A lot of those Gen Am examples were just softer versions of regional accents, but I could tell them all apart (as an American). One even seemed like a fake American accent (there was a vowell in there I've never heard from an American). Jen Anniston is the only one I think can pass as actually Gen Am from those . To my American ear those were NOT all general... they were regional, just not heavy. When you live in it you can still hear an accent in people who 'have a little bit of an accent".... honestly, living here, most of the regional accent examples are definitely representative of people with strong or heavy regional accents, but most Americans with regional accents have much more subtle ones (that apparently, people from overseas cannot differentiate from Gen Am.... oh, but Americans can tell, we can tell).
the accents were way easier to understand than this messy video. are you listing accents? states? cities? this video is so hard to follow and hard to tell when you're switching from one accent to the next one. the editing needs some serious improvements.
Right? Because each state in the South has a distinct sound....hello, Tennessee, anyone? No one would mistake Georgia for Louisiana, and that Mississippi drawl is unique, honey!
The stupidest acssent is the woke acssent . They make statements in the form of questions ... Don't get me started on the word " axe" . My little yellow guitar is more like an axe then a question .
As an American the most difficult accent I’ve ever heard came from rural Louisiana. The accents you labeled as Minnesota and Upper Peninsula Michigan are heard all over the upper Midwest including Wisconsin. In fact one of the clips you used for Minnesota actually was a clip of someone from Wisconsin.
I'm from Northern California & my husband is Cajun. After 17 years together, I can understand him, but when he gets around his family, I'll look at him and say "WHAT???"
I got sort of lost in Lafayette, and stopped to ask a guy for directions. I could not understand a single word he said, so I just went in the direction he pointed.
I speak Californian English, but the hardest to understand is Irish or Scottish from smaller towns and deep down south in US... Ozzy bogans are a close 3rd
Wait that’s crazy I’m Creole and from NorCal! My grandpa was from Louisiana, and his son/my father from Detroit. Definitely had issues understanding both of them as well 😭💗
Was just about to say, the gullah/geechie dialect can be difficult at times. Worked at the volvo manufacturing plant and sometimes I'd get completely confused when we all sat at the table for lunch lol.
Yeah this was kinda a destined pick because Cajun/Creole/Bayou isn't even English. It's the only accent on the list where half the actual words aren't English. No wonder it is hard to understand, because it is pulling from a bunch of non-english vocabulary. The way I explain American accents is that the majority of Americans (especially now because of the internet) are beginning to be standard American English. This is, like the video says, is the accent we hear constantly on TV. It shares vocabulary, cadence, and emphasis. Then you have regional accents which all still pull from commonly understood vocabulary, but some sounds are altered, cadence can vary, and emphasis differs. This is for places like west coast (SoCal) and East Coast too (NYC). It's essentially the same vocab just sounding differently. Then you got the southern accent. Which still shares the majority of its vocab with the rest of the country but southerns speak in colloquial phrases (idioms) to convey meaning. The words on their own dont carry intelligble meaning, but put them together and you've got a profound phrase that only southerners get. And then you got Cajun, which doesn't share its vocab with the rest of the country, and therefore the hardest to understand, because honestly it isn't English. It's an amalgamation of multiple languages where no particularly one dominates the vocabulary. So Cajun is like 30% English. 30% French, 20% Canadian emphasis, and 20% local colloquial phrases. That's why Southern/Appalachian and Cajun are the hardest to understand. Southererns share the same vocab, but we speak in idioms. Cajuns speak a different language altogether. And the rest of the country essentially retains the same vocab but their vowels and cadences and emphasis' are different. As a southerner, I feel it is honestly the best all-around accent. I can understand SoCal, Brooklyn, Boston, Minnesota, Midwest, Texas, southern states, and even Appalachia. I understood every word from the Appalachia segment. I understood every single accent in the video except for the Cajun and NC outer banks. I stand out if I'm in a crowd of northerners or west coasters, but I understand them all quite easily. Now if I take them to rural South or Appalachia, they'd be so lost, but I'd be right at home with my southern speakers.
I’m from the Southern US. My son married a girl from Boston. Her mother was riding in the car with me when I asked Siri a question. Siri couldn’t understand me, so she tried. Siri couldn’t understand her either, so we pulled over and googled. 😂😂😂
Went to pickup a load about a half hour north of New Orleans back in '01. Two super nice 23ish young men working there. First one explains the way I needed to go and under what rack I was to load at. After he finished his directions, I asked the second one to please repeat what the first one said. Unfortunately he said the exact same thing in the exact gibberish. I put my forehead on the counter at that point.
Grew up in NY hearing accents from all over the world but a MS delta taxi driver could have been speaking another language completely for all I could tell. To this day nothing has come close.
I’m only first accent in on video but my first thought as hardest was it had to be Cajun lol. Think the waterboy guy. Thats legit how they sound deep on the bayou. lol it’s wild.
Texan here: I was in Germany this month, and heard an American accent from across the restaurant, and I knew they were from Texas and was pretty confident they were from Dallas. I introduced myself, and they confirmed they were from Dallas - absolutely can tell by accent where folks are from inside the state of Texas 😄
That's too funny! I only lived in Texas for 5 years and was able to pick up on where in Texas someone was from! lol I lived in Granbury, Fort Worth, and Dallas.
Years ago an old fellow in the U.K. thought I was Canadian. When I told him I lived in N.Y., he said I must live right on the border of Canada. He nailed it, Buffalo!
Upstate New York and Northern PA have some strange accents people don’t discuss much. Rochester, Syracuse, it’s a strange mix of Northern/almost Midwestern and….New England? NYC? I don’t even know. Same for people in rural northern PA, one thing they say a lot is “out” pronounced like “oat”, sort of Canadian but different. The Northeast has quite a few unsung heroes of the accent world lol
@@paestum70 fair assessment. My family are all new Englanders, I actually partially grew up there too. To clarify my original comment, I think you’re accurate about upstate NY, I think what I was thinking of more with the New England (and honestly probably more accurately New York) is the Scranton PA accent. There’s a good example here on YT, it’s a clip from some kind of town meeting or something lol. Some chunks of Northern PA were originally populated by people from New England, so there could be something to it
I’m from Louisiana. We ain’t got nothin’ on those Gullah Geeche folks when they start talkin’! That accent is by FAR the most difficult to comprehend! I enjoyed your video. Thanks for sharing!
that's a new thing calling it mid atlantic or transatlantic. Someone made that up in recent years. What is a transatlantic Hollywood accent? Transatlantic referred to east coast to europe. Old Western films was whatever the actor was, and their own accent. THere wasn't any focus on accent.
@@morriganinoregon Reginald Gardiner? The English actor? Anyway, that label mid atlantic is new in the last couple decades. From movie viewers not grasping the accents. Katherine Hepburn, Bette Davis,etc were not taught Mid Atlantic, there was no such thing in those days. There was no such thing when I went to acting conservatory in the 70's. It mainly was their own New England accents. Hepburn from upper class Connecticut family. Davis from Massachuetts. But added to that, there was what was called 'Standard Stage' English. Standard English is same as General English, just contemporary. Standard Stage was American actors doing the classics, like Shakespeare, without doing an English accent. So it was more proper..a bit. But it also was that in those days the majority of hollywood actors came from stage in New York,where they performed everything from the classics, contemporary dramas/comedies, Shakespeare,etc. So you got a majority who has that type of sound to their speaking, both from being from the East Coast, and from standard stage English. But it wasn't all. Spencer Tracy was originally from Wisconsin, and he just kept whatever accent he had from there. I forget where Clark Gable was from, but it was general. He didn't have a stage background first to get standard stage english.
There was actually one guy who taught all the actors how to speak like a Texan. Bob Hinkle. He thought he couldn't be in movies cause of how he sounded but they wanted him as a dialect coach 😂 He tought all the Hollywood stars in the 50s
I'm from Ohio and you can I can attest that the Midwest accent from my state and Indiana, our neighbor to the West, is pretty different. But the difference between Buckeyes and our Southern neighbors in Kentucky is even greater. Even in Ohio you'll hear differences depending on what part of the state the speaker is from.
@@RodericSpode I'm from Indiana (Indy) and I agree with you. I have friends who grew up in Ohio (Cleveland) and they really do pronounce some vowels consistently differently.
@@encycl07pedia- Yeah Kentucky, Tennessee, South Carolina, Arkansas, Alabama, Mississippi, North/South Florida- each distinct dialects. Locals can tell where in the south others are from.
My favorite accent story was told by my geography professor. She's a black woman from suburban Texas. Maybe a slight accent, otherwise very standard. She married an Irish-American as pale and red-haired as can be, from downtown Milwaukee. So when people talk to them on the phone and meet in person later, they're very confused. They completely assume that the husband was black and she was white. She had a great sense of humor about it.
Someone in a music class I took in college easily could've passed for Gabriel Iglesias from a distance, but hearing him talk you'd hear mostly Yooper. Half Mexican, half Brazilian, but no accent from either.
My father-in-law was raised in So. Texas but didn't have a Texas accent. The rest of his family - almost unintelligible. Then throw in the grandparents from the Old Country and a war bride from Wales and you had a real mash-up.
There is a boxing champion from Memphis, Tennessee named Caleb Plant. For starters most American boxers aren't white. Memphis is also mostly African American. Also the name Caleb Plant? Caleb is married to a very attractive black woman,. Caleb is white. If you gave me all the info, except his race I would have lost a lot of money on that.
My Dad was from Georgia, my Mom was from Long Island NY, I was born in Texas, raised in Texas, Kentucky, FL, Panama and California. I speak with a slight Texas drawl with some NY thrown in. I can recognize a Long Island accent over a Brooklyn or other east coast accents. The accent I like most is the Cajun accent.
I was born in California, but grew up in south Louisiana. When I was 9 years old, my parents divorced, and my dad moved back to California. I spent summers in California (San Francisco bay area) and the school year in Louisiana, near the Texas border and on the edge of Cajun country. When I was in college, I had a professor who was a connoisseur of accents and prided himself on being able to guess the place of origin by listening them. I was the only one in the classroom who stumped him.
I speak mostly Italian and spent my young life in Edmonton, Alberta. When I stayed with my father who is spaniard/ French. So I have an accent that is expressive but smooth even when I am angry and it doesn't matter which language I use. That is what I have been told.
i wish they used locals speaking normally uniformly instead of all the people doing impressions. southern californian english is often mostly standard and way less exaggerated than shown here. the accent these guys had was gnarly lol jk
@@Marky-Mark1337 yah we do for all of them actually. the 605 to the 5 to the 405… etc edit: that’s local tho for the most part but we’ll say pch for example or rout 66 or the name of any well known route etc
@@Marky-Mark1337 This is indeed a thing we do! People where I live now sometimes look at me funny when I use the definite article before an interstate number.
I wish I could be you. Full-on American. No influences from the scary nations of Eastern and Southern Europe (Shitaly, Romania, Poland, Macedonia, Serbia).
@@nicedoppy2077 Basic Boomer/Gen X Californian accent. That's average, i.e. newscasters, etc. I speak with that accent, but it really changes when you get into Californian Millennial/Gen Z vocal fry, upspeak, and slang. And the difference between northern and southern California accents pretty much started in the early 1990s.
My Italian teacher, a 30 year old Italian with a PhD in languages, speaks Italian, French, English, German, Spanish and Portuguese. While visiting the U.S., she was stopped for speeding in the Deep South and had to have her American husband translate because she could not understand the state trooper who pulled her over. I’m from central California and she once told me I speak Italian with a Mexican accent. Also, I was surprised that I immediately recognized the Minnesota accent until I remembered my Mom was raised in Hutchinson, MN. Thanks Olly, I really enjoyed your video!
My mother grew up in Brooklyn New York. She moved cross country to Washington state for work when she was 30. She has spent half of her life in Brooklyn and the other half in the Seattle/Tacoma area. Her accent has become a lot softer as the years have gone by. When she talks with our family back East her accent comes back in full.
@@perceivedvelocity9914 same here. I have lost my Bronx accent over the 30 something years since I left. But get me around family and friends from the Bronx and it’s back like I never left 😂❤️
My dad trained himself to get rid of his Brooklyn accent to have a fulfilling radio career up north, but same as your mom, when he goes back there for stuff like high school reunions, he goes back to being "Bawby." 😂
Same here with our particular version of Appalachian accent! Years of traveling and associating with people from all sorts of places have moderated it somewhat, but it tends to come back when we're around people who speak it.
I'd say from SoCal we mostly speak General American. The surfer accent is more in the beach cities and valley accent more in the hills or upper middle/middle class. SoCal has a lot of ethnic accents, especially Chicano/Hispanic. Black American English is heavy in certain neighborhoods. Plus all the transplant, so we probably get all the accents.
So. Cal is definitely predominantly the general accent. The fry voice is everywhere, even here in the South and is more of an affectation than an accent.
I'm from the valley, and I have heard only maybe a couple people in my life have that Hollywood surfer accent. Seems to it's practically a fake stereotype.
@@KyleReeseCel2029 Same, actually up to a few years ago I thought that accent was a myth, but I have surprisingly met a few people who genuinely have the accent. It's so rare though when I do hear one it seems like a prank
Regardless if you think you have an accent or not, that's an accent. Anyone that speaks differently than another has an accent, If you ask anyone with a distinct accent if they thought they had an accent, 9 of 10 will say no. I've done it.
