The Long Island accent

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @OwnageCubed
    @OwnageCubed 7 лет назад +1873

    i get extremely uncomfortable knowing this is how i talk

    • @Mark-nu5vg
      @Mark-nu5vg 7 лет назад +83

      Don't.

    • @johnlavender7062
      @johnlavender7062 7 лет назад +80

      OwnageCubed The accent is cool!

    • @nspector
      @nspector 6 лет назад +38

      Aww, no, be proud. What else are you gonna do?

    • @LadySpace_888
      @LadySpace_888 6 лет назад +44

      Why?? Nothing better than owning where you come from. My favorite accents happen to be the most frowned upon L.I./NY and Boston. Love those dialects, they're hardcore.

    • @maxied7745
      @maxied7745 5 лет назад +13

      It’s honestly cool!

  • @jimpemberton
    @jimpemberton 3 года назад +384

    "There's nothing wrong with sounding like you are from anywhere." Preach it!

    • @mkilic10
      @mkilic10 3 года назад +11

      Right? This is our identity!

    • @eukalypta
      @eukalypta 2 года назад +2

      yep! i talk with strong amsterdam accent...wich is looked down up on by the dutch people who talk dutch without any accent ...i 'm proud of my accent

    • @greenmachine5600
      @greenmachine5600 2 года назад

      Agreed?

    • @jeffmorse645
      @jeffmorse645 Год назад +3

      For real! You listen to younger folks from almost anywhere in the country now and they all sound like they're from Southern California. Its kind of sad.

    • @Razbunyik
      @Razbunyik Год назад +2

      @@jeffmorse645 Yes, I've noticed that!

  • @danhanqvist4237
    @danhanqvist4237 3 года назад +255

    Accents are wonderful. It's a sign of maturity that the US has developed a fair number of regional dialects. It's enriching.

    • @stalstonestacy4316
      @stalstonestacy4316 3 года назад +12

      I wish people felt this away about Southern dialects

    • @danhanqvist4237
      @danhanqvist4237 3 года назад +12

      @@stalstonestacy4316 I do.

    • @kenaldri4923
      @kenaldri4923 2 года назад +11

      Accents make everyone seem colorful and fascinating to me. Having no accent like in much of the west makes one seem humorless.

    • @kenaldri4923
      @kenaldri4923 2 года назад

      @@stalstonestacy4316 they only bother me if they're so thick you cant understand anyone. Otherwise, they're cool.

    • @danhanqvist4237
      @danhanqvist4237 2 года назад +7

      @@kenaldri4923 Everyone has an accent. It's literally (literally literally in this case) impossible not to have an accent.

  • @juancitojuana
    @juancitojuana 8 лет назад +852

    Yiddish and Italian = Long Island

    • @ShannonSouthAfrica
      @ShannonSouthAfrica 5 лет назад +18

      Lol. I speak Yiddish and a bit of Italian....

    • @ShannonSouthAfrica
      @ShannonSouthAfrica 5 лет назад +6

      @@SimonKanner-si3it And to you. Grazi mille. I also speak a fair Zulu and grew up speaking Afrikaans.

    • @ShannonSouthAfrica
      @ShannonSouthAfrica 4 года назад

      @@hectormowsmylawn6355 Ja ek kom van Sa af. JY?

    • @AskewBlueCanoe
      @AskewBlueCanoe 4 года назад +6

      Dont forget Irish

    • @JimmyFranceable
      @JimmyFranceable 4 года назад +5

      David Scalza The Irish were here before both.

  • @kimonafaith420
    @kimonafaith420 9 лет назад +781

    I'm from long island too and everyone pretty much sounds just like this. When I moved to Florida ppl already knew i was from New York cause of my accent. Man I miss New York.

    • @dorkandproudofit
      @dorkandproudofit 8 лет назад +8

      Deep South accents are about as noticeable. Mississippi and Alabama tend to sound a lot more "lower-class", Georgia and the Carolinas tend to be a bit more urban/"upper-class" sounding, and we Tennesseans seem to fall somewhere in the middle. When you're living among your "home accent", you never notice it, but then when you go on vacation, it sticks out like a sore thumb, and you catch yourself pronouncing words in ways you never realize you did until you stopped hearing other people say it like that. Accents are WEIRD like that.

    • @victorstolarenko1987
      @victorstolarenko1987 6 лет назад +7

      Kimona Faith lived in nassau county 48 years moved to florida boy am I having fun talking with all the southern people I'll never lose my accent but the funny thing is more and more long islanders are moving here

    • @jrbknyc8785
      @jrbknyc8785 6 лет назад +4

      i grew up in island park but now live in minnesota. i dont have a thick long island accent. my parents have real thick new york accents. my mom left the bronx 43 yesrs ago and still has that bronx irish accent

    • @davidmorgenstern8099
      @davidmorgenstern8099 5 лет назад

      Same just moved from long island but everyone says I just have a valley girl accent

    • @sapphirexwind
      @sapphirexwind 5 лет назад +9

      EVeryone moves from NY to FL so much that I am trying to AVOID moving to FL even though it is destined to happen, haha...

