Accent Analyzing
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Hello.
I was doing some reading about accents, when I stumbled upon this forum. I have a recording here of The Rainbow Passage, and I was wondering if you could listen to it and tell me where you think I am from. http://fizleglitz.com/media/rec0405-180933.mp3 It's interesting because I have moved recently and everyone here can tell that I am not from here originally, at least based on certain words/slang, however, they think I sound the same (as them) overall. To me, they all sound very different, and I can pick them out a mile away! I was born and raised in the same place and lived there until recently, so it should be a pretty accurate representation of this place! (At least, I would think so!) I say a lot of individual words distinctively, however, none of those particular words are in this passage, so I wouldn't think that the most blatant stereotype of this place would be heard in my recording-- but the vowels and other sounds, probably! So, I am curious to see some responses; if you could help, that would be wonderful! (And, of course, I'll let you know where I'm from and where I live now after some responses.) Thanks! Lauren |
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Hi Lauren!
I started a thread on a similar topic just earlier this evening, it would be fascinating for me to hear where people think I'm from, accent-wise. I think I have fairly standard British English with a barely noticable regional accent but others may disagree. http://www.antimoon.com/forum/t10193.htm Would you say The Rainbow Passage or Comma Gets a Cure is the best to record? I'm going to do it now. Rob |
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Well, here goes!
http://localhostr.com/files/2d1645/comma-rob.mp3 |
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This is interesting. Lauren, I cannot guess where you're from, but I know that you're not from around where I live. Maybe somewhere in the Midwest? You pronounce vowels differently in several words. Rob, I'm not the best with British accents. To me, you have a typical-sounding accent from what sounds like the south of England. That's as far as I can narrow it down. Am I right?
I've uploaded myself reading both passages. Can anybody guess where I live? Comma Gets A Cure http://localhostr.com/files/ce15e0/comma-brian.wma The Rainbow Passage http://localhostr.com/files/20b336/rainbow-brian.wma |
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| Wow, really? I never really thought that I sounded like him. But hey, Justin Long is pretty cool, though. :) |
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| Uninformed Brit commenting with no reference material and simply what it immediately reminded me of, probably not the same at all! |
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| Brian, that's really interesting. What are some examples of the vowel sounds that I pronounce differently? |
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| Wow homophones? SO different in British English! |
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Rob, it's only like that in certain parts of the U.S.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cot-caught_merger#Cot-caught_merger That link talks about the father-bother merger and cot-caught merger. And, I did a search of this forum for cot-thought and I happened to come across this page, so apparently I'm not the only one: http://www.antimoon.com/forum/t8916.htm Personally, I say the vowels in "cot", "thought" and "caught" the same way. I think I say the vowel in "palm" a bit differently, though it's hard for me to tell with that "l" in there. |
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| If they are homophones, then yes, you have the cot-caught merger. I have it as well, but to me, it seems like I pronounce them more like "cawt" |