I'm from North Carolina. We have 4 of the accents you mentioned! African American vernacular english, Appalachian, Southern, and Outer Banks. We're a very diverse state.
@@meatofpeach outer banks is that high tider accent. I’m southern from south east nc and we are actually more Appalachian sounding due to the amount of Scot Irish that settled here in my county back in the 1740. It’s all very unique. Love it.
You just think you don’t have a recognizable accent. Listen to the way Oregonians say Oregon and Portland and many other words. Easy to understand, yes but distinctive.
Yes, and not so much in the midwest. The midwest, for the most part, doesn't have a super heavy regional accent, but does have a number of distinct flavors. There's the grating, nasal a's of Chicaaago-land (especially as you travel south of the city) the swallowed vowels of WI, the Canadian-esque OUs of MN, etc. NorCal and PNW is definitely more the home of "General American," --at least, if you ignore NorCal's tendency to pronounce "eggs" and "legs" as "aygs" and "laygs." [Note: these are strictly personal observations over the years, having lived in SF, Chicago, Seattle, and Minneapolis.]
I was a radio operator in the Coast Guard. I was born and raised in southern Virginia. As it happened, my first duty station was located in the Eastern Shore region of Virginia. I was 100% certain I knew the hardest American accents on your list. Tangier Island's (Chesapeake Bay) fishing boat fleet was in our area of responsibility. We had a 24/7 on-call interpreter that we could patch into our radio communications when assisting these fishing boats. I worked several search-and-rescue cases with fishing boats from Tangiers, and the interpreters were invaluable.
#13 "Hoi Toid'rs" I heard also on Harker's Island, NC, below the Outer Banks. aka - Downeasters region. The accent - dialect was even stronger before a bridge was built to the isand. Isolation.
I thought of Smith Island, MD when I heard that accent! Didn't realized OBX was like that, also as I always think of upper middle class having vacation home there.
I grew up in northeastern Wisconsin not too far from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. I left when I was 9. Forty-five years later I was in the wilds of Syria and ran into some American diplomats. They asked me where I was from. I said Colorado where I currently live. The wife looked perplexed and said, "Are you sure you aren't from Wisconsin?" That was just one of the many times strangers have pegged my accent even though I haven't lived there for many decades!
I moved away from Milwaukee as a kid to North of Eau Claire, and I was ordering something in a diner in Nebraska one day, and the guy at the table next to me asked me if I was from Southern or northern Wisconsin, because I sounded like both.
Even though these accents differ alot, Americans can still easily understand almost all of them, aside from a few isolated areas. I'm a Connecticut natives and don't have an accent at all. It's basically the language of the standard television news presenter, very "correct" yet there only a couple of people in this video I had a hard time understanding
It's been said that people in the Pacific Northwest, specifically the Western Valleys of Oregon and Washington States, speak American English in its most phonetically pure form. As someone who grew up smack in the middle of that region (Portland area) I would have to agree. In fact, as a kid I remember when my best friend moved here from Northern California, and I immediately recognized that he spoke a handful of words (specifically vowel sounds, and more specifically some diphthongs) slightly differently, and we would playfully chide each other over the variance, but we both eventually concluded that the PNW way was technically more accurate to the rules of English Phonetics. This is why news anchors and reporters around the whole of the US, actors in Hollywood, etc... all emulate our (non) accent. Call it: Cascadian English. What's funny, when you cross the border into Southern BC, they sound exactly exactly the same with only one difference - the word "about" the pronounce "a-boat." The difference is immediate. Other than that, absolutely no difference. I have to say, I was a little disappointed we were left off your list, considering we're the de facto masters of American English! Though, we're often forgotten, especially Oregon. The farther East you go in the US, the more people you'll find who don't even know we exist over here, tucked away between the mountains and the Pacific Ocean, just quietly minding our own business and trying to keep a low profile. 😬
I've never heard someone from southern California say supper unless they were transplants from somewhere else in the country. Mid-West usually. We say dinner.
Midwestern rural only. They use Supper and Dinner separately in the northeast. But supper is used widely there. If you live in suburban or Urban Midwest we don't typically say supper.
I'm from Massachusetts and when I was a kid my parents, all parents, said supper but you almost never hear it now and if you do it's an older person using it. We say dinner now too.
I grew up in Ontario, but then lived in upstate New York, southeast Virginia, and now central Florida. Because I've had a scientific education and career I've been constantly surrounded by people from all around the world and have unintentionally honed my accent to be as neutral as possible, to the point where people often tell me that they cannot figure out where I'm from. But if I'm sufficiently excited, or drunk, my Canadian accent comes screaming out.
I have a similar history, born in Central Florida, living in Upstate New York, spent some time in Shenandoah Virginia, and been to Ontario countless times
You're thinking of Upper Midwest, which I would argue is a separate accent altogether from generic Midwestern, especially as it more closely resembles some of the Plains states (like the Dakotas) than the rest of the Midwest.
A lot of American's wouldn't be able to decode some of the accents truly. We are a HUGE COUNTRY..so...I understood most but as you got to the end it did indeed become a challenge. ALSO some of those TikTok folks my sense is they are EXAGGERATING SPEECH for effect/humor.
My dad's side are Finnish Yoopers and my mom's side are Scandinavian Minnesotans. I've never found either difficult to understand at all haha Perhaps it made people from Nordic countries easier for me to understand instead! I love my Lake Superior-surrounding family 💗
You need to hear a Hawaiian Pidgin accent, specifically from someone on one of the smaller islands of Hawaii. Their accent is so thick, sometimes even other people from Hawaii doesn’t understand them.
I dated a guy whose father was from Hawaii. I thought his accent was charming and asked what it was. My boyfriend looked at me like I was being critical and said, "Pidjn English."
@@sweetsubversion Absolutely, the first two people were mimicking. The first guy sounded stereotypically Canadian or something, lol. The third girl’s accent is genuine!
A small correction. the Cajun people were never French Canadian. They were Acadians from Acadia which is today's Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. At the time of the expulsion of 1755-63 the Nova Scotia colony was an independent colony, (New Brunswick was part of Nova Scotia until 1784). The Canada's (Upper and Lower) were separate colonies at that time and were not connected at all to Nova Scotia. So the Acadians from Acadia that ended up in Louisiana were never Canadians.
@@rooseveltnut I always think of the song by the Band "Acadian Driftwood ", which tells the story and migration to the southern US of the Acadian people. Great song.
I’m a Californian who moved to central Alabama for 2 years. My coworkers would have conversations with thick southern accents and spoke very fast. I couldn’t understand a word of it!
There is a neighborhood in New Orleans Louisiana called Algiers, where the natives talk exactly like New Yorkers. I actually knew one of those people when I lived in Texas. Her last name was Watts, and she pronounced it "Warts".
New Orleans far and away has the hardest dialects for other English speakers to understand. (and the city does have more than one dialect) I was watching a second-line parade from the porch of where I was staying, and a lady standing next to the porch asked me a question. I was just lost and asked her to repeat it a few times. Fortunately my husband finally got it, and came out with the paper towel she was asking if she could get. I was lost on what puhpuhtuh meant.
Did you ever eat at GULF PIZZA (which actually gets its name from being an old Gulf gas station building!) in the Algiers area? And where in Texas did you meet this "Watts" lady? I'm especially curious because I actually had an elementary school teacher in Texas (right outside Houston) who was originally from Kenner (Louisiana) and was a perfect example of the famous "Yat accent" found in and around New Orleans!
That’s where does Sicilian immigrants settled when they got off the boat in New Orleans? That’s why it has a very similar accent to New York and other areas that a lot of Italians immigrated to. That’s where half my family grew up.
@@lancerelle9280 Do you suppose the "Algiers Italians" would have trouble communicating with a New Yorker (such as a "Brooklyn Italian" for example) despite the similar accents? And would they have trouble communicating with a person with the "plantation" Southern accent, found especially in Georgia and South Carolina?
A lot of Americans who don’t live in cities tend to have “country” accents. Like go three hours inland from cities like Los Angeles or San Diego and there’s a lot of folks with country accents
Lol that's because they ain't from here I'm in sandeigo now but grew up in Washington DC. Everybody I meet with a slang to their accent is from a different state
Most Southern Californians don’t sound like that. It’s kind of like a fashion accessory of an accent down there for some of their subcultures. As for the general American accent, I sorta associate it with the Pacific Northwest. Where virtually all accents stick out like a sore thumb! If I recall correctly, the University of Washington did a study of the PNW accent… to determine if we have one… and the results were “kinda? If you really look for one…” Love this analysis from the other side of the pond, mate!
@@zacharyduval1 that totally threw me too! “Supper” is soooo much an easy of the Mississippi word me! Never heard it from my home in Western Washington to New Mexico… it’s always dinner here in the west. I love the English language though lament it’s the only language I speak. So out of curiosity, years ago, I tried using vocabulary uncommon to the Pacific Northwest to see how people would react. I had a pretty good idea haha… supper was one of those words. I got so many “dude… really?” looks as well of a few “dude… really?” spoken inquiries to assess if I “really” went there. So that word was dropped from the lineup pretty quick! However, I really love the word “mate” in place of “friend,” and use it to this day. Those who know me have a fun nickname for me! “Pretentious!” …come to think of it, that’s kinda just an adjective… maybe they’re just being funny… But seriously, I’ve had more than a couple of friends and coworkers express they sometimes need to look up vocabulary in my text messages… so. Thank goodness it’s easy to highlight the words and search on most phones…
True. But we definitely like out vocal fry down here. I don't have that 'surfer' talk or even the valley accent, but I still get some vocal fry going. And some people down here do say supper! I was born and raised just 60 miles east of LA, and there are people around who say supper.
Most Southern California residents grew up elsewhere in the US, so mostly average out to General American dialects. The stereotypical SoCal accent is almost entirely associated with 80s valley girls and surfer dudes, and even for them is an ironic affectation they can turn on or off.
At the risk of being that guy, the General American Accent is more specific than just "Midwest". It's specifically the Ohio Valley accent. The Upper Midwest has far more nasal qualities to it.
To be fair he did mention the Minnesota and UP Michigan accents which would both be upper-Midwest, but I do agree that it’d be good to have some of the more specific information regarding the “general American accent” since, like most supposedly “neutral” accents, it’s not quite as general as it’s name might suggest
Nah. Maybe around Columbus. Dayton suburbs. We got a bit of a twang in Cincinnati. I only hear it when it's compared to someone else. Or when I lived in Colorado. Go to the extreme eastern end of the Metro area (Adams and Brown counties) and you get the most hideous, flat, nasal, twangy accent I've ever heard.
Actually, General American is a class-based accent. It's the accent of the educated upper middle class pretty much everywhere outside the South (though members of this class in the South may have this accent and generally have an accent somewhere on a continuum between this accent and their regional accent). The General American accent is based on pronunciations recorded in American dictionaries in the late century, and it reflected the pronunciation of an area stretching from western New England (specifically Springfield, Mass) to northern Ohio where most American dictionaries were compiled. These pronunciations were a model for radio announcers when radio took off in the 1920s. Since that time, regional accents in western New England and, even more so, western New York and northern Ohio, have diverged sharply from General American. The accents in the Ohio valley remain closer to General American than the accents of northern Ohio where it originated, but the accents of people from lower middle or working-class backgrounds in the Ohio valley have regional features that are distinct from General American.
@@lydia3460 almost, but not entirely. The primary affected accent in the 1920s, through to the 1950s, was the Mid Atlantic, an entirely synthetic accent taught to movie stars and radio personalities in the first half of the century, characterized by non-rhotic Rs, a more nasal delivery, and a rounding of front vowels. One leading theory about its demise is the post WW2 rejection of elitism specifically. So while that does appeal to the upper middle class element of your argument, you ignore the importance of the media training of the second half of the century. And in particular the importance of Walter Cronkite. And while he's a topic entirely to himself, his importance to the shaping of how reporters talk, and in turn how that affected the rest of the country would be difficult to understate. Admittedly, he was from Missouri, but he also worked at eliminating Missouri specific markers from his speech. If you listen to reports from him from WW2, versus those from later in his career, there's a notable difference. But again, that may be getting into the weeds a little bit. However, my broader point remains. The reason media personalities were trained to speak that way was because it had the fewest linguistics markers, and so could be unappealing to the fewest people. It just so happens that the Ohio Valley accent has the fewest natural markers. There certainly are those that say that those two facts are coincidental, as so they may be, but it's also reasonable to think that, in an effort to turn away the fewest listeners/watchers in total, vocal coaches would seek out the most "neutral" accent, and in so doing find the OVA. So, yes, there is in a way a class element to it. But I'm afraid it's reductive to insist that it's entirely about class.
I'm glad you do! You're carrying on your region's history AND breaking down some classist bs about which accents are "professional" enough to be used in the workplace. High five from a random internet stranger!
I'm biased but Appalachian is easy to understand without colloquisims. I have what I'd consider a Mid-Atlanic accent but it is very easy for me to slip into Appalachian. If you've some super specific term for something up in your holler i might not know the word, but I'll understand everything else. It doesn't help two out of three guys he used as examples were missing a good part of their teeth. As long as we're all using the same terms we're good.
Being a French and an English speaker I would love to spend some weeks trying to understand and speak Cajun. I have been to the US many times but never to that region ! Not only do you have to deal with the switches you also have to decipher the accent !
