guests and so will not crush the life from you and devour your soul with peals of laughter. No, instead, I will make tea-Gothos
#23
Posted 18 February 2009 - 07:40 PM
They don't have my accent because there is no slurring.
Trouble arrives when the opponents to such a system institute its extreme opposite, where individualism becomes godlike and sacrosanct, and no greater service to any other ideal (including community) is possible. In such a system rapacious greed thrives behind the guise of freedom, and the worst aspects of human nature come to the fore....
#24
Posted 18 February 2009 - 08:52 PM
I'm disappointed by the lack of Canadian dialects offered. Most of the East Coast has different accents, while personally I think West of Ontario sounds all the same.
And so the First denied their Mother,
in their fury, and so were cast out,
doomed children of Mother Dark.
in their fury, and so were cast out,
doomed children of Mother Dark.
#25
Posted 18 February 2009 - 09:33 PM
Does anyone else have a different accent in their inner-monologue? Mine quite regularly slips into Jane Austen-esque Georgian English...... Maybe I am schizophrenic with one personality as a common Mancunian and the other an English minor aristocrat lady circa. 1800!
Burn rubber =/= warp speed
#26
Posted 18 February 2009 - 09:36 PM
Crazy.
This post has been edited by HoosierDaddy: 18 February 2009 - 09:36 PM
Trouble arrives when the opponents to such a system institute its extreme opposite, where individualism becomes godlike and sacrosanct, and no greater service to any other ideal (including community) is possible. In such a system rapacious greed thrives behind the guise of freedom, and the worst aspects of human nature come to the fore....
#27
Posted 18 February 2009 - 10:39 PM
Occasionally my inner thoughts might have a different accent (was especially true while in French Immersion) but it's not a constant thing...
And so the First denied their Mother,
in their fury, and so were cast out,
doomed children of Mother Dark.
in their fury, and so were cast out,
doomed children of Mother Dark.
#28
Posted 19 February 2009 - 12:35 AM
I'm not installing Quicktime, it keeps trying to throw iTunes on my computer which is just not happening. Either way I doubt either of those Florida flags sounds anything like me, if I had to guess the northern flag will sound southern and the southern one will be in spanish. I actually have no accent at all, I just speak english.
QUOTE (Stalker @ Jan 23 2009, 01:09 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
So last night I was walking downtown for some pizza at like 1am with some friends of mine,
and someone said, "I'm so hungry I could eat a whole pizza."
I said, "I bet I could eat 100 pizzas," and no one understood me. I was sad.
and someone said, "I'm so hungry I could eat a whole pizza."
I said, "I bet I could eat 100 pizzas," and no one understood me. I was sad.
#29
Posted 19 February 2009 - 08:12 AM
Mezla PigDog, on Feb 18 2009, 09:33 PM, said:
Does anyone else have a different accent in their inner-monologue? Mine quite regularly slips into Jane Austen-esque Georgian English...... Maybe I am schizophrenic with one personality as a common Mancunian and the other an English minor aristocrat lady circa. 1800!
That'll be the bustle doing that!!
#30
Posted 19 February 2009 - 01:00 PM
#31
#32
Posted 19 February 2009 - 01:35 PM
Anomander, on Feb 18 2009, 08:52 PM, said:
I'm disappointed by the lack of Canadian dialects offered. Most of the East Coast has different accents, while personally I think West of Ontario sounds all the same.
I agree... no English speaking guy from Montreal on there...WTF?
And no Newfie dialect...c'mon!!!
New Brunswick???
The Nova Scotia sample is not accurate, either.
meh!
#33
Posted 19 February 2009 - 02:05 PM
I have a fairly standard accent, it's called Queen's English.
#34
Posted 19 February 2009 - 05:31 PM
Mezla PigDog, on Feb 18 2009, 09:33 PM, said:
Does anyone else have a different accent in their inner-monologue? Mine quite regularly slips into Jane Austen-esque Georgian English...... Maybe I am schizophrenic with one personality as a common Mancunian and the other an English minor aristocrat lady circa. 1800!
I have varying voices as well as inner monolgues, thanks to my attending a very middle class selective school, and then going off to uni and living with people from Oxfordshire (including my gf who speaks so correctly it makes me wince at times). So I veer between quite well spoken and common as a mucky chav, and my normal voice drops somewhere between the two, changing depending on the company. Although not enough evidently, as my family mock me for sounding posh, and people at uni think I sound like an irksome chimney sweep. So you cant win. Although I approve of your subconscious trying to make you dislodge your inner manc accent and talk like a posh southerner, it's a positive sign.
#35
Posted 19 February 2009 - 06:02 PM
For a proper Oxon accent...............add "Me Duck" to the end of each sentence
#36
Posted 19 February 2009 - 06:18 PM
hmm, I think in three different languages depending on the setting.
but my thinking English is same as my spoken English, so I think it's same accent.
but my thinking English is same as my spoken English, so I think it's same accent.
#37
Posted 19 February 2009 - 06:25 PM
Thelomen Toblerone, on Feb 19 2009, 12:31 PM, said:
Although I approve of your subconscious trying to make you dislodge your inner manc accent and talk like a posh southerner, it's a positive sign.
Verily I must heartily protest, Master Toblerone! I believe my other personality is from a family of landed gentry in the north of the England. Indeed it means I am somewhat distant from the society of London but I reside with my sophisticated southern cousins in Kent for the social season.
Burn rubber =/= warp speed
#38
Posted 19 February 2009 - 09:51 PM
Menandore, on Feb 19 2009, 08:00 AM, said:
Really, as far as I've heard, no one can pinpoint where I'm from becaue I have no distinction in my voice. The best they can do is say I'm from America.
QUOTE (Stalker @ Jan 23 2009, 01:09 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
So last night I was walking downtown for some pizza at like 1am with some friends of mine,
and someone said, "I'm so hungry I could eat a whole pizza."
I said, "I bet I could eat 100 pizzas," and no one understood me. I was sad.
and someone said, "I'm so hungry I could eat a whole pizza."
I said, "I bet I could eat 100 pizzas," and no one understood me. I was sad.
#39
Posted 19 February 2009 - 10:33 PM
*cough BULLSHIT! *cough
Who are you talking to? Standard inflections and enunciation change throughout the country.
Who are you talking to? Standard inflections and enunciation change throughout the country.
Trouble arrives when the opponents to such a system institute its extreme opposite, where individualism becomes godlike and sacrosanct, and no greater service to any other ideal (including community) is possible. In such a system rapacious greed thrives behind the guise of freedom, and the worst aspects of human nature come to the fore....
#40
Posted 19 February 2009 - 10:37 PM
We should pick a generic sentence and then everyone type out how they'd pronounce it whilst speaking normally. For instance, I'd say the word "hospital" something like "oss-pih-awl". I speak with what I think are called glottal stops and dark L's.