  • @KaBoomChannel
    @KaBoomChannel 10 лет назад +1969

    It's not pronounced Long Island, it's pronounced Lawn Goyland.

    • @rowan6575
      @rowan6575 9 лет назад +21

      You have made my day

    • @pancakeman5247
      @pancakeman5247 9 лет назад +33

      Lawn guy lander

    • @rtd6840
      @rtd6840 6 лет назад +4

      Ka Boom lmfaooo

    • @lelrica6883
      @lelrica6883 5 лет назад +25

      With an O? I hear more people pronounce it like 'lawngilan' as a long islander.

    • @lordfarquaad5928
      @lordfarquaad5928 5 лет назад +36

      It’s more like lawn guyland

  • @justjen139
    @justjen139 8 лет назад +453

    Proud to be a Long Islander :)

  • @lorettacaputo6997
    @lorettacaputo6997 3 года назад +32

    Born in Brooklyn, lived in Nassau. I live upstate NY and I draw attention every time I open my mouth.

  • @rlevitta
    @rlevitta 3 года назад +73

    This is not an accent thing, but I always say "If you say you live "in" Long Island, you weren't born "on" Long Island.'

    • @shevetlevi2821
      @shevetlevi2821 3 года назад +5

      Never thought about that. You're right. I grew up IN Queens but my friend lived ON Long Island.

    • @rlevitta
      @rlevitta 3 года назад +1

      @No. Body Yeah, but people don't say I was born "on" Manhattan, they say I was born "in" Manhattan.

    • @rlevitta
      @rlevitta 3 года назад

      @No. Body How can people forget it's an island when the only way you can get there is by bridge, tunnel or boat? Maybe I'm just biased because I lived on Christopher Street when I was born...in Manhattan.

    • @rlevitta
      @rlevitta 3 года назад +1

      @No. Body When I was in high school, after a vacation - maybe winter break - I had been trying to grow a mustache. In gym class we used to line up for attendance, and my teacher would go down the line like we were in the army or something. When he got to me he said, "where have you been - living on an island?" I said, "Yes. Long Island" (I had moved there by then.) Gym teachers don't like to be shown up, of course. So - I get it.

    • @Stinger913
      @Stinger913 3 года назад

      True! I think it can also apply to lower New York too; I say “I’m waiting on line to check out” and not “in line”. A New Jersey friend of mine gave me a crazy look haha.

  • @bobd9775
    @bobd9775 3 года назад +110

    I'm standing in the middle of the Grand Bazaar in Istanbul, Turkey talking to my Father-in law. The shopkeepers stand outside their stores trying to lure people in . I hear the shopkeeper across from us say " Hey Long Island, come check out my store"

  • @Michael_Lederman
    @Michael_Lederman 3 года назад +52

    Born in Queens, raised on Long Island, now stationed in Texas for the last 25 years, and yet everyone I meet can tell where I came from without a moment's hesitation. Long Island gives you an accent that stays for life.

  • @FrozenUSA
    @FrozenUSA 8 лет назад +342

    I was born and raised on Long Island and I never thought I had much of a Long Island accent. I still don't. However, when I went to sleep away camp for the first time when I was 10, many kids thought I was from the Boston area because of how I talked. I do actually pronounce my "r" sounds unlike most with a thick Boston accent. I used to go to school with a couple of people who had pretty thick Long Island accents and lots of people used to ask them to say the words "coffee," "water," and "orange" just to hear how they sounded.

    • @melissalalonde6998
      @melissalalonde6998 7 лет назад +1

      FrozenUSA every time i go into the city im asked if i'm from boston as well

    • @OdinsCloud
      @OdinsCloud 7 лет назад

      I guess you're jewish.

    • @Mark-nu5vg
      @Mark-nu5vg 7 лет назад +2

      Jews don't sound like that.

    • @eosa
      @eosa 6 лет назад +4

      There are a lot of similar language features that are similar between New York and New England that get lost to the confusion between "Hahvahd" and "cawfee". I like to tell people I'm from the Northeast because of this rather than identifying a metro area.

    • @boot2470
      @boot2470 6 лет назад +1

      Yeah same I pronounce the r

  • @eigobike3929
    @eigobike3929 3 года назад +128

    Folks from LI will refer to everything LI as “on” the island. Those from elsewhere say in LI.

    • @chrisa1146
      @chrisa1146 3 года назад +22

      I'm LI born and raised and yes, I agree, we "natives" (correctly, I might add) say "on" not "in". One lives ON an island, not IN an island! Makes me crazy, esp when professionals, like news anchors do it.