Texan here, the “Piney Woods” or East Texas accent is much different from the West Texas accent. I’m from Houston and I speak in a much toned down east Texas accent.
Funny. I've lived in North Texas, a time in West Texas, a long time in Houston and now East Texas. I vacationed in Paris and people would intentionally stop talking to hear my accent. When I finished, they asked, "where in England are you from?"
Yep, I lived in the Piney Woods of Texas (tiny town called Grapeland) for my high school years and it's a very different accent than the rest of Texas. Bit of a country twang. Sorta reminds me of some of the rural accents in SC, but a touch less Southern.
One of the most popular/mocked accents currently in the USA is from the "Delaware Valley" area. Delco (south east PA) + North Delaware + Philadelphia + West NJ.
It's also one of the most studied, thanks to linguist William Labov at Penn, who loves it. He called it one of the richest and most complex accents in the world.
From West Philly and my dad's 2nd wife was from Germantown.. man you definitely could hear the difference. She would say "I coaled you" instead of I called you.. It cracked me up..
I was in Glasgow and the cabbie made like he couldn't understand my "I watched a lot of TV" American accent. So, I leaned forward and said, "I know everyone in Europe watches 'Star Trek' and "Seinfeld', so don't even TRY to pretend you don't understand me." He very sheepishly took my friend and myself to the destination I requested.
As a German native speaker, Scotland was almost one of the worst regions for understanding (together with some regions of Australia). I've been working for US companies for a decade now and no issues there anymore but Scotland? Oh my ;). (Besides, I never really watched Star Trek, only a bit of Seinfeld but never in English ;))
@@KiKi-tf8rv lol oh actually this is not too dissimilar from here in Austria where I struggled quite a bit with the dialects of my wife's family for a few years. We now moved into this region and my kids... after two years my daughter I think finally starts to understand everything the teacher says
@@met0xff00 It really is difficult getting used to some dialects when it feels like it’s almost an entirely different language! I once lived in an area of the USA where I understood the Spanish speaking people better than the English speakers. I don’t speak Spanish.😂
I'm a 3rd gen American living in the central valley of California, grandparents came from Mexico. I really don't speak a whole lot of Spanish, and I've always been told I "sound white". But funnily enough when I went to New Zealand, I was told a few times I have a "Mexican accent". Couldn't believe it lol, first time anyone had ever told me that.
I moved there in my 30s, lived there for nine years, and now live in New York and New Yorkers have told me on multiple occasions that I have the weirdest Puerto Rican accent. What??? I’m from Utah. I guess I was influenced by the Central Valley’s strong Mexican population more than I thought. That being said, I think I sound very white too.
I don't know if you are familiar with the 50th state but when I first moved to Hawai'i I found the local accent with its "pidgin" slang certainly the hardest American English accent to understand
I'm a Northern California native with a General American accent. For the past decade, I've lived in Southern California, and my accent fits right in. I can only tell which half of the state people are from by their freeway terminology.
I like the term "General American accent", just because it is so hard to give it a single location. I think of it as the Midwestern city accent, but if you go to a place like Pinkneyville, IL (half-way between Carbondale and St. Louis), you'll find the true regional accent for that region, and it's pretty far from a general American accent. (If you're curious, it's very similar to a western Tennessee accent) __Every__ U.S. city has people with the General American accent, because travel between U.S. cities is easy and no one feels pressured to drop it after moving. Places like Columbus, Indianapolis, and Peoria have the highest percentage, but coastal cities with lots of transplants from the midwest (Seattle, LA, and even Boston) are not far behind. Even people raised for generations in those coastal cities have settled on this accent because their neighbors speak it and it's what's heard on TV. The "So. Cal" accent is an actual regional accent. In college (midwest), I knew a few people with it, but within a year of moving to the midwest, they had lost it. Like many regional accents, it is dying also. It became a cultural phenomenon in the 90s, and that was probably its peak. A few decades from now, it will probably be completely gone (if it isn't already). When a regional accent goes away, the General American accent usually fills its place.
I'm a northern Californian and was in college in the 1970s and was amazed at the cultural differences. Men from northern California would not be wearing shorts and sandals much at any time of the year, but those SoCal guys wore both at all times of the year. I think there's still a bit of difference on that.
@@smallmeadow1 It is much warmer, you can't even swim in the ocean. As a Michigander growing up with the cold Great Lakes we swam in San Diego in the ocean year-round. The water temp was 65-68...warm enough for us but I must say the locals did think we were a bit crazy to be swimming in that temp. But those I know who live near san Fransisco say it is always too cold for ocean swimming. San Diego just had this large beach town vibe I loved.
Not much with the accent, but more about the slang. For instance, how do you refer to the lot sitting diagonally across the street? If you say kitty corner, that's Socal. If you say catty corner, you're in the Bay Area. More regional terms: janky, the city, and hella--all NorCal words you'd never hear in SoCal. And in SoCal: dude, sigalert with its companion term traffic break, and "the" before any freeway number.
There are several towns in North Carolina's outer banks, particularly on Hatteras and Ocracoke island that were essentially isolated until around the 70s. "Hoi toid on the sound side" typifies it. You can still hear it with some of the older locals but it is getting harder to find. I am so glad you included it before it dies out.
My friend spoke Creole. When he was drinking, there was no hope for even catching a drift of what he was saying. I only heard hmana he hmanah hahaha.... Wonderful man.
I’m originally from an area considered to be Appalachia, and that’s very similar to an example that I share with people who ask about the accent. “Jeet yet?” “No, jew?” (Did you eat yet? No, did you?) Another: once, while on vacation, we stopped at a roadside farm stand. My mom asked the proprietor “Zher corn all?” She was asked to repeat it several times, before I stepped in and explained that she meant “Is your sweet corn all gone? (Sold out)
A personal trainer approached me in the gym the other day and offered to show me some exercises, during which he asked, "Waddaya goes?" He was a young black man and at first I couldn't tell that he was asking "What are your goals?" because he couldn't pronounce the "L" in "goals." He also pronounced "shoulders" as "showdahs."
Fun fact about Ocracoke (yes you pronounced it correctly) is that it has a British war cemetary. During WW2 the bodies of the crew of a British ship sunk by the Germans washed ashore. Due to their isolation they just identified the bodies as best they could and buried them in Ocracoke, where they remain today. Officially it's British soil, but in practice it's maintained by the locals of Ocracoke and the US Coast Guard.
That's a touching story. And in Normandy, France there is a local group of French people who lay flowers at the graves of fallen American soldiers whose families can't afford to do the same. A similar thing happens at a Canadian cemetery near Juno Beach in Normandy, and as an interesting twist to the story, some of the locals put maple leaves on the graves in the Canadian cemetery.
I'm texan born and raised. I didn't always appreciate accents till I moved away. Since then, I've made it a point to record family members talking. It's priceless to show people from the northern states what a west and north texas accent sounds like. I have some real king of the hill folks in the fam.
Texan too, I got legit laughed at by a couple little twats working a Wendy's drive through in South Dakota. Sorry I don't speak my vowels in fucking cursive
I was an Army Brat. My dad was in the US Army for 21 years and we lived in many places. Therefore, people sometimes have a tough time telling where I'm from by my mixed accent. 😂
I am in Central Nebraska, and I can understand everything up until we got to the end of the video. And then, it might as well been from a whole different planet.
Haha, okay, you can perfectly understand thick Ocracoke Brogue? The vast majority of Americans will have trouble understanding at least a few of the clips played here. Why are you lying dude, lol.
Wonderful video !! Thanks for uploading this. I am an Asian Indian, and live in a Non-English speaking country in Europe. Though, I have been to the US and have lived there for an year. I not only loved being there meeting new people...but also found out that it is the American version of the English that I do like (read: love) the most...above all other accents from any other English speaking countries in the entire world. Hope to visit the US again someday. 😄😍 ...Great country, great people, great accent ! PEACE!
As someone from the edge of the Appalachian Mountains in upper Alabama, my great grandfather DEFINITELY had the thickest accent in my fam. When he was still alive, I remember constantly lookin' at my mom and going "what he just say??" I was still real young at the time 🤣 Managed to still get some accent from my Pops and Nana tho!!
I was the same when my mum and I visited the village in Germany where she was born. I didn't understand a word what people were saying. After a couple of days there wasn't any problem. I just love all accents in German up to even Dutch which is considered to be a different language but as a German you'll pickit up in a couple of weeks. I also love all the British Isle accents.
hello! I'm in the dekalb, cherokee county alabama area. the accents i hear in my area can be very different from those in the city of gadsden or anniston.
It’s “apple-atcha” and it’s the best! Love that accent! I grew up in Ky and can confirm that western, central, and eastern parts of the state all have distinct accents.
I grew up with that "non accented general American accent", my parents spoke it naturally, it's what I hear in everyday life from nearly everyone from every economic or educational strata, it's just normal and natural to speak clearly. It was reinforced in schools and if someone was lazy or incorrect in their ennunciation they were corrected and taught how to do it properly. There was a fair amount of focus put on grammar, pronunciation and spelling and we were even then informed that our natural way of speaking was considered "standard American English" and that's why so many actors in newscasters sounded very natural to us, we must have sounded almost foreign to someone from the northeast or the deep south. And many friends and relatives did go on to find jobs in radio work, movies, and other media. It is kind of funny, when I speak to people from other parts of the country or the world they often will say I sound like I have "a radio voice" or think that I'm putting a lot of effort into speaking clearly when it really is just the way I grew up. It's second nature and requires no thought or extra effort. I guess in that way I am lucky that I have one of the most easily understood accents, because being understood is such a crucial part of communication.
Same, I grew up that way too. When I moved to Kentucky, I'd constantly get, "You ain't from around here, are ya?" My family now claims that I sound southern when I visit them. I do hear some Kentucky creeping into my voice at times, so I guess they're right.
When I went to Penn State, most of my social circle was either from Pittsburgh or Philly. We developed a mashup language of each city's dialect. We could be having a conversation in public and people would wonder what we were saying!
It’s called Pittsburghese. We have a published dictionary too with the same name! I’m from a town south of the Burgh. Home of champions. Those from the Mon Valley would know what town I’m talking about. 😁
I grew up in California and at 30 moved to Georgia. I am now 70, so I’ve been in the South a long time. I travel extensively so I frequently hear many different American accents. I like them all. There are lots of different Southern accents. You lumped them all together. Boston, Bean Town, was the last one.
i'm from Kentucky and understood every word of the people from the region, haha. one feller was talking about working in a coal mine and i think he said a pipe or something got backed up and exploded. the girl was talking about hanging out with people she thought was friends, but they were laughing and makin fun of her, on account of her strong accent. then my favorite, that's old Jim Tom! durned if he aint the most Kentuckiest man alive, haha. gosh i love this region of Appalachia so much! he was talking about the old buggy they used to ride into town, it'd take em a long time to get to town, and he'd be workin the brakes. we start to go up a hill, and i kindly push the brake on him. he told that old mule, he said, "Git up there!" me turnin the wheel, he looks back and says "Jim Tom! Turn the brakes loose!" he'd take three ears of corn to feed it at lunch. he'd start back home bout 4 o clock." lmao, i love it though. somethin about that twang, people in Tennessee and West Virginia have it too. like music to my ears! literally all the rest of the people i could understand, it was just the regional references and words like dight, lol never heard that one before. just about all the rest, i could understand if i listened hard. then the Tennnessee feller, he said "naw, we didn't have no electricity, didn't have no runnin water neither. we run it out of the, we got it out of the spring. but they eventually got electricity up through here." and i always said it as Apple-at-ya. but yes, to the rest of the country and internationally, we are unintelligible, lol and yes, we've done been isolated for literally forever. since day one. and its made us real particular
That girl who was talking about hanging out with so-called friends made me so sad. It's one thing to be enchanted by someone's accent and want to hear it, but that story sounded like mean people.
Clear to me, as well. I grew up in NJ but I spent every summer with grandparents from WV. I live here now. There were a few points early on when I has to translate for my wife but she's gotten past that, now.
Found that perfectly understandable. I'm from rural Scotland. Then again, I work with people from half of Europe, and a couple from the most remote place you could imagine in Ireland where they speak so fast you can hardly tell one word from another.
@@ALWhite-ub1ye yep, we all sound real similar in central Appalachia ... Kentucky, Tennessee and West Virginia, three of my favorite states. beautiful country!
Texas has states inside the state that people not from Texas don’t know about, we got east Texas, west Texas, Central Texas, North Texas, south Texas, the panhandle, and the coast. Each one is very different
In San Antonio area, if you want to see a fight start, ask people if they are in the south or the southwest. I think San Antonio/Austin is considered right on the geographic & climate border between S/SW.
Greetings from Georgia! As an American, I found this video very enjoyable. You are very well studied in our accents/dialects. I use the General American Accent at work or any place with a more professional/upscale atmosphere. My natural or default accent is very southern, loose, and full of words that cannot be found in any dictionary lol. I would love to see a video on English accents in the UK or Ireland. Great video!
Absolutely, 100%. I don't think it's always been this way. In older movies, the 's' is usually dropped. Even in downstate Illinois, I knew a couple of people that would always drop the 's', but frankly, they're just wrong. Actually, in each of those cases, it was someone that moved there from somewhere else. Once you get anywhere near St. Louis, you'll find that the 's' is pronounced 100% of the time today.
