How to Speak with Different American Accents 🇺🇸

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  • Опубликовано: 3 май 2024
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    ABOUT THE LESSON 📚
    Let's explore some of the different accents you may hear when visiting or living in the US. I'll talk a little about what's happening with each accent, provide you with some examples, and hopefully this will give you a better understanding as to why these well-known accents sound the way they do.
    Lesson Chapters
    0:00 Intro to American Accents
    1:09 New York Accent
    3:54 Boston Accent
    6:04 Southern Drawl
    7:30 Southern Twang
    8:50 Minnesota Accent
    9:56 California (Valley) Accent
    12:19 Speaking Course Announcement
    #InteractiveEnglish #AmericanAccent
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Комментарии • 4,6 тыс.

  • @InteractiveEng
    @InteractiveEng  Год назад +115

    You can join my speaking course: bit.ly/Join_Speak_Up 🎊
    Use the code SPEAK20 to get $20 off. 🤗

    • @edwardamosbrandwein3583
      @edwardamosbrandwein3583 Год назад +2

      Is the "dark l" pronounced only at the end of words as it is in British English?

    • @edwardamosbrandwein3583
      @edwardamosbrandwein3583 Год назад +4

      Pronouncing /e/ like a short /i/ is also typical of New Zealand English

    • @xapaga1
      @xapaga1 Год назад

      I'm struck by the lack of regional varieties in American English (AmE) to the degree of linguistic poverty, uniformity and dreariness. I find the USA much less diverse than the Americans think despite their ethnic salad bowl.

    • @anthonyz7023
      @anthonyz7023 11 месяцев назад

      Where in the Bay Area are ya from? Did you take the AC transit buses ?

    • @j.goggels9115
      @j.goggels9115 11 месяцев назад +1

      _Dropping_ the "R" and using long vowels... Haha! In the UK standard, you _add_ "R"s, in Cornwall and Ireland. That's why I am watching your video. I can easily spot if a British person comes from Yorkshire, South Wales, Liverpool or East-London but with America, outside of Forest Gump's Old South, I am at a complete loss.

  • @erikschmitz1841
    @erikschmitz1841 Год назад +3927

    I am originally from Minnesota, and we would never say "put the soda in the bag". We would say "put the pop in the bag".

    • @timmy334
      @timmy334 Год назад +132

      I spent a year in Minnesota after high school. It's a completely different dialect from here in Alabama. I loved it though.

    • @rosemarystrobel3437
      @rosemarystrobel3437 Год назад +184

      No soda here. It's pop once you cross the St. Croix from Wisconsin.

    • @jenniferpearce1052
      @jenniferpearce1052 Год назад +152

      And it's pronounced "pap", not "pop".

    • @shw_1957
      @shw_1957 Год назад +82

      You betcha!

    • @carmensandiego3691
      @carmensandiego3691 Год назад +94

      We say pop in Canada too eh!

  • @jeanhowell9353
    @jeanhowell9353 11 месяцев назад +1920

    The southern drawl is varied. People from TN have a distinctive sound as does SC and LA. There is no pure “southern accent” very different from state to state. It’s wonderful.

    • @Harrison.DuRant
      @Harrison.DuRant 11 месяцев назад +74

      I'm from SC and have people ask me, "Where are you from?" who are also from SC. I think I sound like everyone else in the south, but my accent is pretty thick. It's still not even close to the top end of the spectrum though.
      It's always fun when you travel out west or up north and everyone asks you, "Say y'all!" and you just say, "y'all..." then they think it's the greatest thing ever.

    • @johnbaugh1122
      @johnbaugh1122 11 месяцев назад +29

      For sure. I live in Arkansas and the accent here is completely different from GA/SC. Love a proper southern accent.

    • @ChristopherMHeaps
      @ChristopherMHeaps 11 месяцев назад +51

      I wish anyone not from the South could understand this.

    • @solomonrivers5639
      @solomonrivers5639 11 месяцев назад +8

      “Hell on Wheels” killed me because Anson Mount is clearly from Tennessee but his character was from Mississippi

    • @botsareeverywhere
      @botsareeverywhere 11 месяцев назад +20

      In SC different towns/areas have different drawls, I lived there for 9 years but it took me about 3 years to tell which area people were from

  • @cracklasco
    @cracklasco 9 месяцев назад +14

    Californian here.
    I was thinking, “isn’t this guys regular voice the Californian accent?” You made me realize things I’ve never payed attention to in my life, I was cracking up thinking “THAT IS HOW WE TALK, MY GOD!”

