How funny you find accents in certain places?
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How funny you find accents in certain places?


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"How funny DO you find accents in certain places?"
I don't really find accents funny, although british accent sometimes makes me giggle. And I'm a guy. That accent is just so awesome.
I don't really find accents funny, although british accent sometimes makes me giggle. And I'm a guy. That accent is just so awesome.


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Well I as in England with some friends last year and every once in a while one of us would just slip into a English accent and not realize it. I guess that's what happens when you are surrounded by people who speak in a different way than you, it just rubs off.
So I guess I only find accents funny when I unintentionally speak with one.
So I guess I only find accents funny when I unintentionally speak with one.
I've never found accents funny. Humour based on this idea isn't humourous.
I have on occasion found them frustrating, particularly when I cannot understand what they're trying to say through the accent.
Speaking of incomprehensible, I don't understand this topic question.
I have on occasion found them frustrating, particularly when I cannot understand what they're trying to say through the accent.
Speaking of incomprehensible, I don't understand this topic question.
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I do not find anybody's accents humorous. Everyone has an Accent. That's just the way it goes. You might think someone sounds funny, but that's just how they speak wherever it may be that they are from. To them it might be you that sounds funny. I have an American accent..., but I've always loved the Australian and Irish accents. I wish i could do them, but I cant.


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keyara412 Wrote:
I have an American accent..., but I've always loved the Australian and Irish accents. I wish i could do them, but I cant.

I have an American accent..., but I've always loved the Australian and Irish accents. I wish i could do them, but I cant.
Just to clarify, as a native Irishman, there's no such thing as a single Irish accent. Every county has it's own accents, sure Dublin alone has 4-5 different accents that's all divided by the suburbs people are from. Cork would have a different range of accents to Galway, likewise Kerry, Laois, Sligo, Limerick, Waterford, Meath etc would all sound very distinct from one another.
I always find it very humorous when people say they like the "Irish" accent. I do be curious about what accent they do be thinking of! haha!
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And unless you educated yourself, you'd be hard pressed to tell the difference between North Midland, North Cities Vowel Shift, North Central, North/Western Canada dialects.
It's a matter of exposure. The subtleties of the language are most prominent to the speaker. Remember, the "American Dialect" is actually a work of fiction to create the least accented of dialects in the US. So yeah, maybe some people roll their R's more in Ireland than in other places. Maybe some get in a cot-caught merger. But unless you're familiar with the nuances, it's all Irish.
It's a matter of exposure. The subtleties of the language are most prominent to the speaker. Remember, the "American Dialect" is actually a work of fiction to create the least accented of dialects in the US. So yeah, maybe some people roll their R's more in Ireland than in other places. Maybe some get in a cot-caught merger. But unless you're familiar with the nuances, it's all Irish.


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ShoeUnited Wrote:
And unless you educated yourself, you'd be hard pressed to tell the difference between North Midland, North Cities Vowel Shift, North Central, North/Western Canada dialects.
It's a matter of exposure. The subtleties of the language are most prominent to the speaker. Remember, the "American Dialect" is actually a work of fiction to create the least accented of dialects in the US. So yeah, maybe some people roll their R's more in Ireland than in other places. Maybe some get in a cot-caught merger. But unless you're familiar with the nuances, it's all Irish.
And unless you educated yourself, you'd be hard pressed to tell the difference between North Midland, North Cities Vowel Shift, North Central, North/Western Canada dialects.
It's a matter of exposure. The subtleties of the language are most prominent to the speaker. Remember, the "American Dialect" is actually a work of fiction to create the least accented of dialects in the US. So yeah, maybe some people roll their R's more in Ireland than in other places. Maybe some get in a cot-caught merger. But unless you're familiar with the nuances, it's all Irish.
Not really the case here. Some accent's in Ireland genuinely do sound much, much different from each other. I have a dublin accent. If I was to say the word "burned", it would most likely sound like "burdind" because I've a strong Dublin accent. Where as in towns like Dalkey, also in Dublin, it would sound more like "bernt". In Cork, it would sound more like "Bornt". lol.
I do just find it a bit humourous when people say they like the Irish accent because I do be genuinely curious what accent they have in mind, is it a Dublin, a Galway, Cork accent etc?
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NoobSaibot5 Wrote:
Not really the case here. Some accent's in Ireland genuinely do sound much, much different from each other. I have a dublin accent. If I was to say the word "burned", it would most likely sound like "burdind" because I've a strong Dublin accent. Where as in towns like Dalkey, also in Dublin, it would sound more like "bernt". In Cork, it would sound more like "Bornt". lol.
I do just find it a bit humourous when people say they like the Irish accent because I do be genuinely curious what accent they have in mind, is it a Dublin, a Galway, Cork accent etc?
ShoeUnited Wrote:
And unless you educated yourself, you'd be hard pressed to tell the difference between North Midland, North Cities Vowel Shift, North Central, North/Western Canada dialects.
It's a matter of exposure. The subtleties of the language are most prominent to the speaker. Remember, the "American Dialect" is actually a work of fiction to create the least accented of dialects in the US. So yeah, maybe some people roll their R's more in Ireland than in other places. Maybe some get in a cot-caught merger. But unless you're familiar with the nuances, it's all Irish.
And unless you educated yourself, you'd be hard pressed to tell the difference between North Midland, North Cities Vowel Shift, North Central, North/Western Canada dialects.
It's a matter of exposure. The subtleties of the language are most prominent to the speaker. Remember, the "American Dialect" is actually a work of fiction to create the least accented of dialects in the US. So yeah, maybe some people roll their R's more in Ireland than in other places. Maybe some get in a cot-caught merger. But unless you're familiar with the nuances, it's all Irish.
Not really the case here. Some accent's in Ireland genuinely do sound much, much different from each other. I have a dublin accent. If I was to say the word "burned", it would most likely sound like "burdind" because I've a strong Dublin accent. Where as in towns like Dalkey, also in Dublin, it would sound more like "bernt". In Cork, it would sound more like "Bornt". lol.
I do just find it a bit humourous when people say they like the Irish accent because I do be genuinely curious what accent they have in mind, is it a Dublin, a Galway, Cork accent etc?
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Touché, my friend.
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