@@GingerBreadBeing Americans don't drop the S, but the man in the accent video does. I wanted to make a note so more British/Europeans don't make the same mistake.
As someone from Minnesota, that first general midwestern accent is something you will hear in all midwestern cities. As you said, the rural parts or Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan ect have their own sounds. Also there were a lot of generalizations with the South made in the video lol, but I'm sure to foreigners it sounds very similar. You can tell the difference between Texas and states like Alabama, Mississippi and Georgia. And for Americans, Louisiana is deffo the worst. It truly is a different dialect
Lived in the Minneapolis area most my life but I live in Florida now. Only thing people really notice is the way I say words that end in ag. They fucking love it when I say the word bag
@@kaiseriv8483 I have the same thing. As an software engineer, I talk about bit flags and my coworkers smile. But the MN accents he used at 13:20, etc. are over the top. There's a few people that talk kind of that way, but not strong. Many of them are first-generation Americans (kids of Norwegian immigrants), and dying off now. Then the movie Fargo came out and popularized that whole accent. Those clips are about as real as the "Californians" on SNL, IMO.
@@kaiseriv8483 honestly, i went to denver as a minnesotan and they asked if we wanted a b-ah-g, and we were like no, we dont need a b-ay-g, and they like lost it
@@robneff7084 agreed, like you only ever use the accents at 13:20 when your trying to or just having fun, you never actually hear them normally anymore. I gotta learn how to do that accent better
Grew up in Eastern North Carolina, so I actually have a pretty good ear for the Outer Bank's accent even though it's notoriously difficult for people moving in.
Yinz guys got me dahn pat! Yea from Pittsburgh! Traveled for service industry and everyone knew I was from da burg! Worked in Australia, hard to understand them but the kiwis were impossible! Good video!
Same I remember Myrtle Beach when I was 18 running into girls from the south and they talked about our accents.. whole time sounding like I'm in a country song with their twang they got.. they said my accent was the worst too I never had a clue til then lol
It’s true, we say “Tah” instead of “To” and I hear the use of “Dhat” more often than “That” even the word “than” is pronounced like “Dhan” sometimes, also the Should’ah, Would’ah and Could’ah is very common too.
Yes, this is true. If I said, "I'm going to the store," it would sound like "I'm goin' ta the store." In cities like Chicago and Detroit the TH is often softened to a "d" so you get "We watched da' Bears!" (Chicago football team). Suburbanities tend NOT to do this though. It's very much a neighborhood by neighborhood thing. The biggest tell of a Michigan accent though is that the letter "T" isn't pronounced in the middle of words. It's either gone entirely and replaced with a glottal stop or it becomes a "d". So city is cidy, kitty is kiddie, butter is bu'er (buh-er there's an actual glotal stop). Then there's words like kitty-corner (a place on the diagonal corner from another place), anyways (not anyway), and local words. So Michigan has three Distinct accents - urban, like Detroit; the Upper Peninsula (Yooper accent hazzah!), and the rest of the state.
I was born and raised in Texas and I can tell the difference in accents from West Texas, The panhandle, Dallas area, Coastal area, and wooded area. Central Texas is a little harder for me to distinguish.
As a Texan from the Piney Woods, I can not only tell you where a Texan is from, I can also tell you that folks who try to imitate any Texas regional accent fail every time. Probably easier just to find a real Texan who can hit a mark and memorize the lines.
Have you ever come across a person from New Orleans (or its suburbs) with the famous "Yat accent" which is unusual for its "New York" sound, living in your part of Texas? My first-grade teacher in Texas (right outside Houston) was a "Yat transplant" originally from Kenner, and this was long before the Katrina disaster happened!
The Appalachia accent is the hardest for me to decipher. Once drove through West Virginia and when we had to stop to get gas it got to the point I had to have the guy write down what he was saying because I couldn't understand a thing he said even when he slowed down.
I know I'm late to the party, but I wanted to say "Hello, from Redding, California." It was fun to see our accents being the easiest to understand. My Dad's grew up in California but his family had moved from Arkansas before he was born. I loved hearing the drawl at family reunions. LOL
I'm from Texas, and I do understand most of those. The Cajun one was the only one in the videos that left me completely flummoxed (though to be fair, I knew where it was as soon as they started talking). All the others I can get used to after about 15 minutes, even the deep Appalachia, even if I have to concentrate hard on that one. In real life though, the only time I've ever found an American accent that I couldn't pick up was in Boston. I went on a leaf-peeping trip a few years ago and my Uber driver who took me back to the airport... bless his heart, he was trying so hard to carry on a conversation with me and I couldn't understand basic niceties like 'how's the weather down there?' and he said something about a highway that had the number 3 in it and the only thing I picked up was 'tree' so I thought he was talking about the fall color. I think he was glad to get me out of his car. Now, that was one guy. I interacted with other Bostonians for a week and never had any problems. I've told that story before, though, and had other people say 'OMG I thought I was the only one that ever happened to!'
I live in the NE now, and the truth is that the Boston accent is much easier to understand than the country accent (ie. Rhode Island & Maine). But the country accent is endangered. I met and older woman in Maine once that I just could not understand. She had lived in a very isolated part of Maine her entire life. Occasionally you'll get someone like that who moves into the city, and that is most likely the case with the Uber driver you met. That isn't to say that the city accents are always easy. I've encountered a few born-and-raised Bostonians (older people again) with difficult accents, but they don't begin to approach the country accents I've heard.
I grew up in So. Cal. and have to say that I really don't think the guy carrying the baby at the beginning of the video is from CA. Not only did he not sound local to me but he used the term "supper." My sense is he's a Midwest or East Coast transplant who's faking the local accent--badly. The chica after him didn't sound natural to me, either. Waaaay too exaggerated, especially on the word "nermally." The third example sounded spot-on, though.
Can you understand these accents? 👉 ruclips.net/video/Bl8ksfLfW6Q/видео.htmlsi=ZTjbdIbMvPE5OwgG
A lot of those Gen Am examples were just softer versions of regional accents, but I could tell them all apart (as an American). One even seemed like a fake American accent (there was a vowell in there I've never heard from an American). Jen Anniston is the only one I think can pass as actually Gen Am from those . To my American ear those were NOT all general... they were regional, just not heavy. When you live in it you can still hear an accent in people who 'have a little bit of an accent".... honestly, living here, most of the regional accent examples are definitely representative of people with strong or heavy regional accents, but most Americans with regional accents have much more subtle ones (that apparently, people from overseas cannot differentiate from Gen Am.... oh, but Americans can tell, we can tell).
the accents were way easier to understand than this messy video. are you listing accents? states? cities? this video is so hard to follow and hard to tell when you're switching from one accent to the next one. the editing needs some serious improvements.
Idaho , Utah , Arizona western accent is very distinct but varying in depth.
NYC and upstate NY(anything past Albany) have completely different accents.
MISSED:
Kentucky
Alabama (Birmingham)
Alaska
Hawaii
Virgin Islands (Crucian/Thomian)
Res (Indian Reservations)
Canadian (west, mountain, plains, Ontario, Newfie, Arcadian, quebec)
Puerto Rico
Samoan.
dude just rounded up like 6-7 States and said, "it's called a Southern Accent" ... bless his heart.
Right? Because each state in the South has a distinct sound....hello, Tennessee, anyone? No one would mistake Georgia for Louisiana, and that Mississippi drawl is unique, honey!
@@coloraturaEliseNorth Carolina here. Each county has divisions of dialects. I can tell what part of the county you are from in my county that is. ❤
Y’all sound the same to people not from your states.
The stupidest acssent is the woke acssent . They make statements in the form of questions ... Don't get me started on the word " axe" . My little yellow guitar is more like an axe then a question .
he rounded up MAGS (Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina)
As an American the most difficult accent I’ve ever heard came from rural Louisiana.
The accents you labeled as Minnesota and Upper Peninsula Michigan are heard all over the upper Midwest including Wisconsin. In fact one of the clips you used for Minnesota actually was a clip of someone from Wisconsin.
Yeah, I was thinking the same thing haha. And I personally would have put the Louisiana accent as the most difficult. 😂😂
I knew that had to be Wisconsin. Thanks for the clarification.
Live in MN traveled to upper peninsula of Michigan
Much common but there's subtle differences between MN Wisconsin and upper Michigan
feeling validated. I would have sworn one of those was Wisconsin.
They're also similar to the accents spoken across the border in southern Canada.
I'm from Northern California & my husband is Cajun. After 17 years together, I can understand him, but when he gets around his family, I'll look at him and say "WHAT???"
My son in law is from central England called the Cotswalds. When he speaks rapidly, I can comprehend about 50% of his English.
I got sort of lost in Lafayette, and stopped to ask a guy for directions. I could not understand a single word he said, so I just went in the direction he pointed.
I speak Californian English, but the hardest to understand is Irish or Scottish from smaller towns and deep down south in US... Ozzy bogans are a close 3rd
Wait that’s crazy I’m Creole and from NorCal! My grandpa was from Louisiana, and his son/my father from Detroit. Definitely had issues understanding both of them as well 😭💗
@@CaptainQueueI met your son at hochunk gaming and he was scalping lakers tickets
I’m so American that I understand 90% of these accents. He’s missing the geechy language in South Carolina tho. But he did good
Was just about to say, the gullah/geechie dialect can be difficult at times. Worked at the volvo manufacturing plant and sometimes I'd get completely confused when we all sat at the table for lunch lol.
I wen down de skreet for some skrimps
Gullah geechee is difficult. It's also easy to pick up on its influence in the Charleston area.
Before watching, I’m going to guess Louisiana Cajun accent as the most difficult to understand
Yeah this was kinda a destined pick because Cajun/Creole/Bayou isn't even English. It's the only accent on the list where half the actual words aren't English. No wonder it is hard to understand, because it is pulling from a bunch of non-english vocabulary.
The way I explain American accents is that the majority of Americans (especially now because of the internet) are beginning to be standard American English. This is, like the video says, is the accent we hear constantly on TV. It shares vocabulary, cadence, and emphasis. Then you have regional accents which all still pull from commonly understood vocabulary, but some sounds are altered, cadence can vary, and emphasis differs. This is for places like west coast (SoCal) and East Coast too (NYC). It's essentially the same vocab just sounding differently.
Then you got the southern accent. Which still shares the majority of its vocab with the rest of the country but southerns speak in colloquial phrases (idioms) to convey meaning. The words on their own dont carry intelligble meaning, but put them together and you've got a profound phrase that only southerners get.
And then you got Cajun, which doesn't share its vocab with the rest of the country, and therefore the hardest to understand, because honestly it isn't English. It's an amalgamation of multiple languages where no particularly one dominates the vocabulary. So Cajun is like 30% English. 30% French, 20% Canadian emphasis, and 20% local colloquial phrases.
That's why Southern/Appalachian and Cajun are the hardest to understand. Southererns share the same vocab, but we speak in idioms. Cajuns speak a different language altogether. And the rest of the country essentially retains the same vocab but their vowels and cadences and emphasis' are different.
As a southerner, I feel it is honestly the best all-around accent. I can understand SoCal, Brooklyn, Boston, Minnesota, Midwest, Texas, southern states, and even Appalachia. I understood every word from the Appalachia segment. I understood every single accent in the video except for the Cajun and NC outer banks.
I stand out if I'm in a crowd of northerners or west coasters, but I understand them all quite easily. Now if I take them to rural South or Appalachia, they'd be so lost, but I'd be right at home with my southern speakers.
i guessed the same, i figured Appalachian or Louisiana
@@gtb81.Appalachian is a good vote too
By far yes!
Remeber that potato chip adv read by the Cajun? "... hot guar-awn-teed..."
I’m from the Southern US. My son married a girl from Boston. Her mother was riding in the car with me when I asked Siri a question. Siri couldn’t understand me, so she tried. Siri couldn’t understand her either, so we pulled over and googled. 😂😂😂
Siri was like "Try that again in English"
🤣🤣🤣 Hilarious!
I have a very conscious news-caster voice that I use hilariously and effectively when voice assistant AI can't handle my yinzeriffic natural voice.
SISTERS🎉
That southern accent section, I was like “some of these people are applalachian and some are downright country”
Drove an 18 wheeler OTR, visiting each of the lower 48. Only person couldn't comprehend was a Cajun store clerk near the Mississippi Delta.
My Waterloo was a cook in the Camelia Grill, New Orleans. He was not Cajun, tho.
Cajun accent 😂😂😂😂is the worst
Went to pickup a load about a half hour north of New Orleans back in '01. Two super nice 23ish young men working there. First one explains the way I needed to go and under what rack I was to load at. After he finished his directions, I asked the second one to please repeat what the first one said. Unfortunately he said the exact same thing in the exact gibberish. I put my forehead on the counter at that point.
Grew up in NY hearing accents from all over the world but a MS delta taxi driver could have been speaking another language completely for all I could tell. To this day nothing has come close.
I’m only first accent in on video but my first thought as hardest was it had to be Cajun lol. Think the waterboy guy. Thats legit how they sound deep on the bayou. lol it’s wild.
This is so cool after hearing British actors answering 'whats the hardest US accent?' with 'theres more than one?'.