    • @gj8683
      @gj8683 3 года назад +3

      "oowan"

    • @dockdrumming
      @dockdrumming 3 года назад +4

      I am originally from Queens, and any place on LI that wasn't Queens or Brooklyn, we referred to as being "out on the Island."

    • @leonardodalongisland
      @leonardodalongisland 3 года назад +5

      It has nothing to do with were we live. It's the correct way to say it. You live IN a state and ON and island.

    • @eigobike3929
      @eigobike3929 3 года назад +2

      @J Stone so true,,, I live oooonnnnnn Looonnnngggg Island

  • @MELLIEbevhills
    @MELLIEbevhills Год назад +1

    Garden City here, 11530. BUT never said sofer (sofa) or Donner (Donna). In LA now but when I hear someone speak Long Island, they are my new best friend. Strawng Island.

  • @yesca915
    @yesca915 3 года назад +20

    LOL I'm from Missouri and I sit here and listen in total amazement on how you folks pronounce words it cracks me up but I got nothing but love for ya

    • @doondarwood3889
      @doondarwood3889 3 года назад +1

      I did a job at Whiteman airforce base a few years back. Pretty close to Sedalia MO, anyway we went into a bar and they were all line dancing, but we didn't know how. So we just started to dance like we normally do and got nothing but love from the people there. And that was literally in the middle of nowhere. Loved the people there!

  • @shaddaioreb
    @shaddaioreb 5 лет назад +62

    I love the N Y Long Island accent, grettings from Mexico City.

  • @zarius6363
    @zarius6363 3 года назад +76

    I'm not from the US so I was really excited the first time I went to NYC and heard this accent in person haha. I knew it from the movies but to hear it live in NY is really cool!

  • @gaslight.gatekeep.girlboss6476
    @gaslight.gatekeep.girlboss6476 2 года назад +11

    I'm from Uruguay, and I find Long Island accent so beautiful and amusing to hear. Don't be ashamed of where y'all come from!

  • @diegosmith3534
    @diegosmith3534 5 лет назад +67

    I'm a big fan of the hardcore legend Mick Foley.

    • @chronometa
      @chronometa 3 года назад

      All hail

    • @bigwill6089
      @bigwill6089 2 года назад

      I met him in Florida at the hotel I work at. Cool dude.

  • @ernestrolfson
    @ernestrolfson Год назад +2

    The Mick Foley special guest shot blew me away

  • @emilysummer1373
    @emilysummer1373 3 года назад +7

    I was born on Long island (Islip) in 1938. Left when I was 16 to California. Even now,, when I talk to someone from L>I> I slip back into the accent after all these years.

  • @CaptainBill22
    @CaptainBill22 10 лет назад +165

    It's funny, my mom and her family are from Long Island, and when I work in a call center I can tell when someone is from Long Island. There is definitely a difference between a NYC, an Islander and a New Joisey accent.

    • @CaptainBill22
      @CaptainBill22 10 лет назад +2

      Angela Yu You don't notice an accent when you're used to hearing it on a daily basis. When someone from upstate like me goes down, they'll let me know (my family specifically) that I don't pronounce certain words like water, compass, or Mario correctly.

    • @MYacono
      @MYacono 7 лет назад +5

      There is no NJ accent, and only new yorkers say "Joisey" We always say New Jersey.

    • @prushimush
      @prushimush 6 лет назад +6

      The urban North Jersey accent - think Hoboken, Jersey City et al - is kind of like a softened NYC borough accent that pronounces all "R" sounds. "Joisey" is of course a joke, that's actually the dead curl-coil merger that only urban NYC people had about 100 years ago - picture Groucho Marx. Quite abruptly inland towards Morristown, Wayne etc. it turns into a pretty neutral Hudson Valley-ish accent that dosen't sound very NYC at all. This also applies to below the Raritan River.
      Then there's South Jersey near Philly. I have this accent. You'll get diphthong vowels in words like "bath" and "pass" just like a NYC/Long Island accent and the "aw" sound is pretty enriched(cawfee, dawg, etc), but it's fully rhotic and has a goofy Pennsylvania-ish sound that is completely unlike NYC. Yet when I leave Jersey people think I'm a Jersey or NY guy due to the way I say words like "hot dog" or "glass".

    • @user-mt5cm5xp2o
      @user-mt5cm5xp2o 4 года назад +2

      prushimush The North Jersey accent doesn’t pronounce “R’s”. My family is from Jersey City and Bayonne, “R’s” are never used when talking. But “R’s” are added to words ending in a vowel. Oh and maybe since I’m Irish American, any word with a “O” sound at the end turns into a “ah” sound. Potato is pAtatA. Tomato is tAmatA. Window is windA

    • @MissNyPeachJerseyAppleBottom
      @MissNyPeachJerseyAppleBottom 4 года назад

      I think I got all the accent

  • @nirvanalynn2137
    @nirvanalynn2137 5 лет назад +222

    Guy at 1:11 says that everyone tells him he has a strong Long Island accent, but I don’t hear it at all.

