Posted on 11/25/2011 4:19:03 PM PST by blam
Agreed. This test was highly inaccurate in IMHO. Yes, I am originally from N.Y., but when I return to that area, they can definitely hear that I spent most of my time elsewhere. Likewise, I can hear that NY accent clearly a mile away. So, basically, according to this test, if you correctly differential sounds between different words, you are a Yankee. If you can’t hear the difference between words like “stalk” and “stock” that makes you inland North....nope, I aint buyin’ it.
Inland North
You may think you speak "Standard English straight out of the dictionary" but when you step away from the Great Lakes you get asked annoying questions like "Are you from Wisconsin?" or "Are you from Chicago?" Chances are you call carbonated drinks "pop."
Not much of fan of Tom Brokaw’s accent, but like the voices of reporters Keith Morrison and Bill Curtis. They could read menus and make it sound interesting.
Okay, now an excuse to post Bill Hader of SNL as Keith Morrison:
http://www.hulu.com/watch/45818/saturday-night-live-dateline
It nailed us...is it possible that they can read your ISP address and predict you that way? I hate to be so cynical...but I can’t help it.
My dad says it that way. He also pronounces the car make "Buick" as "Byurk" (one syllable).
I’m from W. Pa. I got “West” on the test. Nobody I ever met in the rest of Pa ever thought I sounded like them. Hubby from CT got “inland north”. We’ve lived in upstate NY for forty years, and people think we sound funny. The kids have a funny Syracuse accent, where job is jab and feel is fill. Everyone thinks they have no accent.
On a somewhat related note, was observing my daughter’s classroom a couple of weeks back and the teacher said the word “talk” was “tawk”—that the “l” sound was silent. I thought she was wrong, but when I looked it up it on dictionary.com they said the pronunciation was indeed “tawk”. As well as walk as “wawk” and chalk as “chawk”, but I’ve always put the “l” sound in those words.
In the mountains of NC, it's called a dope.
What American accent do you have? Your Result: The West
Your accent is the lowest common denominator of American speech. Unless you're a SoCal surfer, no one thinks you have an accent. And really, you may not even be from the West at all, you could easily be from Florida or one of those big Southern cities like Dallas or Atlanta. |
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The Midland |
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Boston |
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North Central |
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The Inland North |
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Philadelphia |
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The South |
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The Northeast |
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What American accent do you have? Quiz Created on GoToQuiz |
Here’s another one on pronunciation. Had two friends, one that grew up in Nebraska and one that grew up in Missouri. Both didn’t pronounce the “l” in words such as cold, Colfax, and shoulder i.e. shoulder would be showder, cold was code.
Got me right - the West. Born and raised in California.
Do you pronounce the ‘L’ in ‘salmon’?
A North Carolina hillbilly here. It says I have a Midland accent. I grew up in the military, moving all over the place. But folks tell me I’ve got a Southern accent.
I believe I say that word as sammon.
Whenever I travel abroad and spend time with the restless natives there, I return speaking English with their damn accent!
I guess we’re often mimic the people we’re with. There is even a theory supporting such observation.
My result was Northeast, but I’m from New Orleans.
Haven’t heard “Buick” pronounced in that way. What geographic region does your dad call home?
As a youngster in the early 1970’s, my family lived in the suburbs of Boston for a few years.
I walked into a cafeteria-style restaurant in Boston, and I saw the word TONIC on the large movable-type menu hanging high on the wall. I had no idea what to make of “Tonic.”
It sounded like some sort of home-made medicine that Granny gave to Jethro on “The Beverly Hillbillies.”
Eventually, I found out that “Tonic” was soda.
As far as accents, my English mom said that the Welsh accent is so strong that if you spent any time with them, you would end up with their accent. When I went to Wales as a little girl, I didn't start talking like my Aunt (by marriage)--mostly because I couldn't understand a darned word she was saying.
Don’t care what it says, I speek Pittsburghease. And proud of it.
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