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Accent - Why?

Mr Angry

Not a Referee
Messages
51,816
Why is it?

I can pick a kiwi, pom, india, pakistani, american, Victorian, scot, columbian when we all speak english.
 

woodyk2

First Grade
Messages
7,032
Not sure why but i can pick Adelaide....its weird...many others dont hear it but i pick it straight away.
 

Twizzle

Administrator
Staff member
Messages
157,820
Maybe is you studied Pigmalian you'd understand the different dialects.

I think I was away that day as well.
 

El Diablo

Post Whore
Messages
94,107
Aussies sound pretty much the same apart from some states pronouncing a few words differently

a smaller country like England has many different accents

why is that?

why do New Yorkers have their own accent :?

should probably just ring Gids. he'd know
 

woodyk2

First Grade
Messages
7,032
Rang gids...he's in South Granville...he said ''i dunno skippy...its awl fooly sik wiff lashings of madness''.
 

IanG

Coach
Messages
17,807
Difference in Adelaide yes. I think it has something to do with the fact that unlike the Eastern States South Australia was originally settled by Free settlers rather than convicts.

When I went to NZ recently I was waiting to see if anybody I talked to pointed it out to me.

The real curly one I got one was had a Sydneysides reckon they could tell I was from Newcastle.
 

Brutus

Referee
Messages
26,562
Not sure why but i can pick Adelaide....its weird...many others dont hear it but i pick it straight away.


Adelaide stands out like dog balls.

Found this on Big Faggy.

http://www.4bc.com.au/displayPopUpP...media.mytalk.com.au/4bc/podcasts/grayhair.mp3

Listen to the way the lady pronounces WORLD at about 51 seconds. They pronounce a lot of words like that. You get this nowhere else in Australia.

When that Tom Chadwick guy started reading Fox Sports news from the Sydney studios I knew he was from SA straight away.
 
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Brutus

Referee
Messages
26,562
Difference in Adelaide yes. I think it has something to do with the fact that unlike the Eastern States South Australia was originally settled by Free settlers rather than convicts.

When I went to NZ recently I was waiting to see if anybody I talked to pointed it out to me.

The real curly one I got one was had a Sydneysides reckon they could tell I was from Newcastle.

Mate I reckon I can pick somebody from the Hunter region if I listen to them long enough.

The way they words like so and go in a quickish type way. Johns Brothers, the Chief do this. It's ever so subtle.
 

AlwaysGreen

Post Whore
Messages
51,805
Accents tend to take a long time to develop and the more isolated the region the bigger the tendency to be different. Relatively speaking Australia is quite young and although geographically isolated modern transport and technology from the 1900's onwards has meant that the isolation is lessened.

Australia has less variation in accent due to the fact that the majority of people who came here in the early years were from England and Ireland whereas The US had a far bigger melting pot of nationalities.

In saying that if you listen to people from different regions in Australia you can make out certain differences.
Adelaide and South Australia tend to pronounce there A's as ah rather than eh - the way they pronounce dance is 'Dahnce' whereas in the eastern states its 'Daance"

Tasmanians always sound different as do North Queenslanders, who often end their sentences in a higher tone. Even Sydney and Melbourne have nuances, particularly how both pronounce 'castle' differently.

NZ get their different accents due to the fact that they had a lot of welsh and scottish settlers, Canada is influenced by the French language.
 

Poul

Juniors
Messages
729
Accents tend to take a long time to develop and the more isolated the region the bigger the tendency to be different. Relatively speaking Australia is quite young and although geographically isolated modern transport and technology from the 1900's onwards has meant that the isolation is lessened.

Australia has less variation in accent due to the fact that the majority of people who came here in the early years were from England and Ireland whereas The US had a far bigger melting pot of nationalities.

In saying that if you listen to people from different regions in Australia you can make out certain differences.
Adelaide and South Australia tend to pronounce there A's as ah rather than eh - the way they pronounce dance is 'Dahnce' whereas in the eastern states its 'Daance"

Tasmanians always sound different as do North Queenslanders, who often end their sentences in a higher tone. Even Sydney and Melbourne have nuances, particularly how both pronounce 'castle' differently.

NZ get their different accents due to the fact that they had a lot of welsh and scottish settlers, Canada is influenced by the French language.

I think this sums it up pretty well.

However, there are regional differeneces, and even though it can be difficult to isolate what those differences are, when someone is speaking, it is often possible to identify where the speaker is from.

When I lived in Tasmania, i noticed that many people pronounced the word "girl" in a very "English" way; very short and clipped, like "geh'll", whereas I would tend to pronounce it with an extended vowel, like "gurl".

I think it is also interesting how accents change over time. Listen to the audio from some old newsreel footage from the '40s. Contrast that with the way many young people (<20s) speak. I think there is definitely an increasing American influence on the Australian accent, and a shift away from British. But I think we still manage to put some Aussie "spin" to the language. Its all good :D
 

billy2

Juniors
Messages
2,341
Heard an interview about 10 years ago with a guy who had been taught English in a village named New Australia in Paraguay.
That village was set up by about 300 Australians from Sydney in the 1890s, and the guy interviewed was a grandson of the original group and was in his 90s.
He spoke English with an 1890s Sydney accent, which was pretty freakish.
It was basically a cross between the very proper tones of Jim Dibble mixed with some rhyming slang and 'the bastard from the bush' type poetry.
You could recognise it as Australian, but it was odd.

A bit like Jack Thompson reading 'the man from snowy river'.
 

little_aza

Juniors
Messages
690
Certainly noticed the 'castle' pronunciation straight away when I moved to Victoria. In regional Victoria I've noticed they pronounce many 'e' sounds as 'a' sounds - many say "I'm going to *Mal-bourne*", or "I'm feeling *wal*" (rhyming with 'Mal'), or "I need some *halp*". Stupid Victorians.

Maybe I'm crazy (distinct possibility), but I've noticed some Sydneysiders pronounce 'beer' as if it's nearly two syllables: "be-ar"??
 

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