  • @GGdeTOURS37
    @GGdeTOURS37 10 месяцев назад +59

    Strangely as French, many times I don't ear the difference, even way you say it! But I noticed that in the opposite way: We were explaining the different French accents to American friends but they didn"t catch it, even when we were giving examples! It's something very difficult for the foreigner to ear!

    • @dianaantonova1196
      @dianaantonova1196 3 месяца назад +2

      Yeah! For me , as Ukrainian learner, it`s also very difficult to hear some differencies, even when he accentuate them (especially with New York accent and its "l" becoming "w" - i can't catch it anyway!

    • @masond7573
      @masond7573 Месяц назад +2

      I think that's typical if you're listening to a language that isn't your mother tongue. I didn't notice a difference between French spoken in Paris vs French spoken in Montréal

    • @dennisdonoghue9202
      @dennisdonoghue9202 Месяц назад

      Of course. If that is not your native tongue, its not noticeable. As a French person, you don't notice other French people sounding different than the region you are from? I have always heard the way people speak has something to do with cliamte

    • @robertwoodrow9650
      @robertwoodrow9650 28 дней назад +2

      That would be > "Hear" the difference!

    • @excancerpoik
      @excancerpoik 7 дней назад

      Yeah it's the same with swedish move a few km and its basically another language but people say it all sounds the same

  • @joseitsme
    @joseitsme Год назад +893

    Here in California, we have several different accents. Not only the SF Valley accent, but the "surfer" accent and the Chicano accent.

    • @mszafran51
      @mszafran51 11 месяцев назад +90

      Yo dude, like, what’s happening man?! 🤣🤣🤣

    • @Dre_Key
      @Dre_Key 11 месяцев назад +41

      yep there are several, probably not enough time to cover them all in this video, and it depends on where you are.

    • @ZackfromNoHo
      @ZackfromNoHo 11 месяцев назад +70

      The "Val" accent is not real common anymore, even here in the 818 (the telephone area code for the Valley). I listened to the video to find out what he considered to be the California accent. I always thought of the CA accent as being more or less the standard U.S. accent because we have people from all over living here so we get a mixture. My own accent is closer to "surfer dude" but with a mixture of New England (my mom was from Boston) and Texan (I have friends and spent time there before the pandemic). Y'all pahk the cah ovuh theah...

    • @shaunsteele6926
      @shaunsteele6926 11 месяцев назад +45

      valley/surfer/stoner accents are all pretty much the same. I'm not any of those things but I still sort of speak that way from growing up in SoCal

    • @shaunsteele6926
      @shaunsteele6926 11 месяцев назад +33

      @@ZackfromNoHo probably because the "valley accent" was exploited in the 1980s making them all self conscious of it lol

  • @bonnieb.8040
    @bonnieb.8040 11 месяцев назад +588

    Not only does the southern accent vary from state to state, it varies in each state. For example, the accent in East Tennessee is different from Middle Tennessee.

    • @familysystem
      @familysystem 10 месяцев назад +19

      I swear, those people in the mountains in east tennessee have a whole nother language to the people in west tn where I’m from! They’ve got a beautiful sound over there.

    • @MeadeSkeltonMusic
      @MeadeSkeltonMusic 10 месяцев назад +5

      Virginia has many different ones too. In SW VA they are very different from Tidewater.

    • @BarryBishop
      @BarryBishop 9 месяцев назад +2

      Native Texan here and I've noticed that Texas has at least 4 different regional accents: East Texas has a nasal twang, West Texas and Panhandle (but not El Paso) a drawl (esp. noticiable in the L's and R's) South Texas with its Spanish influenced English., Central and rural areas with a general southern accent and all regions with unique Texas lexicon.

    • @Ethan-fh9lq
      @Ethan-fh9lq 9 месяцев назад +4

      Tennessee is really three small states lumped together. Historically East Tennessee was very distinct geographically, economically, politically from the rest of the state.
      It was for instance one of the only areas that resisted confederate rule during the Civil War- East Tennesseeans voted overwhelmingly against secession even after the attack on Sumpter, and after the war broke out it became a hot bed for Union sympathizing guerrillas and saboteurs. It was also one of the only parts of the South where Republicans had a chance at local elections during most of the century after the civil war.
      Of course the mountainous valleys of East Tennessee tend to produce pretty different social patterns than West Tennessee’s Mississippi plantation lands.

    • @Cxrsxn999
      @Cxrsxn999 9 месяцев назад

      I live in East Tennessee and people say I sound like I’m from Alabama or Texas

  • @bloxoss
    @bloxoss 9 месяцев назад +76

    As an American, there are definitely more variations of dialects, but you hit the big ones! I'm impressed :)

    • @SophiesDriver
      @SophiesDriver 8 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, he has a very thorough embrace of ridiculously stereotypical speech patterns assigned to a variety of English Speaking US Americans

    • @ExpTube1969
      @ExpTube1969 Месяц назад

      The Valley accent is Hilarious.