Texan here: I was in Germany this month, and heard an American accent from across the restaurant, and I knew they were from Texas and was pretty confident they were from Dallas. I introduced myself, and they confirmed they were from Dallas - absolutely can tell by accent where folks are from inside the state of Texas 😄
Heard a worker in Home Depot the other day in Colorado. He had to be from the Midland area. I asked and sure 'nuff, Midland.
I'm from east texas and made a friend from west texas and I struggle to understand his accent.
I'm sure the butt plugs made it easier to find each other 😂
as a texan from dallas it’s really easy to tell where people in texas are from
That's too funny! I only lived in Texas for 5 years and was able to pick up on where in Texas someone was from! lol I lived in Granbury, Fort Worth, and Dallas.
Years ago an old fellow in the U.K. thought I was Canadian. When I told him I lived in N.Y., he said I must live right on the border of Canada. He nailed it, Buffalo!
Upstate New York and Northern PA have some strange accents people don’t discuss much. Rochester, Syracuse, it’s a strange mix of Northern/almost Midwestern and….New England? NYC? I don’t even know. Same for people in rural northern PA, one thing they say a lot is “out” pronounced like “oat”, sort of Canadian but different. The Northeast has quite a few unsung heroes of the accent world lol
@@virgilflowers9846 Totally. I'm from New England and I don't hear that in Buffalo/Rochester English. I hear more nasal, Toronto-ish sounds.
@@paestum70 fair assessment. My family are all new Englanders, I actually partially grew up there too. To clarify my original comment, I think you’re accurate about upstate NY, I think what I was thinking of more with the New England (and honestly probably more accurately New York) is the Scranton PA accent. There’s a good example here on YT, it’s a clip from some kind of town meeting or something lol. Some chunks of Northern PA were originally populated by people from New England, so there could be something to it
@@virgilflowers9846 Cool. Haven't heard it...will look it up. "Yah, ya learn somthin' new every day" -spoken in hardcore Bostonian
i grew up in northern California and have lived in Seattle for 45 years. on multiple trips to the UK, several Brits have told me i sound Canadian.
bro slept on the baltimore accent
That's right hon
He shoulda gone downyoshun -- but wudder and earl don' mix, hon.
Maybe because no one cares?
@@rucker69 hold on dawg is this 2016, must be reminiscing, with the pfp and everything
Arr arr arr arr arr err arr!
I’m from Louisiana. We ain’t got nothin’ on those Gullah Geeche folks when they start talkin’! That accent is by FAR the most difficult to comprehend! I enjoyed your video. Thanks for sharing!
The accent from the old Western film is more of a combination of transatlantic Hollywood accent and a Texan accent.
And Katherine Hepburn and Reginald Garner were taught to speak "Mid-Atlantic"
that's a new thing calling it mid atlantic or transatlantic. Someone made that up in recent years.
What is a transatlantic Hollywood accent? Transatlantic referred to east coast to europe. Old Western films was whatever the actor was, and their own accent.
THere wasn't any focus on accent.
@@morriganinoregon Reginald Gardiner? The English actor?
Anyway, that label mid atlantic is new in the last couple decades.
From movie viewers not grasping the accents.
Katherine Hepburn, Bette Davis,etc were not taught Mid Atlantic, there was no such thing in those days. There was no such thing when I went to acting conservatory in the 70's.
It mainly was their own New England accents. Hepburn from upper class Connecticut family. Davis from Massachuetts.
But added to that, there was what was called 'Standard Stage' English.
Standard English is same as General English, just contemporary.
Standard Stage was American actors doing the classics, like Shakespeare,
without doing an English accent. So it was more proper..a bit.
But it also was that in those days the majority of hollywood actors came from stage in New York,where they performed everything from the classics, contemporary dramas/comedies, Shakespeare,etc.
So you got a majority who has that type of sound to their speaking,
both from being from the East Coast, and from standard stage English.
But it wasn't all. Spencer Tracy was originally from Wisconsin, and he just kept whatever accent he had from there. I forget where Clark Gable was from, but it was general. He didn't have a stage background first to get standard stage english.
My uncle from New Mexico spoke like John Wayne. I never knew where the John Wayne accent comes from.
There was actually one guy who taught all the actors how to speak like a Texan. Bob Hinkle. He thought he couldn't be in movies cause of how he sounded but they wanted him as a dialect coach 😂
He tought all the Hollywood stars in the 50s
I’m from Chicago. The Midwest definitely has variation. I can hear if someone is from Wisconsin or Minnesota or Iowa.
I'm from Ohio and you can I can attest that the Midwest accent from my state and Indiana, our neighbor to the West, is pretty different. But the difference between Buckeyes and our Southern neighbors in Kentucky is even greater. Even in Ohio you'll hear differences depending on what part of the state the speaker is from.
@@RodericSpode I'm from Indiana (Indy) and I agree with you. I have friends who grew up in Ohio (Cleveland) and they really do pronounce some vowels consistently differently.
Yeah, these accents are far too broad. "Southern" is laughable, especially when you include Louisiana.
@@encycl07pedia- Yeah Kentucky, Tennessee, South Carolina, Arkansas, Alabama, Mississippi, North/South Florida- each distinct dialects. Locals can tell where in the south others are from.
Yes. I agree.
My favorite accent story was told by my geography professor. She's a black woman from suburban Texas. Maybe a slight accent, otherwise very standard. She married an Irish-American as pale and red-haired as can be, from downtown Milwaukee. So when people talk to them on the phone and meet in person later, they're very confused. They completely assume that the husband was black and she was white. She had a great sense of humor about it.
Someone in a music class I took in college easily could've passed for Gabriel Iglesias from a distance, but hearing him talk you'd hear mostly Yooper. Half Mexican, half Brazilian, but no accent from either.
My father-in-law was raised in So. Texas but didn't have a Texas accent. The rest of his family - almost unintelligible. Then throw in the grandparents from the Old Country and a war bride from Wales and you had a real mash-up.
@@catzenhousewhere in so Texas
There is a boxing champion from Memphis, Tennessee named Caleb Plant. For starters most American boxers aren't white. Memphis is also mostly African American. Also the name Caleb Plant? Caleb is married to a very attractive black woman,. Caleb is white. If you gave me all the info, except his race I would have lost a lot of money on that.
That’s cool actually, I definitely think he was from up on the north side of Milwaukee
My Dad was from Georgia, my Mom was from Long Island NY, I was born in Texas, raised in Texas, Kentucky, FL, Panama and California. I speak with a slight Texas drawl with some NY thrown in. I can recognize a Long Island accent over a Brooklyn or other east coast accents. The accent I like most is the Cajun accent.
Love it. 😃
Me too, I love the Cajun accent and the food.
I was born in California, but grew up in south Louisiana. When I was 9 years old, my parents divorced, and my dad moved back to California. I spent summers in California (San Francisco bay area) and the school year in Louisiana, near the Texas border and on the edge of Cajun country. When I was in college, I had a professor who was a connoisseur of accents and prided himself on being able to guess the place of origin by listening them. I was the only one in the classroom who stumped him.
Not surprised, you must have a real thick Cajufornia accent
I speak mostly Italian and spent my young life in Edmonton, Alberta. When I stayed with my father who is spaniard/ French. So I have an accent that is expressive but smooth even when I am angry and it doesn't matter which language I use. That is what I have been told.
I grew up in Southern California. Until today, I couldn't hear my accent. Now I can't unhear it. Also I feel called out.
It's OK to have an accent. No judging! You're safe here. 😄
i wish they used locals speaking normally uniformly instead of all the people doing impressions. southern californian english is often mostly standard and way less exaggerated than shown here. the accent these guys had was gnarly lol jk
I saw a video where SoCal people use "the" for freeways and some highways.
@@Marky-Mark1337 yah we do for all of them actually. the 605 to the 5 to the 405… etc
edit: that’s local tho for the most part but we’ll say pch for example or rout 66 or the name of any well known route etc
@@Marky-Mark1337 This is indeed a thing we do! People where I live now sometimes look at me funny when I use the definite article before an interstate number.
as someone with a standard American accent, I feel absolutely average
😆
I wish I could be you. Full-on American. No influences from the scary nations of Eastern and Southern Europe (Shitaly, Romania, Poland, Macedonia, Serbia).
what do u mean with average accent?....south accent, midwest accent, new yorker accent?
Same here. An illinoisian.
@@nicedoppy2077 Basic Boomer/Gen X Californian accent. That's average, i.e. newscasters, etc. I speak with that accent, but it really changes when you get into Californian Millennial/Gen Z vocal fry, upspeak, and slang. And the difference between northern and southern California accents pretty much started in the early 1990s.
My Italian teacher, a 30 year old Italian with a PhD in languages, speaks Italian, French, English, German, Spanish and Portuguese. While visiting the U.S., she was stopped for speeding in the Deep South and had to have her American husband translate because she could not understand the state trooper who pulled her over. I’m from central California and she once told me I speak Italian with a Mexican accent. Also, I was surprised that I immediately recognized the Minnesota accent until I remembered my Mom was raised in Hutchinson, MN. Thanks Olly, I really enjoyed your video!
My mother grew up in Brooklyn New York. She moved cross country to Washington state for work when she was 30. She has spent half of her life in Brooklyn and the other half in the Seattle/Tacoma area. Her accent has become a lot softer as the years have gone by. When she talks with our family back East her accent comes back in full.
@@perceivedvelocity9914 same here. I have lost my Bronx accent over the 30 something years since I left. But get me around family and friends from the Bronx and it’s back like I never left 😂❤️
I live in Brooklyn and my accent is a little stereotypical
My dad trained himself to get rid of his Brooklyn accent to have a fulfilling radio career up north, but same as your mom, when he goes back there for stuff like high school reunions, he goes back to being "Bawby." 😂
Same here with our particular version of Appalachian accent! Years of traveling and associating with people from all sorts of places have moderated it somewhat, but it tends to come back when we're around people who speak it.
I'd say from SoCal we mostly speak General American. The surfer accent is more in the beach cities and valley accent more in the hills or upper middle/middle class. SoCal has a lot of ethnic accents, especially Chicano/Hispanic. Black American English is heavy in certain neighborhoods. Plus all the transplant, so we probably get all the accents.
So. Cal is definitely predominantly the general accent. The fry voice is everywhere, even here in the South and is more of an affectation than an accent.
@@dfash1875 you're right, I've heard that vocal fry from people all over NA, even Canada or the South. Add in a bunch of "like"s and "literally"s
I'm from Northern CA/Bay area and I still think there's a Socal accent. I can hear a general California accent when I travel too.
I'm from the valley, and I have heard only maybe a couple people in my life have that Hollywood surfer accent. Seems to it's practically a fake stereotype.
@@KyleReeseCel2029 Same, actually up to a few years ago I thought that accent was a myth, but I have surprisingly met a few people who genuinely have the accent. It's so rare though when I do hear one it seems like a prank
As a midwesterner I heard the first clip and was like “that’s not an accent!” But then I was like “oh right non Americans probably recognize it”
Regardless if you think you have an accent or not, that's an accent. Anyone that speaks differently than another has an accent, If you ask anyone with a distinct accent if they thought they had an accent, 9 of 10 will say no. I've done it.
I'm from North Carolina. We have 4 of the accents you mentioned! African American vernacular english, Appalachian, Southern, and Outer Banks. We're a very diverse state.
@@meatofpeach outer banks is that high tider accent. I’m southern from south east nc and we are actually more Appalachian sounding due to the amount of Scot Irish that settled here in my county back in the 1740. It’s all very unique. Love it.
Not a correction, more of an addition. The General American Accent is spoken all over the Pacific Northwest.
Indeed! PNW is the epitome of General American Accent. Midwesterners tend to flatten their vowels.
Washington State University has the Edward R Morrow school of broadcasting. That's where journalists go if they want to be on a national stage.
@@dgoins6 I did not know that.
You just think you don’t have a recognizable accent. Listen to the way Oregonians say Oregon and Portland and many other words. Easy to understand, yes but distinctive.
Yes, and not so much in the midwest. The midwest, for the most part, doesn't have a super heavy regional accent, but does have a number of distinct flavors. There's the grating, nasal a's of Chicaaago-land (especially as you travel south of the city) the swallowed vowels of WI, the Canadian-esque OUs of MN, etc. NorCal and PNW is definitely more the home of "General American," --at least, if you ignore NorCal's tendency to pronounce "eggs" and "legs" as "aygs" and "laygs." [Note: these are strictly personal observations over the years, having lived in SF, Chicago, Seattle, and Minneapolis.]
I was a radio operator in the Coast Guard. I was born and raised in southern Virginia. As it happened, my first duty station was located in the Eastern Shore region of Virginia. I was 100% certain I knew the hardest American accents on your list. Tangier Island's (Chesapeake Bay) fishing boat fleet was in our area of responsibility. We had a 24/7 on-call interpreter that we could patch into our radio communications when assisting these fishing boats. I worked several search-and-rescue cases with fishing boats from Tangiers, and the interpreters were invaluable.
The Smithsonian studied it, if I recall. Tangier Island has Elizabethan English caused by isolation.
#13 "Hoi Toid'rs" I heard also on Harker's Island, NC, below the Outer Banks. aka - Downeasters region. The accent - dialect was even stronger before a bridge was built to the isand. Isolation.
@@bustedupgrunt1177"hoi toid'rs," the phrase, sounds, in the mouth, like West Country, UK.
I thought of Smith Island, MD when I heard that accent! Didn't realized OBX was like that, also as I always think of upper middle class having vacation home there.
