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Anonymous Posted 19 years ago
Speech & Pronunciation

Trading accents

0 Hey folks,02br
00I'm new to this forum. My point of leaving a posting here is that I'd like to learn different U.S. accents since I'm a non-native speaker (some more info about myself below). So, I guess I'm looking for a native speaker of one of the following regions that has an accent typical to that area that I can learn from over, let's say, the phone or Skype.02br
02br
00Accents I want to learn:02br
00Boston, Massachusetts area, white middle class; no particular neighborhood02br
00Any of the Southern states with the exception of FL or TX (FL isn't very pronounced in my opinion and TX doesn't appeal to me; I've never even worn cowboy boots lol).02br
02br
00What do I have to offer?02br
00Unfortunately and being a poor college student I can't offer monetary compensation; I can, however, offer returning the favor - I do speak high German fluently accent-free in Germany (Hannover area), but I sound funny over here in the states.02br
02br
00About myself:02br
00Alright, some info about me as a person. I came to the U.S. at age 16 (~4 years ago) and lived 1 year in Idaho and 3 years in Minnesota where I currently reside. I was born in Hannover, Germany and speak both English and German fluently and quite accurately. Through a lot of absorbing, I have improved my accent greatly over the past few years and have even gotten to the02br
00 point where random people stop asking me where I'm from when I go to Walmart. However, people can still tell that I'm not from the states, let alone Minnesota.02br
02br
00Why do I want to learn an Eastern and Southern accent? I think it'd be cool to be able to switch at will; people in the midwest may not think I'm from any of those states, but might mistake me for somebody from the East or South. I enjoy learning languages and have had the pleasure to devote more than 16.5 years to studying foreign languages (exluding German, obviously), including Chinese, French, Latin, English, and Spanish. I'm also currently studying sociolinguistics and language itself in Minnesota.02br
02br
00Anybody interested in this experiment?0-
  

Top answer

0Lesson 1: Basic Pronunciation02br 00The following will make you sound Southern to non-Southerners:02br 02br 00Pin pen merger: Pronounce "pin" and "pen" both as pin [ pIn ] . 02br 00Pronounce /aU/ as [ eU ] : down -> dayoon02br 00Pronounce /aI/ as [ a ] except before voiceless consonants (p,t,k,f,theta,s). 02br 00Distinguish /ær/, /ɛr/, and /er/ in "marry" "merry" and "Mary"02br 00Before "l" make all vowels lax: thus feel->fill fail->fell02br 00Many nouns are stressed on the first syllable that would be stressed on the second syllable in other accents.

  • 0Lesson 1: Basic Pronunciation02br 00The following will make you sound Southern to non-Southerners:02br 02br 00Pin pen merger: Pronounce "pin" and "pen" both as pin [ pIn ] .
  • 02br 00Pronounce /aU/ as [ eU ] : down -> dayoon02br 00Pronounce /aI/ as [ a ] except before voiceless consonants (p,t,k,f,theta,s).
  • 02br 00Distinguish /ær/, /ɛr/, and /er/ in "marry" "merry" and "Mary"02br 00Before "l" make all vowels lax: thus feel->fill fail->fell02br 00Many nouns are stressed on the first syllable that would be stressed on the second syllable in other accents.
  • 02br 02br 00Pronounce both "cot" and "caught" as [ ka:wO:t ] So the /A/ or /O/ sound should become [ a:wO: ]02br 02br 00Lesson II: Grammar0-
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4 Answers
0
0Lesson 1: Basic Pronunciation02br
00The following will make you sound Southern to non-Southerners:02br
02br
00Pin pen merger: Pronounce "pin" and "pen" both as pin [ pIn ] . Any /E/ followed by an /n/ should be sounded as /In/02br
00No yod dropping: therefore "02br
00No wine-whine merger: Pronounce words such as "whine" "white" whales" wi
0
0 So, the above should make you sound pretty darn Southern. Can you understand IPA and SAMPA? Try out some of the pronunciations and listen to how you sound. 0-
0
0 Hey Marvin,02br
00Thanks, but I can't read IPA or SAMPA. I attempted to make some of the sounds you suggested, but I'm not sure if I actually made the right sound. Some I could understand such as "caught -> cot" but the others pretty much left me hanging. Do you have Skype by any chance?0-
0
0 >> "caught -> cot" 02<<
02br
00Actually that's not what I meant. I didn't mean to pronounce "caught" as "cot", but rather to merge them both to kah:waw:t. Most Southerners actually don't have the merger, but by pronouncing them both as above, you'll sound more Southern. 0-

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