  • @lynnmcrae8655
    @lynnmcrae8655 9 месяцев назад +56

    I agree with the comments that there are soooo many "American" accents. It's nice to see the nuances analyzed and explained. I would also love to hear some excerpts from native speakers included in the video.

  • @rbhughbanks
    @rbhughbanks 11 месяцев назад +839

    People from Alabama don’t have an accent, but you did a great job explaining why the rest of the country talks so funny. 😊

    • @nc3826
      @nc3826 11 месяцев назад +107

      denial, ya'll is not only a place in Egypt 😆

    • @ChristopherMHeaps
      @ChristopherMHeaps 11 месяцев назад +73

      Alabama is an absolutely terrible place. So glad I never have to go back.

    • @rmj7
      @rmj7 11 месяцев назад +2

      😂😂😂

    • @rbhughbanks
      @rbhughbanks 11 месяцев назад +160

      @@ChristopherMHeaps Mister, I thought everyone would understand that I was joking. My accent is thick and slow. Your comment about Alabama, on the other-hand, was just mean and hurtful. Shame on you.

    • @DarthVantos
      @DarthVantos 11 месяцев назад +23

      @@rbhughbanks Im not from Alabama im from Maryland. But people i know from Alabama all say they are glad they left. What are yall doing down there?

  • @AlgaeEater09
    @AlgaeEater09 11 месяцев назад +816

    You can DEFINITELY hear how the New York accent originated from the British accent. It's got so many similarities.

    • @obaidulhaque7687
      @obaidulhaque7687 11 месяцев назад +17

      YEA ,, VERY FIRST I NOTICE 😂😂

    • @wezzuh2482
      @wezzuh2482 11 месяцев назад +29

      English itself is from Britain so that doesn't make much sense.
      If what you are referring to is the "rhotacism", that is the fact that both the British and New Yorkers don't pronounce r's in final positions, then that is actually a change not a preservation.
      Most varieties of American English, including standard American articulates the r's, but that is a preservation from an earlier form of English. It was British and New England varieties that stopped pronouncing them.

    • @wezzuh2482
      @wezzuh2482 11 месяцев назад +8

      @@skidder67 The modern variety of English that most closely resembles Early Modern pronunciation is Dublin English, not Southern American.

    • @scrambler69-xk3kv
      @scrambler69-xk3kv 11 месяцев назад +8

      Hate the no letter R New York accent. That is why I love the mute button on my tv if I hear it I can just hit the Shut up button.

    • @bchristian85
      @bchristian85 11 месяцев назад +3

      Partially true. Because Hollywood typically gives characters modern British accents for films set in the colonial era, people assume that American English slowly over time diverged from British English, but it was more the other way around, with what we now think of as British English (the Received Pronunciation) taking hold in Britain in the 19th century. However, the accent was still more neutral than a modern Southern drawl.

  • @dablaqueguy
    @dablaqueguy 10 месяцев назад +14

    I'm a black guy from the Chicago area, who's parents are from southern Georgia. I've noticed the way I speak has a mix of every accent it seems. When I was younger, I noticed how differently I sounded from kids from wealthier neighborhoods, so I worked to pronounce words more clearly. Now i'm older, and not so concerned about how I sound, but I definitely slip into speaking similiar to whoever i'm around. I don't conciously know i'm doing it.

    • @bigd2829
      @bigd2829 10 месяцев назад +1

      Huh that is very interesting

    • @Svince54
      @Svince54 9 месяцев назад +2

      You are not the only one. I have sometimes had to apologize to people whose accent I started using after I was talking to them for a few minutes. Most people don't notice or don't mind. We moved a lot when I was a kid. I think it developed as a defensive mechanism. I have one friend who does the same thing, but I am sure that most people just speak with the accent they learned first, and never developed a blending in skill.