So true! I remember a local commenting that it was a "rot qua'at not". If you understood, you know Tangier island.
I grew up in northeastern Wisconsin not too far from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. I left when I was 9. Forty-five years later I was in the wilds of Syria and ran into some American diplomats. They asked me where I was from. I said Colorado where I currently live. The wife looked perplexed and said, "Are you sure you aren't from Wisconsin?" That was just one of the many times strangers have pegged my accent even though I haven't lived there for many decades!
Mine comes out with certain words and I haven't lived there in 33 years.
I moved away from Milwaukee as a kid to North of Eau Claire, and I was ordering something in a diner in Nebraska one day, and the guy at the table next to me asked me if I was from Southern or northern Wisconsin, because I sounded like both.
That skit he played was actually about Wisconsin. He should have mentioned that.
Even though these accents differ alot, Americans can still easily understand almost all of them, aside from a few isolated areas. I'm a Connecticut natives and don't have an accent at all. It's basically the language of the standard television news presenter, very "correct" yet there only a couple of people in this video I had a hard time understanding
Same here, born in Milwaukee moved to Colorado and 45 years later ppl can still pickup on that Wisconsin accent.
It's been said that people in the Pacific Northwest, specifically the Western Valleys of Oregon and Washington States, speak American English in its most phonetically pure form. As someone who grew up smack in the middle of that region (Portland area) I would have to agree. In fact, as a kid I remember when my best friend moved here from Northern California, and I immediately recognized that he spoke a handful of words (specifically vowel sounds, and more specifically some diphthongs) slightly differently, and we would playfully chide each other over the variance, but we both eventually concluded that the PNW way was technically more accurate to the rules of English Phonetics. This is why news anchors and reporters around the whole of the US, actors in Hollywood, etc... all emulate our (non) accent.
Call it: Cascadian English.
What's funny, when you cross the border into Southern BC, they sound exactly exactly the same with only one difference - the word "about" the pronounce "a-boat." The difference is immediate. Other than that, absolutely no difference.
I have to say, I was a little disappointed we were left off your list, considering we're the de facto masters of American English! Though, we're often forgotten, especially Oregon. The farther East you go in the US, the more people you'll find who don't even know we exist over here, tucked away between the mountains and the Pacific Ocean, just quietly minding our own business and trying to keep a low profile. 😬
From Florida here, one time in the national guard we felt like we needed a translator for the Cajun accent.
😂
I've spoken standard American English and standard French since I was 3. I can't understand those guys either. It's fascinating though.
I've never heard someone from southern California say supper unless they were transplants from somewhere else in the country. Mid-West usually.
We say dinner.
South and/or Midwest farming used Supper. (Even Dictionary will confirm)
There's a sizeable population of Southerners that migrated to southern California during the Dust Bowl and that might be where it originated.
We say Supper where I'm from.
In the South !!
Midwestern rural only. They use Supper and Dinner separately in the northeast. But supper is used widely there. If you live in suburban or Urban Midwest we don't typically say supper.
I'm from Massachusetts and when I was a kid my parents, all parents, said supper but you almost never hear it now and if you do it's an older person using it. We say dinner now too.
I grew up in Ontario, but then lived in upstate New York, southeast Virginia, and now central Florida.
Because I've had a scientific education and career I've been constantly surrounded by people from all around the world and have unintentionally honed my accent to be as neutral as possible, to the point where people often tell me that they cannot figure out where I'm from. But if I'm sufficiently excited, or drunk, my Canadian accent comes screaming out.
I have a similar history, born in Central Florida, living in Upstate New York, spent some time in Shenandoah Virginia, and been to Ontario countless times
The first clip is not an American accent, it is a News Caster forcing a voice that American news casters use. No one else in America talks like that.
Technically it’s an extremely formal and forced version of the Midwestern accent.
Mid sized Midwestern towns and cities do.
I was thinking that. I could swear that’s the only time you hear that specific accent. I’m British btw
@@rollforever85 you’re right!
Dudes def brit
The midwest has a specific accent that is definitely not the "neutral" newscaster accent.
It's probably as close as anything to "neutral".
The standard "radio" accent is mostly a highly enunciated version of generic midwestern from Ohio, Indiana and rural Illinois.
You're thinking of Upper Midwest, which I would argue is a separate accent altogether from generic Midwestern, especially as it more closely resembles some of the Plains states (like the Dakotas) than the rest of the Midwest.
@@azelmamortlake4471 he list more than on upper midwestern accent
I’m from Michigan…we don’t have an accent! Haha
A lot of American's wouldn't be able to decode some of the accents truly. We are a HUGE COUNTRY..so...I understood most but as you got to the end it did indeed become a challenge. ALSO some of those TikTok folks my sense is they are EXAGGERATING SPEECH for effect/humor.
Americans not American's.
My dad's side are Finnish Yoopers and my mom's side are Scandinavian Minnesotans. I've never found either difficult to understand at all haha Perhaps it made people from Nordic countries easier for me to understand instead! I love my Lake Superior-surrounding family 💗
I grew up with very little accent in WA state. I Love all accents and I hope people retain most of theirs!!❤
You need to hear a Hawaiian Pidgin accent, specifically from someone on one of the smaller islands of Hawaii. Their accent is so thick, sometimes even other people from Hawaii doesn’t understand them.
Good dat kind bruddah!
I get tree moa gold chains den you and my braddah get one lifted yota
I dated a guy whose father was from Hawaii. I thought his accent was charming and asked what it was. My boyfriend looked at me like I was being critical and said, "Pidjn English."
@@frankfrank7921oo close but lemme fix for you.
Das how June Tao. Or, Das da wan you kno dat buleehhhhh... chutee.
My uncles accent so thick that I had to translate for my friends when he came to visit lol
What the hell? I'm a native Angeleno and no one talks like those first two people, and no one in LA says "supper"!
I’m one county up in Ventura County. They definitely talk like that here but we don’t say supper.
@@laurabelzer7237 Correct, and Supper is def midwest, never heard a Californian say that.
I thought A few people were mimicking the accent. It sounded weird.
@@sweetsubversion Absolutely, the first two people were mimicking. The first guy sounded stereotypically Canadian or something, lol. The third girl’s accent is genuine!
The guy who said supper was from somewhere else and was mimicking the accent, it sounded fake to me (I'm from San Diego)
A small correction. the Cajun people were never French Canadian. They were Acadians from Acadia which is today's Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. At the time of the expulsion of 1755-63 the Nova Scotia colony was an independent colony, (New Brunswick was part of Nova Scotia until 1784). The Canada's (Upper and Lower) were separate colonies at that time and were not connected at all to Nova Scotia. So the Acadians from Acadia that ended up in Louisiana were never Canadians.
I always think of Evangeline when people speak about the Acadian expulsion. One of my favorite pieces of poetry.
@@rooseveltnut I always think of the song by the Band "Acadian Driftwood ", which tells the story and migration to the southern US of the Acadian people. Great song.
Another Catholic People persecuted by the English
Pretty great Peter Santenello episode/interview from spring ‘24 with some useful insights on this. I learned just what the OP cited.
I understand why he said that, but yep, French Canadian, c'est Quebecois
I’m a Californian who moved to central Alabama for 2 years. My coworkers would have conversations with thick southern accents and spoke very fast. I couldn’t understand a word of it!
no socal person says "supper." that guy was not from here! lol
I thought that guy was from Philly.
Exactly my thought, "supper" is not a SoCal thing, at all
@@GohTakeshitaI thought he was from the East Coast too. As a native SoCal resident I’ve never heard a guy sound like him
I hate that! It's called DINNER!
@@lindadixon4341 I lived in San Diego and Michigan and we had dinner.
There is a neighborhood in New Orleans Louisiana called Algiers, where the natives talk exactly like New Yorkers. I actually knew one of those people when I lived in Texas. Her last name was Watts, and she pronounced it "Warts".
@notmyworld44, warts? That's hilarious! Also, do they pronounce it like the capital of Algeria--al-JEERZ?
New Orleans far and away has the hardest dialects for other English speakers to understand. (and the city does have more than one dialect) I was watching a second-line parade from the porch of where I was staying, and a lady standing next to the porch asked me a question. I was just lost and asked her to repeat it a few times. Fortunately my husband finally got it, and came out with the paper towel she was asking if she could get. I was lost on what puhpuhtuh meant.
Did you ever eat at GULF PIZZA (which actually gets its name from being an old Gulf gas station building!) in the Algiers area? And where in Texas did you meet this "Watts" lady? I'm especially curious because I actually had an elementary school teacher in Texas (right outside Houston) who was originally from Kenner (Louisiana) and was a perfect example of the famous "Yat accent" found in and around New Orleans!
That’s where does Sicilian immigrants settled when they got off the boat in New Orleans? That’s why it has a very similar accent to New York and other areas that a lot of Italians immigrated to. That’s where half my family grew up.
@@lancerelle9280 Do you suppose the "Algiers Italians" would have trouble communicating with a New Yorker (such as a "Brooklyn Italian" for example) despite the similar accents? And would they have trouble communicating with a person with the "plantation" Southern accent, found especially in Georgia and South Carolina?
A lot of Americans who don’t live in cities tend to have “country” accents. Like go three hours inland from cities like Los Angeles or San Diego and there’s a lot of folks with country accents
If they have an accent, it's probably because Spanish is their first language lol
@@alaric3056 you don't have an accent?
yeah you drive an hour out of any midwestern city and it's full "country"
In Germany you go 15 minutes outside of a city and you don't even get what the old dudes are saying.
Lol that's because they ain't from here I'm in sandeigo now but grew up in Washington DC. Everybody I meet with a slang to their accent is from a different state
Cajun in da house!!! Woo hoo! Thanks for representing us 😁
Cajun here, too [Lafayette]. I've yet to hear a decent non-Cajun accent. 😂
Most Southern Californians don’t sound like that. It’s kind of like a fashion accessory of an accent down there for some of their subcultures. As for the general American accent, I sorta associate it with the Pacific Northwest. Where virtually all accents stick out like a sore thumb! If I recall correctly, the University of Washington did a study of the PNW accent… to determine if we have one… and the results were “kinda? If you really look for one…”
Love this analysis from the other side of the pond, mate!
Thought the same thing. Never heard someone from SoCal say "supper" either
@@zacharyduval1 : "Supper"??? In Cali? Nah.
@@zacharyduval1 that totally threw me too! “Supper” is soooo much an easy of the Mississippi word me! Never heard it from my home in Western Washington to New Mexico… it’s always dinner here in the west. I love the English language though lament it’s the only language I speak. So out of curiosity, years ago, I tried using vocabulary uncommon to the Pacific Northwest to see how people would react. I had a pretty good idea haha… supper was one of those words. I got so many “dude… really?” looks as well of a few “dude… really?” spoken inquiries to assess if I “really” went there. So that word was dropped from the lineup pretty quick! However, I really love the word “mate” in place of “friend,” and use it to this day.
Those who know me have a fun nickname for me! “Pretentious!” …come to think of it, that’s kinda just an adjective… maybe they’re just being funny…
But seriously, I’ve had more than a couple of friends and coworkers express they sometimes need to look up vocabulary in my text messages… so. Thank goodness it’s easy to highlight the words and search on most phones…
True. But we definitely like out vocal fry down here. I don't have that 'surfer' talk or even the valley accent, but I still get some vocal fry going.
And some people down here do say supper! I was born and raised just 60 miles east of LA, and there are people around who say supper.
Most Southern California residents grew up elsewhere in the US, so mostly average out to General American dialects. The stereotypical SoCal accent is almost entirely associated with 80s valley girls and surfer dudes, and even for them is an ironic affectation they can turn on or off.
At the risk of being that guy, the General American Accent is more specific than just "Midwest". It's specifically the Ohio Valley accent. The Upper Midwest has far more nasal qualities to it.
To be fair he did mention the Minnesota and UP Michigan accents which would both be upper-Midwest, but I do agree that it’d be good to have some of the more specific information regarding the “general American accent” since, like most supposedly “neutral” accents, it’s not quite as general as it’s name might suggest
Nah. Maybe around Columbus. Dayton suburbs.
We got a bit of a twang in Cincinnati. I only hear it when it's compared to someone else. Or when I lived in Colorado.
Go to the extreme eastern end of the Metro area (Adams and Brown counties) and you get the most hideous, flat, nasal, twangy accent I've ever heard.
Ding ding
Actually, General American is a class-based accent. It's the accent of the educated upper middle class pretty much everywhere outside the South (though members of this class in the South may have this accent and generally have an accent somewhere on a continuum between this accent and their regional accent). The General American accent is based on pronunciations recorded in American dictionaries in the late century, and it reflected the pronunciation of an area stretching from western New England (specifically Springfield, Mass) to northern Ohio where most American dictionaries were compiled. These pronunciations were a model for radio announcers when radio took off in the 1920s. Since that time, regional accents in western New England and, even more so, western New York and northern Ohio, have diverged sharply from General American. The accents in the Ohio valley remain closer to General American than the accents of northern Ohio where it originated, but the accents of people from lower middle or working-class backgrounds in the Ohio valley have regional features that are distinct from General American.
@@lydia3460 almost, but not entirely. The primary affected accent in the 1920s, through to the 1950s, was the Mid Atlantic, an entirely synthetic accent taught to movie stars and radio personalities in the first half of the century, characterized by non-rhotic Rs, a more nasal delivery, and a rounding of front vowels.
