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Trusted Contributor
Posts: 1,159
Registered: ‎05-24-2015

Re: PLEASE SHARE YOUR ACCENT

[ Edited ]

This is not a derogatory question, I’m simply curious why.

 

I hear some people from the northeast say a R in place of a W.  E.G.: Laryer instead of lawyer.

 

As someone who personally slaughters the English language on a daily basis (I’m Italian—my only excuse), I’m just curious why the R instead of W.

 

Does any one know where this comes from?

Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 6,463
Registered: ‎07-10-2011

Re: PLEASE SHARE YOUR ACCENT


@Tori3569 wrote:

@Mersha I need to know what a "gum band" is?   😃

 

 


@Tori3569  I was about to ask @Mersha  that question lol.

 

Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 5,630
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

Re: PLEASE SHARE YOUR ACCENT

@Tori3569  Gum bands are rubber bands.

 

I have no earthly idea why we call them "gum" but there you go.

"My desire to be well informed is currently at odds with my desire to remain sane."
Trusted Contributor
Posts: 1,210
Registered: ‎04-13-2016

Re: PLEASE SHARE YOUR ACCENT

[ Edited ]

@Mersha don't forget that most famous Pittsburgh word "youns' or 'yinz"!!  Are youns going to the game?  Do yinz have some gum?  They even have a yinzer gang sign at Steelers games!

 

When I first moved to AZ, I was at a dentists office & they immediately pegged me as Western PA by my accent. I said what accent?  I don't have an accent!

 

Also when I first moved here & said words like buggy & pop  people looked at me like I was speaking another language. 

 

There are whole dictionaries online of Pittsburghese.

 

 

Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 5,630
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

Re: PLEASE SHARE YOUR ACCENT

@AZfem   That is too funny!

 

...and the infamous "Kennywood is open."

"My desire to be well informed is currently at odds with my desire to remain sane."
Respected Contributor
Posts: 2,896
Registered: ‎08-10-2013

Re: PLEASE SHARE YOUR ACCENT

I just took the Babbel test and it said Northwest Pacific.  I've never been there.  I was born in Northern Ohio and live in SW Ohio now.  There is a definate accent here that is different from my Northern OH accent.  Maybe some of that rubbed off.  I had an accent as they do in Cleveland.  I'm confused now.

Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 6,830
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

Re: PLEASE SHARE YOUR ACCENT

welp. I am a native Hoosier but lived most of my adult life in Michigan. Our accent is distinctive, also it is quite a bit different depending on whether you're from the Lower or Upper Peninsula. The U.P. accent is pretty much Canadian. One of the funny things about our accent is that most folks from Michigan will say they don't have one. Lol😁
I'm from southwest Lower. You would notice how I say certain words, like Bob=Baab  Hand= haand  We say Ope when accidentally bumping into someone. 

We say You guys when referring to a group of people.
Our convenience stores are often called party stores, ya know where ya go for the beer, pop and snacks 🍺🥜

MICHIGAN STATE MOM
Trusted Contributor
Posts: 1,159
Registered: ‎05-24-2015

Re: PLEASE SHARE YOUR ACCENT

@Mersha 

 

 Gum bands are rubber bands? What kind of evil sorcery is this? lol

Respected Contributor
Posts: 3,481
Registered: ‎06-27-2010

Re: PLEASE SHARE YOUR ACCENT


@Mersha wrote:

@Tori3569  Gum bands are rubber bands.

 

I have no earthly idea why we call them "gum" but there you go.


I don't think I would have ever guessed that! I was thinking something like gum wrappers or something. Ha! This is a great thread @Oznell! Thanks for posting.
Honored Contributor
Posts: 21,099
Registered: ‎11-08-2014

Re: PLEASE SHARE YOUR ACCENT

Ha, ha, @Sage04 ,   I love the roundabout delicacy with which you alluded to that particular pronunciation of "fork"!

 

@Malcontent ,  that's one of the many, many fascinating regional variations that interests me too-- but, unfortunately, I don't know where it comes from.  Maybe someone else can enlighten us.   I've heard of "r" being inserted into words like "wash" (warsh), and "Washington" too.

 

Sometimes the pronunciations are holdovers from colonial times, or other early times.  For example, the habit of dropping (not inserting) the final "r" sound of a word, started happening on the Eastern Seaboard, in imitation of the way English is spoken in London.  But that didn't catch on in other parts of the U.S.,  where the final "r" sound in a word is always hard, and sounded out.

 

Are there many accents to be discerned in Italy?   Is the biggest distinction between North and South?   Coastal vs. more inland?  Or...