  • @freneticoddball2112
    @freneticoddball2112 10 месяцев назад +16

    I chuckled when you mentioned the Florida panhandle and Louisiana. I grew up in both states! When my son got into kindergarten, his teacher called me in for a conference to discuss his language skills. She was suggesting I put him in Speech Therapy because he wasn't speaking clearly at 5 years old (we had moved to the Pocono, PA area by then). I was infuriated! My son was incredibly verbal, highly communicative, and had a vast understanding of multi-syllabic words. So I stood my son in front of her and asked him some simple questions:
    'What water falls from the sky" his answer ---> "Rain." (pronounced 'rane')
    "What sound does a telephone make?" -----> "Ring." (pronounced 'rayng [soft g])
    "What color is grass? -----> "Green." (pronounced grayne)
    "What is bread made from?" -----> "Grain."
    ----Deep South takes most 'ee' sounds and pronounced them 'ay" as in 'hay'-----
    And when I showed him certain pictures? ----Ow-ell (Owl), tow-ell (towel), ow-er (hour), gray-ess (grass); you get the point.
    Simply and firmly stated, if she was to teach language arts, certainly she understood that children speak in different dialects. It was not her job to correct my son on the certain way he learned to speak growing up. We spoke proper English, no 'aint's' and "gunnas" (going to), we say "May I" and "Please" and "Thank You" and address all adults as Mr. or Miss/Mrs. She conceded.
    But we do say "Fixin' to"....

    • @stuartm6069
      @stuartm6069 8 месяцев назад +3

      I completely understand your frustration with this. I'm 58 now, when I was about 8 we moved from Boston to eastern Ohio, My mother and I both had thick Brookline accents (think President John Kennedy's accent). I eventually had to go to speech classes to lose my accent because no one could understand what I was saying. I'm so sorry now that my accent is gone and replaced with the very plain Ohio accent.

  • @Sal.K--BC
    @Sal.K--BC Год назад +445

    The overuse of 'like' has spread to the speech of young people in many places, including parts of Canada. Also, 'no worries' has spread far from Australia. When I was a kid, no Canadian would have ever said 'no worries,' but now it's very common.

    • @broodge45
      @broodge45 Год назад +30

      Or 'no problem' … and why does every sentence now start with "So..."

    • @zhangshawn2357
      @zhangshawn2357 Год назад +11

      That’s true, Australian teenagers use a lot “like” as well, almost in every sentences

    • @psychescope239
      @psychescope239 Год назад +26

      Hell, even in places across the globe you can hear teens mimicking this mannerism. I live in Poland and in the past few years the conjunction "jakby" (a literal translation of "like") has come to be used in exactly this way, despite it being, in many cases, semantically incorrect.

    • @xapaga1
      @xapaga1 Год назад +18

      @@psychescope239
      The same applies here in Japan. Young people tend to use the filler, "mitaina" when it's absolutely unnecessary to use it. Whether it's an influence from Hollywood movies, I really don't know.

    • @SirakawaHaruka
      @SirakawaHaruka Год назад +20

      That’s because young people today are so stupid that they will lose the train of thought while talking if they don’t use “like” all the times.

  • @Jackjohnjay
    @Jackjohnjay 11 месяцев назад +176

    When I, a native Minnesotan, spent the summer in Maine as a teen, the locals gave me so much grief about how I said the word ‘bag’! They laughed so hard at us! Haha. That was 25 years ago and I couldn’t hear the difference at all! 😂 thank you for finally explaining it!

    • @Jackal_Blitz
      @Jackal_Blitz 11 месяцев назад +6

      I grew up in northern Iowa, and definitely heard people saying "bayg". It's way thicker than he does it in this video. Some people even try to work it into the word Chicaygo.

    • @joeldowell5059
      @joeldowell5059 11 месяцев назад

      Oh man, I'm a Wyomingite currently living in North Dakota and that was one of the first things I noticed when I got up here, the accent definitely threw me off for a second!

    • @pizzaboisupreme
      @pizzaboisupreme 11 месяцев назад +7

      I think it's more a Mid-West-in-General accent. From a Michigander who also says pop and bayg.

    • @kmstins
      @kmstins 11 месяцев назад +3

      @Jewels...I will always remember the first time I visited my future in-laws in St. Paul. My fiance's mom told me to get her "a beg". I replied with "what?" She started flipping out and saying "a beg, a beg!". I stood there looking like a deer in headlights until she finally put the word paper in front of beg. 🤣💡🤗😉

    • @tsoliot5913
      @tsoliot5913 11 месяцев назад +2

      bieg

  • @tonyschmitz1997
    @tonyschmitz1997 10 месяцев назад +27

    My wife and I are both from Nebraska. She had the standard American accent I had more of a rural western dialect/accent. After moving to eastern South Dakota she’s picked up the Minnesota accent yet mine hasn’t changed or it’s gotten to be more standard but not when we go back to my family ranch I fall right back into the old accent.

  • @Twistaholic
    @Twistaholic 9 месяцев назад +18

    I grew up in California. It's important to note that the valley he is referring to is the San Fernando Valley, not the Central Valley. It's a suburb of Los Angeles. The word hella is more of a Nor-Cal thing and although it has migrated it's way down south it's not a part of the "typical" valley accent. Still loved hearing him do me though.