One leading theory about its demise is the post WW2 rejection of elitism specifically. So while that does appeal to the upper middle class element of your argument, you ignore the importance of the media training of the second half of the century. And in particular the importance of Walter Cronkite. And while he's a topic entirely to himself, his importance to the shaping of how reporters talk, and in turn how that affected the rest of the country would be difficult to understate. Admittedly, he was from Missouri, but he also worked at eliminating Missouri specific markers from his speech. If you listen to reports from him from WW2, versus those from later in his career, there's a notable difference. But again, that may be getting into the weeds a little bit.
However, my broader point remains. The reason media personalities were trained to speak that way was because it had the fewest linguistics markers, and so could be unappealing to the fewest people. It just so happens that the Ohio Valley accent has the fewest natural markers.
There certainly are those that say that those two facts are coincidental, as so they may be, but it's also reasonable to think that, in an effort to turn away the fewest listeners/watchers in total, vocal coaches would seek out the most "neutral" accent, and in so doing find the OVA.
So, yes, there is in a way a class element to it. But I'm afraid it's reductive to insist that it's entirely about class.
Appalachian here and proud of my accent. I meet with major companies in my job and I proudly keep my appalachian accent
good, your accent and language is your indentity, and it's boring to constantly hear the general american accent no matter where you are.
I'm glad you do! You're carrying on your region's history AND breaking down some classist bs about which accents are "professional" enough to be used in the workplace. High five from a random internet stranger!
Internet
I'm glad I was raised in the 1st accent, everybody that speaks English worldwide understands me
I'm biased but Appalachian is easy to understand without colloquisims. I have what I'd consider a Mid-Atlanic accent but it is very easy for me to slip into Appalachian. If you've some super specific term for something up in your holler i might not know the word, but I'll understand everything else.
It doesn't help two out of three guys he used as examples were missing a good part of their teeth.
As long as we're all using the same terms we're good.
Being a French and an English speaker I would love to spend some weeks trying to understand and speak Cajun. I have been to the US many times but never to that region ! Not only do you have to deal with the switches you also have to decipher the accent !
Texan here, the “Piney Woods” or East Texas accent is much different from the West Texas accent. I’m from Houston and I speak in a much toned down east Texas accent.
That’s bc you have a Gulf Coast accent. Or partly.
@DomP1989 Very true. I grew up near Houston but have relatives in West Texas around Abilene. Our accents are completely different:)
Funny. I've lived in North Texas, a time in West Texas, a long time in Houston and now East Texas. I vacationed in Paris and people would intentionally stop talking to hear my accent. When I finished, they asked, "where in England are you from?"
Yep, I lived in the Piney Woods of Texas (tiny town called Grapeland) for my high school years and it's a very different accent than the rest of Texas. Bit of a country twang. Sorta reminds me of some of the rural accents in SC, but a touch less Southern.
Austinite here, I feel the same. I feel like my accent is so plain but once in a while you can tell I'm from the south.
One of the most popular/mocked accents currently in the USA is from the "Delaware Valley" area. Delco (south east PA) + North Delaware + Philadelphia + West NJ.
It's also one of the most studied, thanks to linguist William Labov at Penn, who loves it. He called it one of the richest and most complex accents in the world.
From West Philly and my dad's 2nd wife was from Germantown.. man you definitely could hear the difference. She would say "I coaled you" instead of I called you.. It cracked me up..
Was looking for this comment also go birds!
Everyone there sort of sounds like Elmer Fudd- they don't say "L"s. They don't SpecuLate they SpecuAte about things.
It's a Philly thing
I was in Glasgow and the cabbie made like he couldn't understand my "I watched a lot of TV" American accent. So, I leaned forward and said, "I know everyone in Europe watches 'Star Trek' and "Seinfeld', so don't even TRY to pretend you don't understand me." He very sheepishly took my friend and myself to the destination I requested.
As a German native speaker, Scotland was almost one of the worst regions for understanding (together with some regions of Australia). I've been working for US companies for a decade now and no issues there anymore but Scotland? Oh my ;).
(Besides, I never really watched Star Trek, only a bit of Seinfeld but never in English ;))
@@met0xff00Half of my family is Scottish and I still can’t understand some of them!😂
@@KiKi-tf8rv lol oh actually this is not too dissimilar from here in Austria where I struggled quite a bit with the dialects of my wife's family for a few years. We now moved into this region and my kids... after two years my daughter I think finally starts to understand everything the teacher says
@@met0xff00 It really is difficult getting used to some dialects when it feels like it’s almost an entirely different language! I once lived in an area of the USA where I understood the Spanish speaking people better than the English speakers. I don’t speak Spanish.😂
Wow. Thanks for the tip and money I won't lose
Fascinating and expertly done. Good job. 👍
I'm a 3rd gen American living in the central valley of California, grandparents came from Mexico. I really don't speak a whole lot of Spanish, and I've always been told I "sound white". But funnily enough when I went to New Zealand, I was told a few times I have a "Mexican accent". Couldn't believe it lol, first time anyone had ever told me that.
I moved there in my 30s, lived there for nine years, and now live in New York and New Yorkers have told me on multiple occasions that I have the weirdest Puerto Rican accent. What??? I’m from Utah. I guess I was influenced by the Central Valley’s strong Mexican population more than I thought. That being said, I think I sound very white too.
I don't know if you are familiar with the 50th state but when I first moved to Hawai'i I found the local accent with its "pidgin" slang certainly the hardest American English accent to understand
Agreed
I'm a Northern California native with a General American accent. For the past decade, I've lived in Southern California, and my accent fits right in. I can only tell which half of the state people are from by their freeway terminology.
I like the term "General American accent", just because it is so hard to give it a single location.
I think of it as the Midwestern city accent, but if you go to a place like Pinkneyville, IL (half-way between Carbondale and St. Louis), you'll find the true regional accent for that region, and it's pretty far from a general American accent. (If you're curious, it's very similar to a western Tennessee accent)
__Every__ U.S. city has people with the General American accent, because travel between U.S. cities is easy and no one feels pressured to drop it after moving. Places like Columbus, Indianapolis, and Peoria have the highest percentage, but coastal cities with lots of transplants from the midwest (Seattle, LA, and even Boston) are not far behind. Even people raised for generations in those coastal cities have settled on this accent because their neighbors speak it and it's what's heard on TV.
The "So. Cal" accent is an actual regional accent. In college (midwest), I knew a few people with it, but within a year of moving to the midwest, they had lost it. Like many regional accents, it is dying also. It became a cultural phenomenon in the 90s, and that was probably its peak. A few decades from now, it will probably be completely gone (if it isn't already). When a regional accent goes away, the General American accent usually fills its place.
I'm a northern Californian and was in college in the 1970s and was amazed at the cultural differences. Men from northern California would not be wearing shorts and sandals much at any time of the year, but those SoCal guys wore both at all times of the year. I think there's still a bit of difference on that.
@@smallmeadow1 It is much warmer, you can't even swim in the ocean. As a Michigander growing up with the cold Great Lakes we swam in San Diego in the ocean year-round. The water temp was 65-68...warm enough for us but I must say the locals did think we were a bit crazy to be swimming in that temp. But those I know who live near san Fransisco say it is always too cold for ocean swimming. San Diego just had this large beach town vibe I loved.
So Cal for over 60 years. I don't know about the "laid back" accent - I have never heard anyone use in expect in movies and jokes.
Not much with the accent, but more about the slang. For instance, how do you refer to the lot sitting diagonally across the street? If you say kitty corner, that's Socal. If you say catty corner, you're in the Bay Area. More regional terms: janky, the city, and hella--all NorCal words you'd never hear in SoCal. And in SoCal: dude, sigalert with its companion term traffic break, and "the" before any freeway number.
I am from Long Island, NY and definitely have a Long Island accent....and proud of it. Thank you for a great video.
There are several towns in North Carolina's outer banks, particularly on Hatteras and Ocracoke island that were essentially isolated until around the 70s. "Hoi toid on the sound side" typifies it. You can still hear it with some of the older locals but it is getting harder to find. I am so glad you included it before it dies out.
The crazy thing is that a county line can make all the difference in accent, especially here in North Cackalacky (North Carolina).
My friend spoke Creole. When he was drinking, there was no hope for even catching a drift of what he was saying. I only heard hmana he hmanah hahaha.... Wonderful man.
I moved to Alabama from Minnesota and I seriously had to have an impromptu class with my neighbor to understand all the idioms. 😂
welcome to bama! how about these summers? 😊
What I found out is that I mostly have problems to understand when it is an old guy who barely has teeth speaking, no matter his accent.
Take care of your teeth folks 😂
I thought the same. His pronunciation would have changed with teeth.
No teeth? Why don't these people use dentures?
A conversation between two Appalachians.
"Jeet?"
"Naw."
"Eeont too?"
"Aight ten."
Translation....
Did you eat?
No.
Do you want too?
Alright then.
This appears as something I would expect to hear more in NE Texas/NW Louisiana than anywhere else.
I'm from Texas originally and I understood that perfectly! 😂
I’m originally from an area considered to be Appalachia, and that’s very similar to an example that I share with people who ask about the accent. “Jeet yet?” “No, jew?” (Did you eat yet? No, did you?)
Another: once, while on vacation, we stopped at a roadside farm stand. My mom asked the proprietor “Zher corn all?” She was asked to repeat it several times, before I stepped in and explained that she meant “Is your sweet corn all gone? (Sold out)
I live in Kentucky (though from somewhere else originally), that made perfect sense to me.
Yeh I understood that on the first read. Sounds like some of our country bumpkin accents in SC.
A personal trainer approached me in the gym the other day and offered to show me some exercises, during which he asked, "Waddaya goes?" He was a young black man and at first I couldn't tell that he was asking "What are your goals?" because he couldn't pronounce the "L" in "goals." He also pronounced "shoulders" as "showdahs."
This is soooooo cool. Ty soo much. I am fascinated. Greetings,!
Bostonian here in Reno, Navada
Fun fact about Ocracoke (yes you pronounced it correctly) is that it has a British war cemetary. During WW2 the bodies of the crew of a British ship sunk by the Germans washed ashore. Due to their isolation they just identified the bodies as best they could and buried them in Ocracoke, where they remain today. Officially it's British soil, but in practice it's maintained by the locals of Ocracoke and the US Coast Guard.
That's a touching story. And in Normandy, France there is a local group of French people who lay flowers at the graves of fallen American soldiers whose families can't afford to do the same. A similar thing happens at a Canadian cemetery near Juno Beach in Normandy, and as an interesting twist to the story, some of the locals put maple leaves on the graves in the Canadian cemetery.
I'm texan born and raised. I didn't always appreciate accents till I moved away. Since then, I've made it a point to record family members talking. It's priceless to show people from the northern states what a west and north texas accent sounds like. I have some real king of the hill folks in the fam.
Texan too, I got legit laughed at by a couple little twats working a Wendy's drive through in South Dakota. Sorry I don't speak my vowels in fucking cursive
I was an Army Brat. My dad was in the US Army for 21 years and we lived in many places. Therefore, people sometimes have a tough time telling where I'm from by my mixed accent. 😂
Closed captioning totally tapped out on Minnesota
I'm from Nebraska... And I'm sitting here thinking, "Seriously? English speakers from outside the US find some of those accents hard to understand?"
Yes, I do
I am in Central Nebraska, and I can understand everything up until we got to the end of the video. And then, it might as well been from a whole different planet.
im from Germany but fluent in English and i understood everything except for the elderly men without teeth
Haha, okay, you can perfectly understand thick Ocracoke Brogue? The vast majority of Americans will have trouble understanding at least a few of the clips played here. Why are you lying dude, lol.
For me it's harder to pick out questions from statements whenever they use rising tones on every word, and all the r sounds are hard to imitate
Wonderful video !! Thanks for uploading this.
I am an Asian Indian, and live in a Non-English speaking country in Europe. Though, I have been to the US and have lived there for an year. I not only loved being there meeting new people...but also found out that it is the American version of the English that I do like (read: love) the most...above all other accents from any other English speaking countries in the entire world.
Hope to visit the US again someday. 😄😍 ...Great country, great people, great accent ! PEACE!
Awww, come on back!
As someone from the edge of the Appalachian Mountains in upper Alabama, my great grandfather DEFINITELY had the thickest accent in my fam. When he was still alive, I remember constantly lookin' at my mom and going "what he just say??" I was still real young at the time 🤣 Managed to still get some accent from my Pops and Nana tho!!
I was the same when my mum and I visited the village in Germany where she was born. I didn't understand a word what people were saying. After a couple of days there wasn't any problem. I just love all accents in German up to even Dutch which is considered to be a different language but as a German you'll pickit up in a couple of weeks. I also love all the British Isle accents.
This comment has an accent so thick I can hear it in my mind
DEEP woods dialects
Talkin waaaay far behind the backwoods where earliest folks settled in. Makes me smile thinkin of em. 😏
hello! I'm in the dekalb, cherokee county alabama area. the accents i hear in my area can be very different from those in the city of gadsden or anniston.
Interesting episode! Enjoyed it in Pittsburgh!
Life long SoCAL resident. Rarely hear the last meal of the day called "supper'.
That is prevalent here in Northeast Pennsylvania. Supper is almost always used to designate the evening meal here.
