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04-03-2009, 02:32 PM | #71 (permalink) | |
Mate, Spawn & Die
Join Date: May 2007
Location: The Rapping Community
Posts: 24,593
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04-03-2009, 02:47 PM | #74 (permalink) |
Ba and Be.
Join Date: May 2007
Location: This Is England
Posts: 17,331
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When one does not resort to slang, colloquialisms and clipped vowels. EG how everyone thinks we talk in the UK!
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“A cynic by experience, a romantic by inclination and now a hero by necessity.”
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04-03-2009, 04:39 PM | #77 (permalink) |
The Sexual Intellectual
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Somewhere cooler than you
Posts: 18,605
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The correct pronunciation of this sentence is "sarf of the rivar , at this tima night , you're avin a larf aincha"
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Urb's RYM Stuff Most people sell their soul to the devil, but the devil sells his soul to Nick Cave. |
04-03-2009, 06:06 PM | #78 (permalink) |
Slavic gay sauce
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Abu Dhabi
Posts: 7,993
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Hmm...we have something called dialects here which means some parts of the country not only have different accents but different words. This makes it kinda difficult to communicate. That's why I had to adapt and learn how to speak the official dialect which is used in schools and government offices and such. I've been told that I adapted quite well, which means that when I speak the official dialect there aren't any traces of my native one (which is spoken mostly on the islands). When I speak with my island folk and family I use my native dialect so it's not gone, although since it's a commener's language so to speak, if you want to express anything more complex you have to use more and more of the official dialect so the lines are getting blurrier. Plus, there are a lot of words (mostly from italian, incorporated into the dialect. There's a long history of Italian colonizing in this part of the country) which young kids aren't using anymore...or maybe just shut-ins like me.
Incidentally my English comes with an American accent since I learned it from the telly mostly. I don't know how good it actually is since I don't really speak with proper Americans and I've recently learned that I have trouble using more complex words in a conversation (learning a language from the telly means you mostly pick up the basic vocabulary, anything more you get from books which don't come with pronunciation, but that's what I have the internet for. But still, with little actual experience using them...you get what I mean). And that's more information than anyone needed.
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“Think of what a paradise this world would be if men were kind and wise.” - Kurt Vonnegut, Cat's Cradle. Last.fm |
04-03-2009, 06:16 PM | #79 (permalink) |
Melancholia Eternally
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: England
Posts: 5,018
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Well your written English is far better than mine. It's also better than about 90% of the written English I see from both my actual friends and my make believe friends when I log into Facebook and what not. I need to start forgetting about Facebook because all it does is annoy me now.
Regional dialects interest me. I like hearing people use words I have never heard before. I often have to "speak Geordie" for people, mainly foreigners. Then they laugh at me for the next twenty minutes and tell me that the words i'm using don't exist. |
04-03-2009, 06:22 PM | #80 (permalink) |
Atchin' Akai
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Unamerica
Posts: 8,723
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I went out for a night with two Geordie lads and a group of Canadians we'd just met one time on holiday.
The Geordies got bladdered in a matter of hours and I spent the rest of the night translating. |