    • @mikeluna2026
      @mikeluna2026 3 месяца назад

      Oh, good to know, thanks.

    • @Eskey__
      @Eskey__ 2 месяца назад

      A 100% true. I’m born and raised in Southern California and no one says hella down this way. That’s definitely a Northern California thing.

    • @deanm375
      @deanm375 Месяц назад

      Totally accurate. Right? When I was a teen in the early 80's everything in SoCal was "bitchin' or Mega-Bitchin". Surfers might say something is "Tubular".

    • @caccalot3637
      @caccalot3637 11 дней назад

      @@Eskey__you probably live in middle class or higher

  • @sabinehalfhill4005
    @sabinehalfhill4005 11 месяцев назад +371

    I’m from Southern California. I do agree with the dialect being common amongst kids, but I feel like that was more common in the 90’s and early 2000’s. Also, you should cover the surfer accent which is another Calif classic 😂 there’s also spanglish, amongst others!

    • @kiajulian4619
      @kiajulian4619 11 месяцев назад +17

      I know everybody here still talks like that. And the surfer accent is pretty much the same as a valley accent... And you can't do Spanglish because then you're getting into the difference between how different races of people speak English in different states and that would take like all month. Lol

    • @TheSnerggly
      @TheSnerggly 10 месяцев назад +4

      Very true. My ex was a surfer, I could barely understand him sometimes.

    • @jonathanaldana4941
      @jonathanaldana4941 10 месяцев назад +7

      To me ppl from the OC have that typical surfer accent
      “Oohhh woah”

    • @albertovaldivia6132
      @albertovaldivia6132 9 месяцев назад +21

      @@kiajulian4619 surfer accent is very different from the valley accent he was explaining, surfer accent is a lot lazier and a longer stretch on vowels, like bro or dude and hella is specifically Bay Area dialect
      Another example of surfer dialect is dropping the t at the end of a word and replace it with a -d sound to make them flow better like “what’s up” = “wha(d) up”

    • @yacobz
      @yacobz 9 месяцев назад +6

      I grew up in the San Fernando valley in the late 90s and 00s, and have never met a single person that spoke with that caricature of an accent. Aside from bilingual kids, I don't think we really had a discernable accent. If we do, it's definitely nothing like what everyone thinks "valley" sounds like.

  • @Mahal.Kita_
    @Mahal.Kita_ 10 месяцев назад +141

    As a Texan I would say the main difference between southern drawl and twang is the drawl is slow and deep while with twange we speak a bit faster and slightly higher pitched. Another thing, drawl sounds a lot more southern while twang is less heavy but still very southern

    • @gmichele4603
      @gmichele4603 6 месяцев назад +1

      As a Brit, I think the Texan accent/ southern drawl is the most attractive American accent by far: it’s really charming. Are there also big regional variations within Texas itself?

    • @buddyunderwood5873
      @buddyunderwood5873 5 месяцев назад

      im from the north of Louisiana where i'm from i'm from when i'm talking on the phone with family or talking to people i know not at school the country comes out. But when im at school i have a mix of the 2 one my friends heared the way i said ten it kinda sounded like tin

    • @jumpinjee
      @jumpinjee 4 месяца назад

      ⁠@@gmichele4603 I’m from Texas. There are huge differences in Texas, not only regional but the difference between people in the city and just a few miles outside of the city are dramatic. Much like the differences between London proper and Cockney.

    • @kevinwilkins7851
      @kevinwilkins7851 3 месяца назад

      In upper midwestern states all the way north to Michigan, Illinois and Wisconsin there's a distinct twang and especially in the country. Am from Milwaukee and when I talk to my best bro from north of me in the country he has a pronounced twang.

  • @citroen143
    @citroen143 10 месяцев назад +50

    You are the typical friendly American guy. God bless you! The way you pronounce English is breathtaking. You bring hope to all those foreigners who strive to learn your language🙂 I was impressed by your ability to reproduce so many accents, you are better than many actors. Thank you for helping us with English all over the world. Best Regards😃

    • @InteractiveEng
      @InteractiveEng  10 месяцев назад +2

      Thanks for commenting & checking out the lesson. 👍

    • @user-ek3km5or1q
      @user-ek3km5or1q 6 месяцев назад

      Beautiful smile, too!

    • @user-ek3km5or1q
      @user-ek3km5or1q 6 месяцев назад

      What's the name of the accent, where some people tack on, 'er' at the end of words that don't exist such as IDEA-ER, Linda becomes LINDER, Cuba becomes CUBER, etc.?