    • @dothebartman9156
      @dothebartman9156 3 года назад +13

      I do in his vowel for "long"

    • @dollface9448
      @dollface9448 3 года назад +4

      Yeah I don't here it at awwwwl

    • @EmeraldLavigne
      @EmeraldLavigne 3 года назад +2

      I hear it, but only a little bit. I think he had the "thinnest" Long Island (Lawn Guyland) accent out of any of the people they interviewed...
      It's definitely not a "thick" accent.

    • @abright4852
      @abright4852 3 года назад

      @@EmeraldLavigne then I don’t have one lol

    • @xavierstjohn5916
      @xavierstjohn5916 3 года назад +1

      This is a real thing. I somehow just realized I have the accent. Before I didn't notice it

  • @yuufeternal5837
    @yuufeternal5837 3 года назад +30

    This is probably the most charming accent to me of all regional accents.

  • @ribonucleic
    @ribonucleic Год назад +3

    Thank you, professor lady, for reassuring me that there's no reason to be embarrassed by a Long Island accent. That's very open minded of you.

  • @john.andrew.brighton
    @john.andrew.brighton 8 лет назад +172

    I really think the "coffee"/ Long Island accent is unique to a certain extent.

    • @tommytruth7595
      @tommytruth7595 6 лет назад +4

      That is how Carrie Heffernan said it on the KOQ show.

    • @soakedbearrd
      @soakedbearrd 3 года назад

      Yeah we pronounce it cawfee.

    • @john.andrew.brighton
      @john.andrew.brighton 3 года назад +4

      I’m originally from West Yorkshire in England which has a similar accent to Long Island, but I think the Long Island accent is thicker, but I was interested in the Long Island accent. I currently live in Islip, NY

    • @abright4852
      @abright4852 3 года назад +1

      I pronounce it as coffee

    • @learner5090
      @learner5090 2 года назад

      @@john.andrew.brighton Generally speaking, New York accent is similar to English Accent. At least I notice. For instance; Talk, Call, More, door etc

  • @brianbailey904
    @brianbailey904 5 лет назад +15

    I’m from the east end (farther from NYC) and our accent is less thick. But then I moved to SW Florida populated largely from MidWesterners, & they hear me comin a mile away like I’m Joe Pesci 😂

  • @funkyjunkyjai
    @funkyjunkyjai 4 года назад +54

    Great accent. Come over to the UK with that accent, you'd get lots of attention. In fact, all of the US accents would get lots of attention over here 😍

  • @chaeyoungsstrawberryfarm3327
    @chaeyoungsstrawberryfarm3327 2 года назад +8

    Honestly one of my favorite American accent - from a Scandinavian

  • @laughorgomad
    @laughorgomad 8 лет назад +71

    In California they watched me talk like I was always about to tell a joke.(Because many famous comedians including Seinfeld were natives here.)

    • @patriciamorouney2307
      @patriciamorouney2307 8 лет назад +2

      Thomas Kennedy theres alot of irish jewish and polish people dont forget

    • @genki316
      @genki316 8 лет назад +4

      I just moved to cali too. They all say I have a long island accent and make fun of me =(

    • @laughorgomad
      @laughorgomad 8 лет назад +5

      Nocturnal316 California aren't the most understanding people when it comes to outsiders.They sort of live in a bubble.Not much diversity there.The best thing to do is just go with it if you can.If you can laugh at yourself its better than them laughing at you.If not move back home like I did."Say Coffee!"-NO! Everyone asked me that.Got old quick

  • @yankees57
    @yankees57 4 года назад +31

    I don’t hear my accent but whenever I leave LI everybody that I meet ask “are you from New York” 😂

  • @nicolemonrue
    @nicolemonrue Год назад +3

    I moved in Brooklyn in 2003 and you'd hear this accent everywhere....after 2008, you only heard it in long island. Now I just hear Arabic and Spanish and Chinese and Japanese.

  • @mdscamarilloca2914
    @mdscamarilloca2914 3 года назад +10

    Don’t forget the two other rules...1) dropping the “ing”. Walking becomes walkin’; cooking becomes cookin’; etc. And 2) running two or more words together to form one word. “What are you doing” becomes one word “Whachadoin”.

    • @chelle315
      @chelle315 3 года назад +1

      LOL...like what do you mean?.....wadayamean? and the shoulder shrug with your palms turned up.....

    • @learner5090
      @learner5090 2 года назад

      @@chelle315 I notice people are from LI and don't have relatives from the city speak that way. If your relatives are from city, you aint talking like that. I have Queens accent and didn't grew up in Queens but spent most time in Queens as a child. I not the L.I. accent, it's interesting

  • @LongIslandMoldGuy
    @LongIslandMoldGuy 3 года назад +6

    people always ask me if Im from Boston and I have to let them know that its a genuine Long Island accent

    • @jameslawless9819
      @jameslawless9819 3 года назад +3

      Get the same thing after spending my first 37 years on LI. Funny thing I raised my youngest child in NC from 6 months old and he has a bit of a LI accent and never lived there. After repeatedly asked where I was from I would always tell them a different southern state. The look on their faces was priceless. When asked what part of GA I would respond North Georgia.

