Well I've said it before and I'll say it again, I'm just plain crazy about a Cajun accent! Not sure what it is, but when I hear a guy speaking with that accent I just swoon. I'm also big into Gaelic accents as well. In particular Welsh and Scottish. Sean Connery was my first big man crush (yeah I know he's a right pompous ass and a dirty old man but back in his prime...). And the president of the company I work for is from Scotland so it's really hard to focus on what he's saying when he makes a presentation! Hehehe
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Cajun is hard to understand. The few I do encounter up here really make me listen to understand what they are saying.
I like the brogue accents too. Always sound "manly" to me for some reason.
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I'm thinkin' I'm glad I live in Texas where there are no accents, and everywhere else they talk funny!
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^^ Y'all jsut got big heads in Texas, and mighty big egos too. Oh and y'all do talk funny. :tongue:
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My father has an inimitable accent, growing up as a young kid in Tehran, Iran in an Armenian household , where Armenian was spoken at home (also as a child he was sent to local public school while his 6 siblings attended private Armenian school because in his words he is "the black sheep of the family"), he left his family and Iran at 16 for Australia (which is where he learned English), he then left to go to university in Manchester, England and went to the U.S. after he graduated where he met my mother and she had me. So he speaks with an Eastern European/Persion/Aussie/British accent with an emphasis on the British/Australian part because that's where he learned to speak English and went to school.
As for me, in kindergarten I spoke with British accent with hints of Australian from both my father and watching the BBC with my mother (who's an Anglophile). According to the book "Divided by a Common Language", British and Aussie English are relatively similar whereas American English is very different.
Kindergarten was one of 3 years I spent living in suburban New Jersey, which I hated, they were very mean and bothered me about my accent and forced me to take ESL (English as a second language) classes, so I somehow taught myself how to speak with no accent at all AKA "Broadcaster's English"
Today I still speak with zero accent. Though if I'm too anxious or too comfortable, the British accent creeps back in (when I type mmy computer changes all my British spelling into American English, ie changing mum to mom)
I can also do a good British accent.
Note, they say Armenian has two "dialects" Eastern and Western, this is a lie they are completely different.
The type I speak "Eastern" is the type actually spoken in Armenia (it has a lot of Farsi [Persian] loan words) whereas Western Armenian has a lot of Turkish in it and is the type spoken by most Armenian-Americans.
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