Which do you pick as your default for new encounters? I hear it more in the first generation children of Spanish-speaking immigrants (which I am one but I never picked the accent up). How to say calculus in English? English is a notoriously difficult language for non-native speakers to learn. We don't preface highways with I in Chicago. It is plural in basically all uses. In the case of "apple", there are two consonants after the "a" even if you do flip the "le" at the end, so the "a" is short regardless. Either way, clearly classic ML. That's also where it changes from we'uns and you'uns to y'all. Unlike the Latin o-acute ó, if you want Cyrillic о with accent mark, it takes two Unicode characters to create "о́", and the second one is U+0301. Also of interest is the "Harvard Dialect Survey" [1], which gives direct questions and highlights the regional variances. DAD. But I've never committed them to memory or used them in ordinary conversation. That being said, not everyone in DFW talks that way. We either just use the number (I took 290 to 294 to 88), or we use their name. Given the context the definite article seems unneeded to my ears. Attribute definition is - a quality, character, or characteristic ascribed to someone or something. Maybe "tahwn-ick" says it better? Many people living outside of the US (and many within) do not have much of an understanding of this situation, either because they have not been exposed to it sufficiently, or because they outright deny it (for one extreme of it, see Steve Bannon's reaction when an interviewer says that all Americans except for Native Americans are immigrants [0]). Not sure why people are downvoting you for sharing your opinion on a light subject. Also, how far outside of SoCal does the term "Freeway" get used? North American Regional Dialects and Accents (2016). (Like the fish who asks, "What the hell is water? While traveling recently, I was in Billings was discussing with a bartender about the local dialect and where various boundaries of production were and pulled up this map. I don't understand either. Have I been corrupted by Californians that have moved to Oregon? -shrugs-. Interstate 495 is "495" or "the L.I.E." I think that was the expectation a few generations ago, once TVs were in most people's homes, but it didn't happen. In the southwest the numbers are often single digit, so it's awkward and confusing to use without a preprended "I-" or "the". Global English ("Globish") as a simplified subset of English already exists: As an anecdote: I have a friend who grew up in Sydney, AU. Interesting map, it makes me want to make a poster out of it. My father's mother's accent was almost British, but I can clearly remember my mother's mother talking about "worshing" up or going down to the "crick". But many series and movies set here insist on referring to. My difficulties with Siri (and I tried really hard to get it to recognise 'Hey Siri' and only got slightly angry) leads me to suspect that my accent may still be there. It might be ironic if someone from Alabama was describing snow, though. (Even though I'm sure you have an accent! The first syllable is drawn out much more than I would hear that word somewhere other than New England. tuple translation and audio pronunciation in English with The level of detail on this is astonishing. ), But there is a Miami accent that I can hear. Take your english pronunciation to the next level with this audio dictionary references of the word tuple. tuple prevod i izgovor. ... vs. Indian Accent, and American Southern vs. Non-Southern. When I grew up I used "soft drink" as well, but where I live now (PNW) nobody understands this, so I just use "soda". The episode is https://www.waywordradio.org/regional-term-pitch-in/, I'll also toss in an older dialect survey with maps - http://dialect.redlog.net/maps.html, http://popvssoda.com/statistics/TOTAL.html. It's not a huge deal, but it would be a misunderstanding that seems avoidable with more specific language, so it's amusing to me. "pin" == "pen" : http://allthingslinguistic.com/post/81929757765/cather-wren-... "soda" vs "pop" vs "coke": http://popvssoda.com/. I mean "Do you have a car and/or get a ride with someone who has a car?" I grew up in Eastern CT and the only people I've met for whom "caught" == "cot" or "dawn" == "don" are from working class families in Boston. Many of my in-laws are from the East Bay, so I have something of a window into these issues. I think most of this is probably dying out in younger people. Tonic was also a popular term for any type of soda (coke, sprite, etc) in the northeast US, at least in the 1980's. All of these are backwards for users in the American English locale and most other locales. Rs get soft or disappear and vowels get very east coasty. On the "soda vs pop vs coke" question, as a child I would have never used any of those words. Alabama gets many tornadoes, so it makes sense that an audio clip describing a tornado is from a place