    • @citroen143
      @citroen143 6 месяцев назад

      That much is true! A smile that kills (Harrison Ford), posh accent (Annette Bening), charming and amiable manners (Gary Cooper). Cutting remarks and puns (Bugs Bunny), at times despthicable (Duffy duck). But to get -got-got and stop disparaging Mr U's Reputation! No more cruelties against colour and behaviour! Signed: ye friendly neighbour a.k.a. The Merry Man. Shall I pass the fan-test or the ominous verb "to flunk" is downing on my endangered fate? Linguistically Yours 🙂@@user-ek3km5or1q

    • @88KeysIdaho
      @88KeysIdaho 3 месяца назад

      @@user-ek3km5or1q I think that has something to do with "Rhotic" accents. You piqued my curiosity, and I found this video for you:
      ruclips.net/video/-CGISNe4LrI/видео.html

  • @brianlabarthe8511
    @brianlabarthe8511 4 месяца назад +3

    Used to work at ValleyFair in MN, it's been over 10 years now, brought me back instantly. I miss people of MN, thanks so much for this video!

  • @bobbynguyen9921
    @bobbynguyen9921 Год назад +185

    10:46 this valley accent is a Southern California thing and “hella” is a Northern California (more specifically Bay Area) thing. You would not commonly hear someone speaking with that accent and saying the word hella. Before it was more popularized, the use of that word indicated which part of the state you were from.

    • @rexx9496
      @rexx9496 Год назад +34

      Hella spread to everywhere now.

    • @voongnz
      @voongnz Год назад +11

      Hella is in New Zealand now, and I didn't bring it back from my cousins in Northern CA.

    • @FreedomLovin
      @FreedomLovin Год назад +13

      "Hella" actually originated in my home town of Hayward, an Oakland suburb. I hella used it as a kid but it seemed dumb when I got older.

    • @RileySullivan
      @RileySullivan Год назад +14

      “Hella” has definitely spread to Southern California too. Every time I hear someone say that, I ask “are you from the Bay Area?” And often times they say “no”.

    • @leflores91
      @leflores91 Год назад +3

      Facts. I used to live in South Lake Tahoe. Yeah, that's further north. But, I picked up on certain things. I’m from NY, by the way.

  • @76bwjordan
    @76bwjordan 11 месяцев назад +175

    Being a native southern speaker that's lived around both the drawl and twangs, I would say the key difference between the two is more about pitch and tempo. An upbeat, nasal, quick "Hey, y'all" would be a good example of a twang, while a drawl would be a slower, deeper, breathy, sometimes almost throaty "howwwalllyalllldoin'?"

    • @MeadeSkeltonMusic
      @MeadeSkeltonMusic 11 месяцев назад +1

      I say both, but there is kind of a light twang that isn't so hard on the ear. In parts of Appalachia.

    • @DoctorSmartyPants
      @DoctorSmartyPants 11 месяцев назад +1

      And choice of words, right?

    • @Minorcan123
      @Minorcan123 11 месяцев назад

      Nailed it!

    • @NecroTV666
      @NecroTV666 11 месяцев назад

      I'm from NY and we don't speak that way.

    • @alexanderboulton2123
      @alexanderboulton2123 11 месяцев назад +2

      For the difference between twang and drawl, say “Hell yeah brother!” and then “Hwhell I do declare…”

  • @CrimsonRaven51
    @CrimsonRaven51 24 дня назад +2

    Also with a New York accent is a hold over from Old English which is to add an “r” sound to words that end in “w” as in “I sore you yesterday,” for “I saw you yesterday.”

  • @stanstanly3812
    @stanstanly3812 4 месяца назад +4

    This was great! Being a Air Force brat I've grown up all over the place and I've heard all kinds of dialects of the english language. Spot on.

  • @davidkasquare
    @davidkasquare Год назад +389

    Wow. Just from the little you talked about and in the Minnesota accent, I can tell it’s an accent that’s been somewhat influenced by the Nordic languages, probably because of the huge amount of Swedes, Norwegians and Finns that moved there. I’m from Finland, and those sounds are really familiar to the English that people speak here.

    • @broodge45
      @broodge45 Год назад +16

      The cadence as well...

    • @davidkasquare
      @davidkasquare Год назад +2

      @@broodge45 yes, agree

    • @BaconDrive
      @BaconDrive Год назад +48

      The Minnesota accent has a lot of crossover with Canada.