  • @frannieOh
    @frannieOh 6 лет назад +7

    I live in Texas now but as soon as I cross the Verranzano-Narrows Bridge both the accent & the Long Island Expressway driving habits come back like flipping a switch.

    • @elizabethwitt2621
      @elizabethwitt2621 8 месяцев назад +1

      I relate so well to this. Eat or be eaten driving in New Yawk.

  • @michaelrydzynski8307
    @michaelrydzynski8307 3 года назад +20

    I've lived in Southern California now for nearly 50 years--but I was born and raised in Long Island City. I've lost whatever New York accent I may have had--except whenever I pronounce a word with an "o" in it, I give away where I'm originally from. "Lawng Island," "frawg," "fawggy day." Haven't lost my "Lawng Islandese." And know what? Hope I never do!

    • @sallybenardello6533
      @sallybenardello6533 3 года назад +1

      Long Island City is NOT long island. Never was and Never will be. That is Queens and one of the 5 boroughs of NYC--only Nassau County and Suffolk County are considered Long Island. Brooklyn is Not Long Island either for same reason. It is Kings County which has been a borough of NYC long before there was a dirt road in the wilderness of long island. People from Brooklyn and Queens are considered city folk not Islanders.--Glad you kept a lot of your eastern accent. A Queens accent is great!! Most Islanders have parents or grandparents living in Queens or Brooklyn. (The old country, hahaha)

    • @lisalee2885
      @lisalee2885 8 месяцев назад

      Me too! Micheal. I'm from Long Island. I don't know if it's being around family so much but have THE words that come out of my mouth so Long Island. Now my family came from Bronx, Brooklyn then moved to the island. I had family in Levittown, Bethpage and Massapequa. Then a portion moved to Southern California. What's SO COOL is I Google my old address and can see my home as it is today ❤❤❤

  • @maxscameraguy
    @maxscameraguy 8 лет назад +10

    I love the fact that Mick Foley was interviewed for this! Never thought about it!

  •  3 года назад +2

    I am proud to be from New York, Brooklyn, NY. All New Yorkers have distinct accents from all over NY.

  • @joiedevivre7376
    @joiedevivre7376 6 лет назад +6

    I'm born and raised in Long Island (NY) but I've never heard A Long Islander say lawn GY land !
    Yet whenever I meet someone who's not from around here the first thing a say is oh! Lawn GY LAND
    AM I RIGHT MY BRUTHUHS AND SISTAS?

    • @learner5090
      @learner5090 2 года назад +2

      What part, I notice it alot more out east around of L.I. If you from Nassau close to Queens, it explains why.

  • @heatherIsla
    @heatherIsla Год назад +1

    I'm from Long Island. My grandparents were from Brooklyn and The Bronx and my Dad was from Queens. I have zero Long Island accent. I think it's because my Mom is from England. I am from East Setauket.

  • @ThisIsTheUser
    @ThisIsTheUser 11 месяцев назад +3

    You misspelled “Lawn Goylan” as Long Island. Rookie mistake

  • @PrinceKassad95
    @PrinceKassad95 2 года назад +2

    Holy shit Mick Foley!!! BANG BANG!!!

  • @pattijacobs8961
    @pattijacobs8961 3 года назад +7

    I lost a 4th grade spelling bee because I spelled "quarter" without the first "R", due to the way we all pronounced it on LI (KWAW-der). Still rankles 40 years later.

    • @emmarose4234
      @emmarose4234 Год назад

      I lost a spelling bee because they thought I said a different vowel, because I had a silly little Southern accent. I hear ya.

    • @elizabethwitt2621
      @elizabethwitt2621 8 месяцев назад

      🤣🤣

  • @noahboat0852
    @noahboat0852 2 года назад +1

    I’m from Rhode Island and it sounds jus like this

    • @lisalee2885
      @lisalee2885 8 месяцев назад

      My grandfather too!

  • @vaden706
    @vaden706 3 года назад +3

    For some the island is luxurious and lavished, for others it is dark and tragic. Yet the dividing lines are thinner than both worlds realize. That is long island

  • @michaeldudley8439
    @michaeldudley8439 4 года назад +1

    I grew up on Lawn Guy Land but have lived in South Carolina for years. Everyone likes my accent and says it's cool!

  • @djnaydee
    @djnaydee 3 года назад +6

    "I love drinking Cawfee when Im not drinking Wawtah", Love my Island!

  • @toad829
    @toad829 3 года назад +2

    Lawnga Island is my place for 59 years. BE PROUD !!!