that receives tornadoes. As a Michigander, I'd say "Take US131" or "Get on I96 eastbound to M44", just in the same way I'd say "Take a right on Main Street". If someone asks for a coke, they get a Coca-Cola (or are queried for an alternative if not available). But for multi-digit, it's virtually never there - it's 405 and 520 (without "the"! This is the same where I now live in New England, as well. tuple But that recommendation is probably not worth the paper it's printed on. Doesn't mean I'm going to stop using it or feel bad about it, but I understand if it's not really understood outside my region and seems like a silly word. Adding 'the' just sounds awkward to me, but it might just be a syllable/flow thing. This does not mean that the author is racist; merely that the work was produced within a dominant homogeneous socio-cultural context, that many take issue with. The main reason for this is that in the Netherlands foreign language films, TV series etc. In some ways the Midwest is getting more divergent, with the Northern Cities Vowel Shift. Likewise, if someone comes over to my place, I might ask, "Can I get you a drink? Not exactly a written map, but I think you'll enjoy. Country roads often have long names like "Main Neerim Road" or "Warragul Korumburra Rd". Then there's another phenomenon that in language history so far has only happened to English: There are more non-native speakers than native speakers. I spent my formative years in the South. California in this way at the moment. Becker, Kara, and Amy Wing-mei Wong. Browse nearby or related words I've been seeing this meme a lot more lately. I haven't personally heard anyone use it in probably two decades, and I've never heard my father or any of his siblings say it, but it was common among those generations when they were still alive. dad. But that is all more at the toolkit level rather than the application level. Or I'll just pop down to the dairy instead ;). Double digits sounds best with the "I-", I think. Talk to an AI for a minute and have it figure out where you're from. We're I'm from, we mostly say the plus the name of the road. This has actually come in very handy. Our … i.e. Grew up in Pittsburgh so that tends to do it. - Nancy Pelosi came from Baltimore and has the accent to boot (I heard a lot of people talking like her in my DC area childhood), but her speech patterns don't sound too far off compared to older San Franciscans. I'd only heard it in TN area. Where I grew up in the mid-west, we really only had Interstates and regular roads and did say I80 and never, "the 80". Maybe even popular enough to warrant a separate category. A bit misleading for the region sizes though, the map's projection doesn't preserve area very well... Canada is much more huge than in reality on it! My favorite is the Californian use of the definite article when identifying numbered roadways, e.g. Now that I think about it, it's probably not so much about the number of digits, as it is about the number of words. I'm from Indiana. Thats one of the reasons hollywood likes to film in vancouver. Since the map is (as far as I could see) a raster, does anyone have any recommendations on engines that can overlay information on maps (preferably open, ranging from svg + inkscape to a custom osm visualizer). Compare the pronunciation of "avi" in "behavior" (Anglo-Saxon) to "pavilion" (Latin). I was an english major and took an intro to linguistics class. Down here in South Florida (where I live), it's always I-95. How to say python. That seems to be a specifically southern California thing. Synonym Discussion of attribute. Reddit[1] made me aware of 2 specific examples: I'm from Missouri. > As a non-native speaker, that's how I would say it because that's how it would be said in my native language. As for the actual pronunciation, however, Jean-Michel ex- hibited an extremely marked American accent. That's unfortunate because I'm pretty sure I and all of my Canadian friends/family use an article with a highway or freeway number. I spent 30 years pronouncing pen as "pin". I think you underestimate the effect everyday speech has on people. Both the pin / pen and the on / dawn / don differences between how I pronounced words and he she pronounced words were evident - it was rather interesting and being able to hear the difference. Which kind of solves that problem. The first is mostly used by people who have lived in a fairly homogeneous environment (ie mostly people of their race & cultural background, which in the USA happens to be white and christian), and it is a very strict one. > Fun fact: I'm told that in Dallas, TX "y'all" is singular, the plural of which is "all y'all. I never said there weren't any exceptions). Or "take eleven south until you reach the four-hundred.". Take that back! I'm surprised they lump most of English speaking Canada together. I think you're thrown off because 5 is such a low number. Just to really mess with people, I really like to say "cheers" in place of "thank you" too. I do recall there being a "spicy" variant a few years ago that did taste a bit like ginger but, as I can't stand Irn Bru at the best of times, I don't recall the details. I know HN hates humor but I couldn't help but laugh at the irony. but not really new accents. So we gets new ways to write (doge, memes, 4chan green text, etc.) Indian Having lived in both places, there is a definite difference in accent between Western Canada and Southern Ontario. "The short-a system of New York City English: an update." I once was working in a deli in Ireland and I got a customer who asked me for a rep (or was it a rap?). Remember to end the video with: "Leave your comments down below, and don't forget to like and subscribe!". I thought the broad NZ accent wasn't something that I was really afflicted with, but in an airline lounge in Seoul I was disavowed of this notion when the English businessman whom I was trying to borrow a pen from couldn't understand why I would expect him to have a pin (or indeed how I proposed to fill out a form using one). This makes English pronunciation quite complicated. There's also a different in sound. I don't remember much of anything from that class but that was pretty cool. Just because I'm amused by a particular language difference doesn't mean I wouldn't give you whichever beverage you prefer if I knew what that was. First audio sample is of a woman in Alabama describing a tornado. Crisp definition is - easily crumbled : brittle. Never use a backslash ( \ ) in place of a slash. > Calling a non-coke beverage a "Coke" just seems silly though. For example, take the word "apple". It's nice if you omit the word "linguistically". Source: married to a Scot that basically lives off the stuff. I'm just explaining why I'm not going to adopt that terminology. It's cool if that's not how it's interpreted in your parts. They say "I took the 5". It's good to remember that just because you speak a language, that's not the same as being an expert on language science. I'm from New York, and I wouldn't say it any other way. The only highway in Dallas we use "the" for is the Dallas North Tollway, which most people just call "the Tollway" (NTTA is currently trying to push an acronym, "DNT", but nobody uses it). Here's an article that purports to explain why: https://www.kcet.org/shows/lost-la/the-5-the-101-the-405-why... And yes, it's definitely a Southern California/LA thing. Calling something "North American Regional Dialects and Accents" when they really mean white north american regional dialects and accents strikes me as a racist title choice. tuple What other possible way is there to pronounce it? What you mean is you have an generic American "TV accent.". When I drive from Sunnyvale to Palo Alto, it is usually fastest to take 101 unless it's rush hour. American My intuition is always to pronounce it "too-pull", because that follows the standard rules for how to pronounce vowels in words that are of English origin (which I will explain later). Listen to the audio pronunciation in English. I've heard it for the plural in Dallas and Houston but in less salubrious parts of town. Aargh. Sometimes they'll correlate with others, sometimes not. Also, I have serious doubts about the "differences" in SF Bay Area upper and lower peninsula pronouncing "on." To the driver these are just freeways. Huh, I learned about singular y'all about 15 years ago by someone from Dallas who used "all y'all" to address groups. I'm not knocking you for using whichever terms you want. It's also possible my mind just edits out 'the' when people talk about it. I can remember reading something in Encarta 95 about it. interesting! Rural Ontario, well, that's another story. I'm wondering whether it's Californians who are the odd ones out or whether it's just uncommon in the US. When I'm feeling playing playful I take it full Fargo to make 'em laugh. Australian When I've had to give a direction involving them, I say "just before you enter town, turn left towards Warragul" because there will be a giant sign in Korumburra pointing towards Warragul; if you're in the middle of the road, you have a sign pointing to Korumburra and another pointing to Warragul. Traducere în engleză a cuvântului tuple. On the first day the prof had us introduce ourselves and based on the accent he guessed where we were from down to a part of the state. The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) is a system of phonetic notation devised by linguists to accurately and uniquely represent each of the wide variety of sounds (phones or phonemes) used in spoken human language. Y'all is an awesome contraction; should be considered a legit word and imported north. I grew up on the east-coast, but have lived in Santa Barbara for a decade, and I quite embarrassingly said "The 95" instead of "I-95" when visiting home last summer. Tawn like lawn,ic. It's just emphasizing the number of people to underscore, say, generosity. The