Yep, it’s dinner 🍽️
Exactly! His parents were perhaps from the Midwest? We always hear that word when we travel there. No one I know uses it in So Cal.
😂😅 7th generation Alta Californian here & have never heard anyone say "supper" 😂
yeah as soon as I heard "supper," this video lost all credibility
It’s “apple-atcha” and it’s the best! Love that accent!
I grew up in Ky and can confirm that western, central, and eastern parts of the state all have distinct accents.
If an Appalachian woman says Oh, bless your little heart - run!
I grew up with that "non accented general American accent", my parents spoke it naturally, it's what I hear in everyday life from nearly everyone from every economic or educational strata, it's just normal and natural to speak clearly.
It was reinforced in schools and if someone was lazy or incorrect in their ennunciation they were corrected and taught how to do it properly.
There was a fair amount of focus put on grammar, pronunciation and spelling and we were even then informed that our natural way of speaking was considered "standard American English" and that's why so many actors in newscasters sounded very natural to us, we must have sounded almost foreign to someone from the northeast or the deep south.
And many friends and relatives did go on to find jobs in radio work, movies, and other media.
It is kind of funny, when I speak to people from other parts of the country or the world they often will say I sound like I have "a radio voice" or think that I'm putting a lot of effort into speaking clearly when it really is just the way I grew up.
It's second nature and requires no thought or extra effort.
I guess in that way I am lucky that I have one of the most easily understood accents, because being understood is such a crucial part of communication.
Same, I grew up that way too. When I moved to Kentucky, I'd constantly get, "You ain't from around here, are ya?" My family now claims that I sound southern when I visit them. I do hear some Kentucky creeping into my voice at times, so I guess they're right.
I love different accents! Fun video!
Being from GA living in Missouri now, I have to explain that a sentence in a southern accent is just one whole word!
As a pittsburgher I will proudly say we have our own language!!!
When I went to Penn State, most of my social circle was either from Pittsburgh or Philly. We developed a mashup language of each city's dialect. We could be having a conversation in public and people would wonder what we were saying!
Meh, Chicago's gotchyer number.
@ranglaandersson3993 only thing Chicago has is ruining pizza
@@andrelindor1775 Yeah, ok.
It’s called Pittsburghese. We have a published dictionary too with the same name! I’m from a town south of the Burgh. Home of champions. Those from the Mon Valley would know what town I’m talking about. 😁
1:20 buddy we aren’t speaking like that on purpose so that you will understand us. We’re speaking like that because that’s how we speak lol
I grew up in California and at 30 moved to Georgia. I am now 70, so I’ve been in the South a long time. I travel extensively so I frequently hear many different American accents. I like them all. There are lots of different Southern accents. You lumped them all together. Boston, Bean Town, was the last one.
i'm from Kentucky and understood every word of the people from the region, haha. one feller was talking about working in a coal mine and i think he said a pipe or something got backed up and exploded. the girl was talking about hanging out with people she thought was friends, but they were laughing and makin fun of her, on account of her strong accent. then my favorite, that's old Jim Tom! durned if he aint the most Kentuckiest man alive, haha. gosh i love this region of Appalachia so much! he was talking about the old buggy they used to ride into town, it'd take em a long time to get to town, and he'd be workin the brakes. we start to go up a hill, and i kindly push the brake on him. he told that old mule, he said, "Git up there!" me turnin the wheel, he looks back and says "Jim Tom! Turn the brakes loose!" he'd take three ears of corn to feed it at lunch. he'd start back home bout 4 o clock." lmao, i love it though. somethin about that twang, people in Tennessee and West Virginia have it too. like music to my ears! literally all the rest of the people i could understand, it was just the regional references and words like dight, lol never heard that one before. just about all the rest, i could understand if i listened hard. then the Tennnessee feller, he said "naw, we didn't have no electricity, didn't have no runnin water neither. we run it out of the, we got it out of the spring. but they eventually got electricity up through here." and i always said it as Apple-at-ya. but yes, to the rest of the country and internationally, we are unintelligible, lol and yes, we've done been isolated for literally forever. since day one. and its made us real particular
That girl who was talking about hanging out with so-called friends made me so sad. It's one thing to be enchanted by someone's accent and want to hear it, but that story sounded like mean people.
Clear to me, as well. I grew up in NJ but I spent every summer with grandparents from WV. I live here now. There were a few points early on when I has to translate for my wife but she's gotten past that, now.
Found that perfectly understandable. I'm from rural Scotland.
Then again, I work with people from half of Europe, and a couple from the most remote place you could imagine in Ireland where they speak so fast you can hardly tell one word from another.
@@ALWhite-ub1ye yep, we all sound real similar in central Appalachia ... Kentucky, Tennessee and West Virginia, three of my favorite states. beautiful country!
SW Virginian here and understood every word. We speak the same way here.
Texas has states inside the state that people not from Texas don’t know about, we got east Texas, west Texas, Central Texas, North Texas, south Texas, the panhandle, and the coast. Each one is very different
And different parts have a huge Hispanic influence.
In San Antonio area, if you want to see a fight start, ask people if they are in the south or the southwest.
I think San Antonio/Austin is considered right on the geographic & climate border between S/SW.
That first So-Cal guy went from 100% So-Cal to 0% when the moment he said supper. 😂
Greetings from Georgia! As an American, I found this video very enjoyable. You are very well studied in our accents/dialects. I use the General American Accent at work or any place with a more professional/upscale atmosphere. My natural or default accent is very southern, loose, and full of words that cannot be found in any dictionary lol. I would love to see a video on English accents in the UK or Ireland. Great video!
Talk about difficult accents, I submit to you...Cockney....
And rural Scotland variants.
Oi bruv! Heard use talkin' shit on me. Less have it out
Including that bizarre "Cockney rhyming" thing, where they substitute words that sound like what the speaker means, but just aren't.
Learned the cockney accent once, I still can't do it
I live in St. Louis, and we pronounce the ending S, Saint Lewis.
Absolutely, 100%.
I don't think it's always been this way. In older movies, the 's' is usually dropped. Even in downstate Illinois, I knew a couple of people that would always drop the 's', but frankly, they're just wrong. Actually, in each of those cases, it was someone that moved there from somewhere else.
Once you get anywhere near St. Louis, you'll find that the 's' is pronounced 100% of the time today.
There is the old musical ‘Meet me in St Louis.’ though.
@@GingerBreadBeing Americans don't drop the S, but the man in the accent video does. I wanted to make a note so more British/Europeans don't make the same mistake.
In the south we pronounce your city that way as well, but yet there are places in the south that we pronounce the same name Lewy.
Missouri is pronounced “mezurah” to my ears when I lived in S Illinois & S Missouri. From MN.
As someone from Minnesota, that first general midwestern accent is something you will hear in all midwestern cities. As you said, the rural parts or Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan ect have their own sounds. Also there were a lot of generalizations with the South made in the video lol, but I'm sure to foreigners it sounds very similar. You can tell the difference between Texas and states like Alabama, Mississippi and Georgia. And for Americans, Louisiana is deffo the worst. It truly is a different dialect
Lived in the Minneapolis area most my life but I live in Florida now. Only thing people really notice is the way I say words that end in ag. They fucking love it when I say the word bag
@@kaiseriv8483 I have the same thing. As an software engineer, I talk about bit flags and my coworkers smile. But the MN accents he used at 13:20, etc. are over the top. There's a few people that talk kind of that way, but not strong. Many of them are first-generation Americans (kids of Norwegian immigrants), and dying off now. Then the movie Fargo came out and popularized that whole accent. Those clips are about as real as the "Californians" on SNL, IMO.
@@kaiseriv8483 honestly, i went to denver as a minnesotan and they asked if we wanted a b-ah-g, and we were like no, we dont need a b-ay-g, and they like lost it
@@robneff7084 agreed, like you only ever use the accents at 13:20 when your trying to or just having fun, you never actually hear them normally anymore. I gotta learn how to do that accent better
Dude, great video!
Grew up in Eastern North Carolina, so I actually have a pretty good ear for the Outer Bank's accent even though it's notoriously difficult for people moving in.
Yinz guys got me dahn pat! Yea from Pittsburgh! Traveled for service industry and everyone knew I was from da burg! Worked in Australia, hard to understand them but the kiwis were impossible! Good video!
Same I remember Myrtle Beach when I was 18 running into girls from the south and they talked about our accents.. whole time sounding like I'm in a country song with their twang they got.. they said my accent was the worst too I never had a clue til then lol
The Midwest does have an accent, they tend to nasalize vowels General American “o” becomes more of a nasal “ah”
It’s true, we say “Tah” instead of “To” and I hear the use of “Dhat” more often than “That” even the word “than” is pronounced like “Dhan” sometimes, also the Should’ah, Would’ah and Could’ah is very common too.
Yes, this is true. If I said, "I'm going to the store," it would sound like "I'm goin' ta the store." In cities like Chicago and Detroit the TH is often softened to a "d" so you get "We watched da' Bears!" (Chicago football team). Suburbanities tend NOT to do this though. It's very much a neighborhood by neighborhood thing. The biggest tell of a Michigan accent though is that the letter "T" isn't pronounced in the middle of words. It's either gone entirely and replaced with a glottal stop or it becomes a "d". So city is cidy, kitty is kiddie, butter is bu'er (buh-er there's an actual glotal stop). Then there's words like kitty-corner (a place on the diagonal corner from another place), anyways (not anyway), and local words. So Michigan has three Distinct accents - urban, like Detroit; the Upper Peninsula (Yooper accent hazzah!), and the rest of the state.
Words like rock and Rochester and the city in NC, Charlotte is not quite sweet and soft as one would think. Upstate NY, 2nd grade to HS grad.
Love this video! So much fun!
I was born and raised in Texas and I can tell the difference in accents from West Texas, The panhandle, Dallas area, Coastal area, and wooded area. Central Texas is a little harder for me to distinguish.
As a Texan from the Piney Woods, I can not only tell you where a Texan is from, I can also tell you that folks who try to imitate any Texas regional accent fail every time. Probably easier just to find a real Texan who can hit a mark and memorize the lines.
Have you ever come across a person from New Orleans (or its suburbs) with the famous "Yat accent" which is unusual for its "New York" sound, living in your part of Texas? My first-grade teacher in Texas (right outside Houston) was a "Yat transplant" originally from Kenner, and this was long before the Katrina disaster happened!
What town are you from? I lived in Grapeland for a while.
The Appalachia accent is the hardest for me to decipher. Once drove through West Virginia and when we had to stop to get gas it got to the point I had to have the guy write down what he was saying because I couldn't understand a thing he said even when he slowed down.
Yes it can be yes
😂😂😂
The Appalachia accent is completely absent in the northern panhandle and the eastern part of the eastern panhandle.
I know I'm late to the party, but I wanted to say "Hello, from Redding, California." It was fun to see our accents being the easiest to understand. My Dad's grew up in California but his family had moved from Arkansas before he was born. I loved hearing the drawl at family reunions. LOL
You skipped Baltimore!!! Bro that’s the best one.
Ballmer!
HAHAHA errn ern an ern errn 😂☠️😂😂☠️
Hun! How'd you skip Bawlmer?? (Baltimore)
Hey Hon, jeet? I got a bushul ov numb er tues steamin. I wus downyoshun an bogt sum back. How bout dem Ow's?
Balmer, lol.
I'm from Texas, and I do understand most of those. The Cajun one was the only one in the videos that left me completely flummoxed (though to be fair, I knew where it was as soon as they started talking). All the others I can get used to after about 15 minutes, even the deep Appalachia, even if I have to concentrate hard on that one.
In real life though, the only time I've ever found an American accent that I couldn't pick up was in Boston. I went on a leaf-peeping trip a few years ago and my Uber driver who took me back to the airport... bless his heart, he was trying so hard to carry on a conversation with me and I couldn't understand basic niceties like 'how's the weather down there?' and he said something about a highway that had the number 3 in it and the only thing I picked up was 'tree' so I thought he was talking about the fall color. I think he was glad to get me out of his car.
Now, that was one guy. I interacted with other Bostonians for a week and never had any problems. I've told that story before, though, and had other people say 'OMG I thought I was the only one that ever happened to!'
I live in the NE now, and the truth is that the Boston accent is much easier to understand than the country accent (ie. Rhode Island & Maine). But the country accent is endangered.
I met and older woman in Maine once that I just could not understand. She had lived in a very isolated part of Maine her entire life. Occasionally you'll get someone like that who moves into the city, and that is most likely the case with the Uber driver you met.
That isn't to say that the city accents are always easy. I've encountered a few born-and-raised Bostonians (older people again) with difficult accents, but they don't begin to approach the country accents I've heard.
@@uigrad that checks out. I interacted with people all week and it was just the one guy.
Have you ever met a person with the famous "Yat accent" of New Orleans?
I grew up in So. Cal. and have to say that I really don't think the guy carrying the baby at the beginning of the video is from CA. Not only did he not sound local to me but he used the term "supper." My sense is he's a Midwest or East Coast transplant who's faking the local accent--badly. The chica after him didn't sound natural to me, either. Waaaay too exaggerated, especially on the word "nermally." The third example sounded spot-on, though.
At all. He sounded more Jersey than socal.
supper is KS, NE, MO, IL, IA farmland, and sometimes the mid South, and I've heard it in CO and WY.
correct, we don't say "supper" in SoCal