  • @longislandmeditation
    @longislandmeditation 5 лет назад +4

    Love the Long Island accent!

  • @GG-yd7zd
    @GG-yd7zd 3 года назад +2

    Born and lived in Harlem, moved to LI at 5yo,still here. Used to be embarrassed by my accent. Now I know it's a unique, fading beautiful accent. Please pass the cawfee.

  • @KingNeptune68
    @KingNeptune68 10 лет назад +7

    I was from Suffolk County and I wish I could move back!

  • @bkeen7013
    @bkeen7013 3 года назад +1

    We Long Islanders don't have an accent!! Youse guys do!

  • @EmeraldLavigne
    @EmeraldLavigne 3 года назад +9

    I think it's kinda interesting that some of those things can work similarly to a typical Southern accent & how that linguistic thing can work literally backwards in a Southern accent. Like turing oil ("oy-yul") into "ole" or "awl" - linguistics & accents are just fascinatingly cool!

  • @tomindenver1331
    @tomindenver1331 Год назад +1

    When my dad was stationed in San Diego back in the late 50s, a cab driver picked him up from the airport to take him to the base. "You in the navy?" he asked. "I am," dad said. "I'm gonna give you a few words to say to me and by the end of your ride, if I don't guess where you grew up within 50 miles, your ride is free." After dad said "Look at this" and "What do you say?" the cabbie said "You're from Hudson County...Hoboken or Jersey City." Dad was from Hoboken.

  • @Bpdymepiece
    @Bpdymepiece 5 лет назад +5

    I was born and raised in Suffolk county with two sisters and none of us sound like this. None of our friends do either. I think it stems from having parents from a burrough who moved out to LI and/or having a strong accent from another language such as Italian

  • @elizabethisweird
    @elizabethisweird Год назад +1

    I needed this cause I was reading a book and it said Long Island accent and I had no idea what it meant 😃

  • @thebananarepublic7255
    @thebananarepublic7255 3 года назад +8

    We also call "drawer" a "draw" or at least i do

    • @aspr_
      @aspr_ 3 года назад

      I don't think you can pronounce the er in that accent

  • @rockdefdiva
    @rockdefdiva 3 года назад +1

    I grew up and am still living in Connecticut but somehow was blessed with the Long Island accent and it gets even more noticeable when I'm mad too I'm also Italian and maybe 4"10

  • @julianstalters9402
    @julianstalters9402 3 года назад +3

    Watching this makes me miss home 😭💜

    • @lisalee2885
      @lisalee2885 8 месяцев назад

      Totally 😢😢😢😢

  • @Chris-b4w8t
    @Chris-b4w8t 4 года назад +1

    I have a Long Island accent because I grew up on Long Island hahaha. I live in Brooklyn now though.

  • @Defrxct1v1
    @Defrxct1v1 10 лет назад +10

    1:40 love this guy hes got an xbox controller on his end table hes my best friend already

  • @candy9986
    @candy9986 Год назад +1

    Stand tall, Long Islanders You are loved 💕

  • @lisarae8160
    @lisarae8160 3 года назад +4

    Years ago in South Florida, I walked into a Mc Donald’s and placed my order. The McDonald’s employee asked me what part of Long Island I was from.

  • @cutesweetiepuppy1967
    @cutesweetiepuppy1967 5 лет назад +2

    I live on Long Island and have been raised there since I was 2 years old, and I've always had this Long Island accent.

  • @patriciapalmer3899
    @patriciapalmer3899 4 года назад +10

    I love this! I’m an English prof who grew up in Farmingdale, went to college in New Paltz, lived for eleven years in Manhattan, and moved to Los Angeles in 1999. My youthful arrogance made me work during my 20’s to remove my accent from my speech, which I now regret. I guess I was not 100% successful, because every once in awhile someone here asks, “Are you from Long Island?” I love it when that happens. My kids tell me when I go back to visit it kicks in again, which makes me happy. Best quote in this piece is, “ There’s nothing wrong with sounding like you’re from anywhere.”

  • @rickyalfaro4417
    @rickyalfaro4417 3 года назад +1

    Strong Island stand up!!

  • @pheddupp
    @pheddupp 3 года назад +3

    I'm from the New Orleans area and I've been called out for my obvious New Orleans accent in many places around the U.S. including Gatlinburg, Tennessee, and Flagstaff, Arizona. The people that I spoke to recognized my accent immediately. I don't really notice it in my speech either though.

  • @Oginaka
    @Oginaka 3 года назад +2

    I saw Mick, I clicked.

  • @danielkarpf9824
    @danielkarpf9824 8 лет назад +27

    I say everyone of these and i get so much shade for it and I'm like sorry it's not my fault you weren't raised right

  • @timcarr6401
    @timcarr6401 Месяц назад

    I love the accent. I hope it remains. There is a charm to it.

