well they did have their own language until we fucked them out of it
Hiddy-ho there you drunken bastard
But you already said American
They’re a lumberjack and that’s ok!
I cut down trees, I skip and jump
I like to press wild flowers
I put on women’s clothing
And hang around in barsdeleted by creator
Let’s be real here, we usually just stick all of them in a blender and pour ourselves one glass of perfectly mixed accent juice
This! My English accent is so all over the place, I can’t even spot the differences if I hear them. I can’t tell, If someone is British, American, Australian etc because I mix them up so much myself
I’m quite found of accents myself, like that SS officer in the bar scene from Inglorious Basterds lol, would love to have a conversation and dissect it
I feel like all three of those accents have normal/fancy/wildcard options within them
As an Aussie I can confirm we have normal & wildcard, anyone trying fancy is just a knobhead.
Actually, I’d like to have my accent sound like a white south african, like how Leonardo DiCaprio speaks in blood diamond.
As a white South African, I’d like to not sound like one
Why choose when you can just randomly mix them
I lived in South Korea for a while and I met a South Korean young lady who had learned English from an Australian teacher. This Korean girl had the most beautiful Australian accent with a hint of Korean. She was very talkative, Asian people get excited when they meet english-speakers so they can practice speaking English with us. So she talked a lot. It was a beautiful culture medley.
My English accent usually depends on the most common accent in the podcasts I’ve been hearing that week
Lmao
In order of appearance: wildcard, simplified, traditional.
Ironically, US English is in many ways more traditional than UK English. The US uses many words and phrases that used to be common to both continents but later changed in the UK.
US did try to de-French most spellings with mixed success.
Yeah, but there’s still the tendency to simplify things (e.g. “color” vs “colour”) and the ever shortening of phrases as if it’s difficult to say the whole thing (“macaroni and cheese”).
Changing spellings to match pronunciation should happen more often, to ne honest. And I don’t think UK or Australian English get to throw any stones about shortening words and phrases, the US isn’t calling anything “spag bol”.
Haha you’ll never take my French accent away!
By trying to get rid of it I accidentally took the German accent, not sure how that works
Eh I’m not even trying, I try to articulate more but it’s hard, also everyone tells me it’s great so 🤷
I don’t think you choose, it’s just kinda what you grow up around
OMG our usernames can be emojis??
It’s a cosmetic thing. @mojo@lemm.ee here has set a display name in addition to their username, which I believe supports any unicode character.
As an American I feel like either US or UK could be considered the “normal” one, UK or AUS the “fancy” one, and US and AUS the “wildcard” (from the UK perspective).
Oh UK would definitely be the fancy one. It would need to be like a David Attenborough accent though
I’m English and my perspective is UK is both normal and fancy.
Aussie is wildcard.
US is just there because OP felt it needed to be involved for some reason.
Australian as the fancy one??
Fancy maybe wouldn’t be the best word, perhaps exotic, but I know there’s plenty of us who, depending on the Aussie, might not be able to tell the accent from a British one and just go “ooh, accent, fancy”.
No no, I speak a combination of the three. Although American English dominates my accent. That’s what you get when you grow up watching English-speaking media. You pick up their accents and you make one of your own.
I got mine originally from TV, as in my country everything is subtitled, so that means I ended up with an americanized accent (it isn’t really an “american” accent because there is no such things as an american accents but rather several).
It was of course poluted by my own native language (portuguese, from Lisbon) accent.
Then I went and lived in The Netherlands for almost a decade so my accent started adding dutch “effects” (like a “yes” that sounds more like “ya”, similar to the dutch “ja”).
And after that I lived for over a decade in England, so my accent moved a lot towards the English RP accent. In fact I can either do my lazy accent (which is the mix of accents I have) or pull it towards a pretty decent English RP accent if needed for clarity.
By this point I can actually do several English Language accents, though mostly only enough to deceive foreigners rather than locals - so, say, a Scottish accent that will deceive Americans but Brits can spot it as not really being any of the various Scottish accents - including the accents of foreign language speakers in English (i.e. how a french or italian will sounds speaking english or even the full-force portuguese accent when speaking english, which I don’t naturally have anymore).
That said, IMHO it is very hard for somebody who grew up in a foreign country speaking a foreign language to fine tune their accent so that it sounds perfect to the ears of a local, and this is valid for all languages, not just English.
I think Finnish school teaches the American pronunciation.
In my case; western games further hammered that down between my ears.
Interesting. German schools teach British English. It’s with time that I was more and more influenced by American English but first and foremost I have a strong German accent
In the UK, schools largely teach European French/Spanish/etc.
I wish more European countries would teach European (British) English.
Teaching British English would certainly feel the most appropriate as it is the local variant
You can teach whatever, the kids are still going to get way more exposure to American accents than British from tv and movies.
I think it was British pronunciation considering that (at least when I was still in school) we also learned to write British English instead of American English.
Later on in high school they said you could write either, but you had to stick to one or it would count as a mistake.
When were you in school?
I think about the 2000-2011 time period (from 3rd grade to trade school).
Around that same time. Searching online I didn’t find anything saying it’s either one but rather both with both being acceptable (but not mixing as mentioned). Seems to depend on the teacher with lot of the older (possibly now retired) teachers being more familiar and teaching British English, sometimes as the only “correct” one and younger (not particularly young now) generation of teachers being more familiar with American English and teaching primarily that.
So, depends. Both are taught, there’s no unified policy for preference of one over another that I could find.
Okay cool.
There’s a chance that I had a British English teacher back in the secondary school…I don’t recall much, let alone speaking British myself.At one point I had one of those teachers that thought British English was the only correct one. She was a real superfan of the British royal family and took sickdays or just made us watch with her if there was some televised event hah.
In Europe we call it “Euro-English”
Ngl as someone who speaks British English I find Europeans with American accents hot
Ah right, Americans that aren’t actually American, gotcha.
Or is it not just us Euro folks but the Accent in general?
I don’t know, I haven’t really thought about the psychology behind it tbh. I think it’s the combination of both because I come from europe as well
As a native speaker, I agree.
But the way check out c/Englishlearning if you are learning English.
There is not much there, but I’m happy to help and answer questions.
c/Englishlearning
is this the right link to the community you are talking about? I thought I’d help by creating the link. It’s not easy to get those links sometimes.
put a ! in front of your link and it will open in the users home instance. !englishlearning@lemmy.ml
Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn’t work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: !englishlearning@lemmy.ml
Good bot!
Thanks for the link. I feel like I never do it right 😂
Do you know is there something like this for German?
You could try
c/Englischlernen
I mean I’m learning German. Or are you saying go there to ask about that?
I have no idea. I hope you find one.