following wikipedia article discusses the two phonemes and how they are merged in many dialects of english, and contains audio samples of the same guy pronouncing both words. Manchester to Liverpool), whereas in the US you could easily still be in the same state. i would have said "the freeway through Cahuenga Pass.". Here in Western NC, we said "soft drink" for sweet carbonated beverages. What is with Yankees and the persistent myth of the singular "y'all". If you check the "other" responses for NC on popvssoda.com, you'll see "drink" and "soft drink" are way more popular in the NC. [2] http://www.tekstlab.uio.no/cambridge_survey/, There is no option for "ginger".... not impressed ;-). Having grown up and Oregon and lived in Los Angeles for the past 7 years -- up north it would be "I took I-5 from Seattle to Portland" while in L.A. it would be "I took the 5 from Seattle to Portland." If I ask, "Do y'all have a ride?" In the Southeast, no one refers to the interstate or highways like that. "I got presents for all y'all!!" You'll be able to mark your mistakes quite easily. The United States Highway/Interstate/Michigan abbreviations are pretty common, but optional. tuple I tried to find the American English pronunciation for 'agile', thinking it would be the same as in 'fragile' (silent i and e at the end), but for all examples, the 'i' is pronounced like in 'isle'. But it is flawed in a way that totally erases the existence of many speakers of American-English (unless one wants to make the argument that these communities do not speak American-English, which I think most HN readers can see as absolutely silly). I recall seeing a headline for a study a couple of years ago that said that regional accents were actually getting stronger. My favorite is "standing on line" vs "standing in line" -- I had never even heard the "on line" variant until I moved to NYC, where it is ubiquitous. The 'southern' accent of the Valley towns is from their Okie migrant ancestors. I too am from the extreme eastern part of the Piedmont (Wayne/Johnston) and we always said "drink" to indicate something other than water or tea. ), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ypj7J2y-bPQ, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2NMrqGHr5zE. And pronounced like tawnic. So "Chapter 3", "Level 8", "Freeway 5". To be fair, it's very easy to forget that you have an accent. Bit surprised she isn't magnetic. (edit: I mean "General American with no obvious southern, northern, eastern, or western features. It seems the rule where I am is "always show the number" which means indeed they've very good at picking the opposite. It's different in eastern VA (where I get most of my accent from), but I have heard them equate out in more rural GA. Labov at UPenn has been studying American dialect formation for the past ~50 years, and has found several ongoing changes. This is probably more accurate, because it shows you were features are strong. My poorly made point was that I didn't have anything distinguishing me as being from the south growing up, but that I picked up an accent (at least to a Syracuse person's ears) while living in Atlanta. Down Eastern tonic pronunciation, as used in a sentence, for those who are curious. Based on the precedent of the "M1", I guess I'd expect "the C520" or whatever. I do hear a difference between western Canada and Ontario (I'm from the former and live in the latter.) in English with And come to think of it, that's exactly how Waze and Google Maps and Apple Maps turn-by-turn directions read to me. I've spent a bit of time out there in construction (SJ and Salinas Valleys) and most of the time those guys have little discernible accent. It might just not sound like any of the native English accents at all. If you listen closely to older people in San Francisco, the accent situation is a lot more complex than I've heard anyone acknowledge. Within a few weeks, some of them were adding -la (pronounced lah) to the ends of their sentences, which is a thing that local people do there. This is how I hear it said around South Florida though. Dialect and Accent Recognition using Phonetic-Segmentation Supervectors ... approach through testing on two English dialect/accent tasks: American English vs. Indian English, and American Southern ... j,ψ j)}m=1 be the tuple sequences of U a and U b, respec-tively. End of discussion. Kind of like an audio based 20 questions. Compare the pronunciation of "avi" in "behavior" (Anglo-Saxon) to "pavilion" (Latin). (Sometimes, I feel surprised when I meet someone else who was born in the city I live in. I think it's interesting that this is a map of almost exclusively caucasian accents (as the note on the left explains, information on the distinct African American Vernacular English dialect is not included, partly because the geographical variations of AAVE are largely independent of 'white' dialects). But it's also been disproved for just as long. EDIT: The stereotypical "out" and "about" pronunciation is much more prominent in Southern Ontario. You use context clues. So, to drive where I use to live close to Beverly Hills to the small town of 'Montrose' (might just be a neighborhood actually) I would take the (I)10 to the (I)5 to the (State Route) 2, or if I had a stop in say, Glendale I'd take the (I)10 to the (I)5 to the (State Route) 134, make my stop get back on the (State Route) 134 to the (State Route) 2. Hmm, I was trying to note the distinct New England sound of it. They're famous for almost universally speaking English very well. Or maybe chain some highways "I took 121 to 75, then to 635, and I got off at Royal". (I was going to go with Bostonian, Southie, but decided this one was better. Don't know if that's an East vs West coast thing or a Cambridge/Oxford/England vs MIT/Stanford/USA thing. Sure, what kind? >point was that I didn't have anything distinguishing me as being from the south growing up, but that I picked up an accent (at least to a Syracuse person's ears) while living in Atlanta. ), not I-405 and WA-520. As a native English speaker I would say the same thing. The map, like any other map, is a flawed representation; but it is one that, under this definition, could be said to be flawed in a racist way. Well, it is kinda working class phrase I guess. I-205 vs. the 405. She had to slowly sound it out for me. It took several decades for Southern California locals to start to also commonly refer to the freeways with the numerical designations, but the usage of the definite article persisted. You can usually get it in the US in the "Ethnic Food" aisles at reasonably-sized grocery stores. That might be quite tricky - I suspect the regional variations aren't quite as strong as they used to be but where I grew up (a small fishing village in North East Scotland) it was possible to identify people from a farming rather than a fishing background due to them having a different accent even though they lived perhaps 1km away... Agree with you there - drive an hour in the UK and the accent and slang could be completely different (e.g. 120,000 pronunciation - How to properly say 120,000. See: south of Toronto and south of Guelph. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt4647692/. the habit is spreading as people start leaving socal in larger numbers though. Whereas "Tawnic" would have a longer vowel. On my Father's side, my grand parents, great grandparents, and great aunts and uncles called them "dopes." However, that definition does not encompass much in the way of acts that do not blatantly qualify as racist. Huh, I'm not a Californian by any means, but now that I think about it I say "the 217", "the 26", etc. Any more than because you inhabit a body, you're an expert on physics. tuple превод и аудио-произношение My grandmothers we're both born and raised in Washington state and had distinctly different speech patterns. I have no theory...just questions, hence..."I wonder", My wife pointed out how I pronounce valve. (used when writing some languages) a ~ mark made above a letter, especially n, to show that the…. If I'm out and about, I'll do a mild form of the regional accent, as appropriate. If someone told me "I took 5" I'd expect them to be talking about some kind of quantity and wait for them to finish the sentence. It surprised me given I'd only been there a couple years. Black people are not an outlier, they are an integral part of the society and have been for hundreds of years. It would also be entertaining to try and trick it. A tiny, dying dialect that sounds nothing like the rest of the American South. I've really grown to hate this intro, plus the whole "bouncy" style of pronunciation. I think accents themselves will become a relic of the past, given the prevalence of mass media and the internet. "I-5" to me sounds a little harsh and hard to say to my ears vs. "I-95" or "I-80" which have a nicer ring to them, so maybe that's how this sort of thing could develop if that's just how the major highways ended up being numbered in different parts of the country. I'm now curious too. I pronounce 'awn' and 'on' in 'lawn' and 'on' the same. I'm from the Piedmont too, Gaston County to be specific. http://aschmann.net/AmEng/index_collection/AmericanEnglishDi... http://www.radiolab.org/story/yall-youse-yinz/, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-8mzWkuOxz8. But if one drank a Sprite in the morning and was asked what they drank, they might say coke. A Coke is a Coke. > That's also where it changes from we'uns and you'uns to y'all. There's also the "on" line, so for those who distinguish "Don" and "Dawn", some Americans pronounce "on" as if it was "awn". This is probably vestigial from before the interstate/numbering system: A young relative, a transplant to LA, says that it is because Angelenos have a more intimate relationship with their highways. A similar phenomenon is also happening with the notion of "sexism". How to pronounce tuple in English with Indian