    • @What_Makes_Climate_Tick
      @What_Makes_Climate_Tick Год назад +22

      I come from Minnesota, near the border with North Dakota. My mother was from a very small town where everyone was Norwegian, and some even third and fourth-generation Americans spoke it at home. While the pure o sound is true and highly stereotypical, I think the pure oo sound is even more characteristic. I now live in southeastern Michigan, and when people say "food", I hear it as being shaded by varying amounts toward "feud". My father is from a Nebraska community with a mix of Swedes and Germans, and this was true there too.

    • @davidkasquare
      @davidkasquare Год назад +10

      @@What_Makes_Climate_Tick … and you even have a Swedish name, Löfgren, Leave Branch, which is a typical Swedish name with two parts of nature combined. My actual surname is Forsberg, Stream Mountain. 😊 And yes, I do agree that it’s the vowels where the Scandinavian “ancestry” can be heard the most.

  • @lisaalinaaa7765
    @lisaalinaaa7765 Год назад +291

    I sometimes struggle with pronouncing the ‘r’ in words when talking in english, so it’s actually great to hear that you don’t really do that in NY or in the Boston dialect. Makes me way happier that I could sound like a local if I tried hard enough without having to struggle with the ‘r’!

    • @greenmachine5600
      @greenmachine5600 Год назад +27

      yea that is true. There are many non rhotic dialects/accent along the east coast, especially in the northeast. Not just the New York accent and Boston accent, but the New Jersey, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Maine, and New Hampshire accent too. There are some non rhotic accent in the south too. The traditional Georgia accent, Mississippi, and Louisiana accents are non rhotic.

    • @Shoppinghappens
      @Shoppinghappens Год назад +28

      Boston…where “car keys” sounds like something you wear.
      (Khakis)

    • @Fummy007
      @Fummy007 Год назад +14

      British English doesnt pronounce the "r" after a vowel too.

    • @CreepersNeedHugs
      @CreepersNeedHugs Год назад +7

      Go anywhere in the UK and it's the same thing. As​@@Shoppinghappens said, "car keys" sounds like, "khakis."

    • @jordanashtonsmith5436
      @jordanashtonsmith5436 Год назад

      @@Shoppinghappens cockies??? 😅😂

  • @jeanneprieto5219
    @jeanneprieto5219 9 месяцев назад +3

    As a Californian, I think the use of “like” as a filler tends to lessen with age. I remember when I was in HS in the late 90s in the Bay Area, a teacher listening in on a conversation asked me if I was at all aware of how many “likes” I used. 😂😂 I don’t think I use “like” as much, as I used to, but I still do it quite a bit.😂

  • @zekharye1
    @zekharye1 Год назад +89

    I grew up in Minnesota in the 1950s and 1960s. We didn’t say “soda” (except for “club soda”) - we said “pop” when referring to soft drinks. Pop came in bottles back then.

    • @mike.b90210
      @mike.b90210 Год назад

      Exactly

    • @juanguzmanhernandez7288
      @juanguzmanhernandez7288 Год назад +1

      That is right, I had a friend, elderly, he used to pop when referring to what we call soda, at first I did not understand but he was drinking a soda and I understood that context, have a great day

    • @COlson-rh3dg
      @COlson-rh3dg 11 месяцев назад +4

      Where I live we still call it 'pop'.

    • @bchristian85
      @bchristian85 11 месяцев назад +2

      And if you live in the South, it's all "Coke" whether it's Coca-Cola or not.

    • @tomfields3682
      @tomfields3682 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@bchristian85My friend from VA called it co-cola!

  • @whoahdudeman
    @whoahdudeman Год назад +82

    No native Minnesotan would EVER say, "put the soda in the bag." They would instead say, "Put the pop in the bag." Big difference.

    • @anndeecosita3586
      @anndeecosita3586 Год назад +5

      My coworkers and I recently had lunch with a guy from Minnesota. I think he has been working to get rid of his accent but it slipped out when he said the word both. Sounded like boath. It was so cute. I love that accent. ❤

    • @kevinthompson507
      @kevinthompson507 Год назад +6

      I was out west with some coworkers and they said that I don’t have a Minnesota accent. Later in the evening after some drinks they said “oh there it is!” Another time people said I didn’t have an accent and then I got a phone call from my dad. I hung up and they were like, “what was that? You sounded like a different person on the phone with him.”

    • @mrZanZibar777
      @mrZanZibar777 Год назад +1

      Also the sound in bag is more like ray, say, etc. The video presenter isn't emphasizing it enough.

    • @bretlir
      @bretlir Год назад +1

      Put the pahp in the bague

    • @whoahdudeman
      @whoahdudeman Год назад

      @@bretlir Yes! You nailed it!

