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Unread 04-20-2011, 04:40 PM
Status: "It's the first page of the 2nd chapter" (set 10 days ago)
 
Location: Richmond, CA
8,428 posts, read 5,721,613 times
Reputation: 3562
Quote:
Originally Posted by Gemdiver View Post
Unfortunately most blacks, not all, speak in that jungle-rap dialect. If blacks try to speak correctly they get accused by other blacks of being uncle toms or sellouts or not keeping it real.
Unfortunately there is some truth to this as well.
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Unread 04-21-2011, 02:58 AM
 
23 posts, read 33,215 times
Reputation: 33
Quote:
Originally Posted by UNLV09 View Post
This is ludicrous. There is no such thing as NO accent. All an accent is, is a common way that a group of people, usually from the same region, pronounce their words.
Definition of "accent" from the dictionary:
a distinctive mode of pronunciation of a language, esp. one associated with a particular nation, locality, or social class : a strong German accent.
• the mode of pronunciation used by native speakers of a language : she never mastered the French accent.
2 a distinct emphasis given to a syllable or word in speech by stress or pitch.
• a mark on a letter or word to indicate pitch, stress, or vowel quality.

It is not "ludicrous." Do Californians have a distinctive way of pronouncing words? No.
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Unread 04-21-2011, 05:13 AM
 
Location: Everywhere and Nowhere
14,008 posts, read 10,400,602 times
Reputation: 6138
Quote:
Originally Posted by mac n cheese View Post
It is not "ludicrous." Do Californians have a distinctive way of pronouncing words? No.
Distinctiveness is pretty subjective. What may sound non-distinctive to a long-time Californian might seem much more distinctive to someone from the deep South or the Northeast.
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Unread 04-21-2011, 08:57 AM
Status: "It's the first page of the 2nd chapter" (set 10 days ago)
 
Location: Richmond, CA
8,428 posts, read 5,721,613 times
Reputation: 3562
Quote:
Originally Posted by mac n cheese View Post
Definition of "accent" from the dictionary:
a distinctive mode of pronunciation of a language, esp. one associated with a particular nation, locality, or social class : a strong German accent.
• the mode of pronunciation used by native speakers of a language : she never mastered the French accent.
2 a distinct emphasis given to a syllable or word in speech by stress or pitch.
• a mark on a letter or word to indicate pitch, stress, or vowel quality.

It is not "ludicrous." Do Californians have a distinctive way of pronouncing words? No.
By this definition, the word dialect would fit better than the way we've been using accent. Either way, speakers from other regions recognize our way of speaking as mentioned by several people. If not distinctive it's certain noticeable and identifiable...wait isn't that distinctive?
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Unread 04-21-2011, 09:53 AM
rah
 
Location: San Francisco
2,996 posts, read 3,686,694 times
Reputation: 2010
Quote:
Originally Posted by mac n cheese View Post
It is not "ludicrous." Do Californians have a distinctive way of pronouncing words? No.
Yes they do, compared to many people not from California. Do native New Yorkers and native Californians sound the same? No, because they have different accents. Why is this hard for you to understand?
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Unread 04-21-2011, 02:09 PM
 
Location: California
626 posts, read 253,501 times
Reputation: 499
Quote:
Originally Posted by rah View Post
Yes they do, compared to many people not from California. Do native New Yorkers and native Californians sound the same? No, because they have different accents. Why is this hard for you to understand?
He's obviously never been outside of California.
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Unread 04-21-2011, 02:55 PM
 
23 posts, read 33,215 times
Reputation: 33
Quote:
Originally Posted by rah View Post
Yes they do, compared to many people not from California. Do native New Yorkers and native Californians sound the same? No, because they have different accents. Why is this hard for you to understand?
Quote:
Originally Posted by UNLV09 View Post
He's obviously never been outside of California.
Four months in New York, and I never heard any native pronounce anything differently from people in California.
Also going on six months in Jersey. Clearly, someone who holds a different opinion than yourself has never traveled.
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Unread 04-21-2011, 03:07 PM
 
Location: California
626 posts, read 253,501 times
Reputation: 499
Quote:
Originally Posted by mac n cheese View Post
Four months in New York, and I never heard any native pronounce anything differently from people in California.
Denial is not just a river in Egypt.

New York dialect - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

California English - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Unread 04-21-2011, 03:09 PM
 
Location: 7th Level of Hell
15,368 posts, read 13,165,651 times
Reputation: 14055
Quote:
Originally Posted by mac n cheese View Post
Four months in New York, and I never heard any native pronounce anything differently from people in California.
Also going on six months in Jersey.
Some people don't have an ear for this stuff. That's ok, we still love you.
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Unread 04-21-2011, 03:19 PM
 
23 posts, read 33,215 times
Reputation: 33
Quote:
Originally Posted by UNLV09 View Post
Well, Regis and Pacino notably have accents, I'll give you that.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Fontucky View Post
Some people don't have an ear for this stuff. That's ok, we still love you.
LOL, the Jersey note was just in reference to the never been anywhere remark. I can definitely tell a Jersey accent, it's pretty hard to miss.
And thank you :]
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