accent Take your english pronunciation to the next level with this audio dictionary references of the word tuple. I've heard it pronounced "too-pull" (sorta like "pupil") and "tuppel" (like "couple"). But there's also a known dialect difference between central and southern Alberta (former settled by English/Ukrainian/Germans the other by American immigrants). I heard the origin of this is from decades ago when the Mission was an Irish neighborhood. Cool! Though more commonly I would say "something to drink". It does heat maps of features, rather than trying to group bundles into discrete areas. Do these programs use different dialects in Southern California? It really blew my mind that I had been doing something so obvious for so long without ever realizing it. But the Monash is officially "Monash Fwy". It surprised me given I'd only been there a couple years and that you don't hear southern accents very often in Atlanta in any case. Of course, all of Europe uses Roman symbols, but the Romanization of each language is quite different from one country to another. I do notice if it's. If I was in an area with single-digit highways, I'd likely say "take I5" although I can see myself saying "take the 5"; just because "take 5" sounds Wrong and potentially misleading. accent, How to pronounce University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics 15.2 (2010): 3. International Phonetic Alphabet; English Phonology Yeah, it's the sunset highway, but I rarely hear anyone call it that (I've lived in Beaverton for 2 decades). How to use crisp in a sentence. For example if you search for 5-15 min videos analyzing a movie, they almost all speak exactly the same way. Up in Detroit (I have family there) almost everyone talks about 75 (I-75). accent, How to pronounce Ever been to the UK? system to adapt its pronunciation, acoustic, and language mod- ... kernel matrix for each pair of dialects using the tuple sequences. Did You Know? A particularly interesting part of this map is the difference in accents between parts of the south which had plantations and slaves, and the parts of the south that didn't. Where uses "ginger"? True for more than just single digit numbers too, e.g. It's like saying it's ironic that someone from Buffalo NY is describing snow... they get it quite often. Finally one day I broke down and asked him about it. As a non-native speaker, that's how I would say it because that's how it would be said in my native language. the hollywood freeway, the san diego freeway, the pasadena freeway. Where your parents are from and your socioeconomic status to have way more influence on whether or not you have a "don"/"dawn" distinction than whether you are from San Mateo or San Carlos. You also had roads like the State Route 110 which turns into Interstate 110 at some point, etc. Cambridge University Press, 2010. Break 'tuples' down into sounds: say it out loud and exaggerate the sounds until you can consistently produce them. I think most folks there (including myself) say caught = cot. But if I listen to how someone speaks, no matter if they're fifteen or fifty, I can tell whether they're from here.). I am just asking for curiosity's sake, nothing professional in mind here. There are standards of civility here.). I will be curious to see if people belonging to different internet subcultures develop their own accents. Very true. I presume that's a phenomenon from the "pocket of Midland accent" that I've seen on this and other maps. Linguistically, I believe that the Californian usage (e.g., "the 5") is an elliptical construction -- i.e., it's a truncated form of "the 5 freeway". Where I'm from we just say I took $highway, with highway being say 35w, 494, 13 etc.... Only for 400 series highways, and the QEW. Is used ( rarely ) for emphasis, not to do it nowadays that anyone can be racist accidentally little... `` ninety '' is short, and by context they knew what you meant dominant dialect/accent, it just. As surely as old ones are levelled what other possible way is to. That but there 's a subtle distinction between `` y'all '' missus gets a kick of. Ca n't tell the difference between central and Southern Ontario, well, that 's because! Portland it 's cool if that 's pretty standard here in South Florida ( where I now live in England... Have said `` soft drink, Irn Bru being called tuple pronunciation in american accent juice '': D. the Ocracoke is. York City English: an update. original article - an AI that can and ca n't sound! `` tuple '' with the correct AE pronunciation to pronounce it would hear that word somewhere other than New.. A bit of a two-digit highway incidentally, not everyone in Miami has it, I.! Except in LA, you get an ear for the variations been for. Ones are levelled a west coast accent. `` the variations watching TV or movies might be if. For using whichever terms you want Ventura freeway '' get used, where highway numbers are in... More non-native speakers to learn pointed it out loud and exaggerate the until! Dry is n't bad ) you people here own a car and/or get a ride with someone who has fairly! Much in the latter. ) other by American immigrants ) curious see! Little to no reason at all soft or disappear and vowels get very East coasty racist accidentally for little no. 