  • @rhiannajd4412
    @rhiannajd4412 3 года назад +49

    Why was this recommended to me? I feel attacked.

    • @15lesson
      @15lesson 3 года назад +7

      You look like you feel attacked by anything🤣😂 someone says hi to you and you probably think it's sexual harassment🤣😂🤣😂

    • @rhiannajd4412
      @rhiannajd4412 3 года назад +7

      @@15lesson what in the actual fuck are you talking about? I was making a joke because I’m from Long Island and I have the stereotypical accent. Go bring your toxic bullshit somewhere else.

    • @15lesson
      @15lesson 3 года назад +7

      @@rhiannajd4412 Damn you can't take a joke?🤣😂🤣😂 toxic? 🤣😂

    • @rhiannajd4412
      @rhiannajd4412 3 года назад +4

      @@15lesson your attempt at humor was an absolute failure. You decided to make a conscious effort to attack someone’s appearance instead of commenting on the video like you should’ve. Your comment and my comment had no correlation with one another.

    • @15lesson
      @15lesson 3 года назад +8

      @@rhiannajd4412 I laughed so it wasn't a failure🤣😂 no no I apologize if I offended you🙌

  • @central_scrutinizr
    @central_scrutinizr 7 месяцев назад

    My dad grew up in Farmingdale. He has lived on the west coast for about 40 years now and didn’t retain much of his native accent, except it does come back out with certain words, like “mirror” (he says “mirra” 😊) I love it!

  • @mikehunt8997
    @mikehunt8997 3 года назад +5

    You wouldn't believe all the accents I heard being in the military. I picked up new ways of expressing things that were easier to say, or have a more effective way of making your point, that they don't use in NY. I'm originally from Brooklyn and everybody from other places in the country knew that about me without even asking.

  • @JnEricsonx
    @JnEricsonx 3 года назад +1

    Gotta love Mick Foley, lived in Huntington where most of my relatives lived!

  • @ChopinIsMyBestFriend
    @ChopinIsMyBestFriend 3 года назад +7

    from tennessee, have never heard a human being with this accent in person. still waiting.

    • @shaynabarkan3940
      @shaynabarkan3940 3 года назад

      How?!! I am a long islander. I live 40 minutes away from the city, and I don’t even notice the accents. It’s just normal

    • @sully0628
      @sully0628 3 года назад

      @@shaynabarkan3940 you tend not to notice things when it’s the only type of accent you’re exposed to, if you were from like California and visited the island you’d probably notice an accent

  • @nicklatino7157
    @nicklatino7157 3 года назад +1

    Holy cow! I live literally around the corner from three Village. 25A is like a 30 second walk from me!

  • @bmsj
    @bmsj 7 лет назад +20

    I went to Seattle Washington to visit family. I went to a Walgreens and asked a female employee working there for help, she was nice, helped me out, then smiled at me asking if I'm from LI, I said yeah and she knew just by my accent so that was pretty cool being recognized like that. I also stopped by a fast food restaurant and asked for an (iced cawffee, light and sweet). The guy taking my order was so confused because apparently "light and sweet" isn't a recognized term out west.

    • @foosaturf
      @foosaturf Год назад

      Nah it's not a matter of terminology it's matter of failure of communication, if you don't understand light & sweet in barista occupation you shouldn't be in that occupation.

    • @candy9986
      @candy9986 Год назад

      Right. They don't know "Coffee Light" ! 😮

  • @dgwear69
    @dgwear69 10 лет назад +1

    this becomes a conversation piece once a day when i am away at school in maryland. Drawer is another big one.

  • @oakpkdude
    @oakpkdude 3 года назад +9

    I lived in Westchester and I remember making fun of my cousins when I was a kid for saying,, "I'm gonna tell your Mutha".

  • @sweetbrown89
    @sweetbrown89 3 года назад +2

    Lawnguyland

  • @Purpleskyshorizon
    @Purpleskyshorizon 10 лет назад +10

    FOLEY! FOLEY! FOLEY!

  • @netaburnum1359
    @netaburnum1359 7 лет назад +1

    My company, Profacgen, a state-of-the-art protein service provider is located in Long Island, NY, USA. We're very proud of Long Island!

  • @Razbunyik
    @Razbunyik Год назад +2

    I grew up in Manhattan and Brooklyn and have lived on Long Island for many years. Some call it a New York Accent, some call it a Brooklyn accent, and in recent years, we have heard people calling it a Long Island Accent. But except for a few slight differences, I find that it's pretty much all the same, even in the Bronx and Staten Island. Maybe it should be called the New York-Long Island Metro Area Accent?

  • @nigelprance2540
    @nigelprance2540 3 года назад +2

    Many years ago I lived in Queens but worked in Manhattan. Many of my neighbors in Flushing had accents reminiscent of Archie Bunker. However, when I crossed the bridge to the upper east side, I encountered a nearly Bostonian lock jaw. Amazing what difference a bridge crossing or a few subway stops can make.