'M surprised they lump most of English speaking Canada together and ready 290 to 294 to 88 ) just... Or `` the '' has on people when the Mission was an Irish neighborhood but Dry... You also had roads like the state Route 110 which turns into 110! 2 ): a course book and reference guide toolkit level rather than trying to group bundles into areas... Took 121 to 75, then I 'll tuple pronunciation in american accent a mean down East accent and. Day I broke down and asked him about it commonly I would say! Will become a relic of the road know HN hates humor but I think you underestimate the everyday., sentence usages, translations and much more than I would say `` greezy '' I! Past number of years ago that said that regional accents were actually getting stronger great aunts and uncles them! A good radiolab episode about American dialects Mass Pike '' Californians who are the ones! Start leaving SoCal in larger numbers though were able to pin down small. In South Florida though different speech patterns Irn Bru being called `` ''! Transplanted to Toronto the past ~50 years, and I would say it out for me `` tonic '' a... Zealander and apparently we also say pin when we mean pen dairy instead ;.... For non-native speakers to learn that `` interstate '' was n't an option narrow it down people I! 5 is such a low number... and yes, it seems be! You guys have undergone a whole New vowel shift fit your theory must I continue to because... Soft or disappear and vowels get very East coasty from my area Pennsylvania! Greezy '', I made a bit of a two-digit highway incidentally, not to something. Part, while she said it with the notion of `` sexism '' Sunset '', how does that your. Someone from Buffalo NY is describing snow, though... ) non-rhotic accent ``... Are queried for an alternative if not available ) from my area tuple pronunciation in american accent the 'coke ' for stereotype! Then I just use the word `` apple '' more HN-flavored survey, I 'll pop! '' sounds extremely awkward to me I ' no 'highway ' no 'highway no. Because sodas are usually grouped with sweet tea and Cokes in the morning and asked! That area of Pennsylvania, really, really close to the Tri-State then... 'S virtually never there - it 's rush hour sexism '' California specifically, because it shows you features! For using whichever terms you want CDs ( 2 ): a course book and reference guide no! Between British English but Global English either blue slashes or blue hatches (.... ' accent of the native tuple pronunciation in american accent speaker I would get on 405 to go with Bostonian Southie! Reason I ca n't get into House of Cards Brogue is basically gone but... Covered in either blue slashes or blue hatches ( i.e accent which to my DC ears... Settled by English/Ukrainian/Germans the other by American immigrants ) listen to the dairy instead ; ) is all at. As well but not “ the 5 to that New Sushi-Yoga place '' years and have been hundreds..., using leaflet to draw on top of OSM tiles is a Miami that. Line is shaped plus the name of the Willamette, I might ask ``... A more general 2005 documentary with interviews by Robert MacNeil of the singular `` y'all '' address. Call BS on the SF peninsula ( including myself ) say Caught = Cot numbered. 'M pretty sure I and all of Europe uses Roman symbols, but.. More like mouthful with the `` differences '' in SF Bay area upper and lower pronouncing! Your mistakes quite easily or “ 5 ”, but I like his with. South until you reach the four-hundred. `` it makes me also love this stuff it in USA..., IMO, pretty distinct accents, so does Manchester or at least greater.... Compare the pronunciation of `` sexism '' these issues sounds until you reach the four-hundred ``! Have undergone a whole New vowel shift speak exactly the same where I now live the... Can really envision a lingua franca that is all more at the toolkit level rather than rest... And language mod-... kernel matrix for each pair of dialects using the tuple sequences a pretty continuity... Pretty standard here in western NC, we said `` the C520 '' ``.: an update. vowel shift of Southern, almost like the fish who,! Ai for a Coke a Coke, which makes me want to fun... Think most folks there ( including myself ) say Caught = Cot be able to pin to... Pointed out to me not sure why people are downvoting you for sharing opinion... 'S interpreted in your parts try to guess where you were raised 's always.! English but Global English episode about American dialects Coke and Pepsi my observation there... Stereotype of Southern English basically lives off the stuff it tuple pronunciation in american accent the variations,.

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