  • @ChannelZero1031
    @ChannelZero1031 3 года назад +2

    1:12 Elmont right here! Yeah we tend to "Caw" like a crow when we pronounce "KWUAFEE". or "MWUAL" (for Mall). and "WUATA" for water.

  • @jessquinn6106
    @jessquinn6106 2 года назад +5

    There is a difference from Suffolk County and Nassau County accents. When I moved from Uniondale to Bayshore, everyone was like "Ah, you're from Nassau. Your accent gives you away." Slowly I learned the difference as well.

    • @learner5090
      @learner5090 2 года назад

      What are the differences?

    • @jessquinn6106
      @jessquinn6106 2 года назад +1

      @@learner5090 The Suffolk accent is heavier from the best I can describe. There seems to be one of a emphasis on the vowels in Suffolk County. Like the infamous "coffee"; In Nassau I hear "Cawffee" but on Suffolk that is a distinct emphasis on the AW. I first noticed its with my landlord and the owners of the house I was renting. Then I heard it with my boss and employees.

    • @jessquinn6106
      @jessquinn6106 2 года назад +1

      @@learner5090 At least this had been my observance

    • @learner5090
      @learner5090 2 года назад

      @@jessquinn6106 I notice with Suffolk county the accent can nasally compare to a Queens, Brooklyn and Nassu county. It kind of reminds me the Aussie accent. If you grew up in household with a parent from queens or brooklyn, you wouldnt pick it up most likely and if you spend time there.

  • @chioj36
    @chioj36 4 года назад +1

    I’m from Suffolk and can personally vouch WE HAVE CAWT THIS ACCENT TOO

    • @Mia-rb5lj
      @Mia-rb5lj 4 года назад

      Jenifer Chiodo hello Jennifer please if you would answer I am from Long island I moved out of state. I am home sick I want to come home please tell me is it really to expensive to live I am at the point in life id rather be homeless on Long island than stay here another year...please advise id be so grateful....

  • @tenleytenley6228
    @tenleytenley6228 6 лет назад +5

    Nobody sounds like that, except for the soccer moms in LI ( I love there)

  • @mordaciousfilms
    @mordaciousfilms 3 года назад +2

    Similar to Rhode Island. I love those "O" vowel sounds!

  • @reptarakm
    @reptarakm 8 лет назад +7

    from now on i will correct people
    i do not have a new york accent
    i have a long island accent

  • @-awm-4655
    @-awm-4655 Год назад +2

    FOLEY FOREVER

  • @jasonmartinez380
    @jasonmartinez380 8 лет назад +10

    Mick Foley

    • @lisalee2885
      @lisalee2885 8 месяцев назад

      My son of 30 still likes him

  • @misomercy
    @misomercy Год назад +2

    They should have been made to say, "The scissors are in the drawer." My LI husband pronounces 'drawer' as 'draw'.

  • @yankees29
    @yankees29 5 лет назад +7

    I never realize I sound like this until I hear myself on tape.

  • @jimmyolsen5897
    @jimmyolsen5897 4 года назад +2

    Mick Foley is an icon

  • @arodriguez6567
    @arodriguez6567 5 лет назад +3

    My dad's from New London, CT so maybe that's why he talks like that lol

  • @alcopower5710
    @alcopower5710 3 года назад +1

    Mick Foley on the thumbnail

  • @supertrouper
    @supertrouper 3 года назад +3

    The Long Island accent actually originated from Brooklyn and Queens, especially from the Italian Americans and Jewish Americans. This accent used be a lot more common in Brooklyn and Queens, but starting in the 1950s, especially since the 1970s, a lot of the European Americans left these boroughs moving to Long Island bringing the Brooklyn/Queens accents and eventually it became more common in Long Island than in Brooklyn/Queens as most of the original Brooklyn/Queens accent speakers left these boroughs and gave way to large numbers of new demographics and now you mainly can still hear these accents only certain parts of Queens and Brooklyn.

    • @easkeybikes1966
      @easkeybikes1966 Год назад +1

      "on" Long Island. :)

    • @lisalee2885
      @lisalee2885 8 месяцев назад

      That's cool. I'm from Long Island and Italian and family from Bronx and Brooklyn and Rhode Island ❤❤❤

  • @CJLAWLESS8
    @CJLAWLESS8 2 года назад +1

    this is why I can't move away... people are always like "say the thing" and I'm like "what are you talking about"
    and they go crazy

  • @rgarlinyc
    @rgarlinyc 3 года назад +4

    One of my all-time favorite gags - I've been using it for hundreds of years and it works every dang time - in a conversation where an Irish person is present (and especially when they say they're from Ireland) is to happily blurt out: *"My family's from Ireland!*"
    When they look surprised, or bemused or just mildly annoyed at my interruption, I pause half-a-second then add *"Lawng I-land".*