  • @eleriloki6275
    @eleriloki6275 10 месяцев назад +6

    I grew up in NW Iowa, spent 14 yrs in Texas (and married a Texan), 20 yrs in East TN and now 6 yrs in WI. Luckily I mostly kept my Iowa accent (Standard American with flattened "a") but I do fall now and then into a weird southern drawl. Because of this locale diversity I have noticed a few things about the accents from the places I've lived.
    1. Texans flip the short i and double ee sounds. Example, "I hurt my heel walking up that hill" would sound like "I hurt my hill walking up that heel."
    2. Southerners tend to mush a whole sentence into one or two words. Example, "yontu" = do you want to. Or "fixin to" = getting ready to. And of course "y'all" = you all. However, there is a distinction some southerners have adopted. They will say "y'all" to refer to one person and "all y'all" to refer to a group. (I have since switched to "y'all" from the "you guys" I used to say in Iowa.)
    3. Southerners will move vowels from one word to another. Example: "oil can" will sound like "ol cian (cyan)" - moving the "i" from oil to can.
    4. Wisconsinites, even in southern WI, have a tendency to sound Canadian. They even say "eh". And "aboot".

  • @marissa8776
    @marissa8776 9 месяцев назад +14

    Being from California I can also tell you we tend to drop the “T” in words like Santa turns to sanna, Sacramento turns to sacramenno, mountain turns to mounin etc lol

    • @user-ol4dl9ks2o
      @user-ol4dl9ks2o День назад

      Isn't it just a common English thing? Even though I'm not a native speaker, I've heard many americans and british pronounce words without "t", especially at the end of the word. [start] turns into [stah'] or [star'] (different from star) in words like "mountain" that "t" gets reduced to a glottal stop and so on.

  • @theveryfirst
    @theveryfirst 11 месяцев назад +80

    I'm English. I love the US southern drawl accent. Beautiful.

    • @ryanc970
      @ryanc970 10 месяцев назад

      👍

    • @brianmilosevic8400
      @brianmilosevic8400 3 месяца назад

      Sounds rednecky 😅

    • @schs1977
      @schs1977 Месяц назад

      A common Southern phrase would be "Tell Momma an 'em I said Hey", which means "Tell your Momma and your family I said Hi".

    • @My2up2downCastle
      @My2up2downCastle 15 дней назад

      Me too.... i'm from deepest darkest Buckinghamshire (England) and we have almost lost our country accent..... but i love the Southern US accent. There's a wonderful short video knocking about with a little Southern boy writing out his mum's shopping list..... stroh bearies, tayders, mo tayders, ayaggs,...so bloody cute!

  • @RhiannonRaven
    @RhiannonRaven 11 месяцев назад +39

    I am from the UK and my uncle and aunty who are now in their 70's, emigrated to Boston when they were in their 20's. They have a really interesting accent which is a mixture of Welsh English and Boston, its really fascinating to listen to them talk when they come over. As a native UK English speaker I find it very hard to distinguish between the various American accents other than the New York and the Southern accents. Very informative video, thank you.

    • @lisaroberts8556
      @lisaroberts8556 11 месяцев назад +1

      You may be referring to the American Trans Atlantic Accent. Look for American News reels of the 1920’s. Lots of News Broadcasters of the time. Almost all had that very distinct accent. Today the accent is near nonexistent.

    • @dylanmurphy9389
      @dylanmurphy9389 11 месяцев назад +2

      Same, they all sound the same to me

    • @sonyavanwoerkom3108
      @sonyavanwoerkom3108 11 месяцев назад +2

      Where are you from? I'm hearing ta (to) and cer-in (certain) as you speak :)

  • @CamJam312
    @CamJam312 9 месяцев назад +8

    The southern accent (SC native) has a wide variety that changes not only in just state to state, but also from county to county. A common word that I hear pronounced differently is "fire". Sometimes the "r" sound can be held in the back of the throat (popular in towns settled by Scots-Irish). Sometimes I hear folks dropping the "r" sound and putting more emphasis on the "i" sound. With the older folk, like my papa, I've heard it spoken as "far" with a drawn out "a" and a little lazy on the "r", subtle but still noticeable

    • @stuartm6069
      @stuartm6069 8 месяцев назад

      Having lived in South Carolina for a number of years, the state is very interesting with it's accents. The coastal accent (which has similarities to the Boston accent only slower and more drawn out) is very different from the upstate accent which is closer to Appalachian hillbilly of eastern Tennessee and West Virginia.

  • @johnford1043
    @johnford1043 6 месяцев назад +3

    As a Californian, I can tell you that your presentation is pretty good. The Valley accent used is a bit dated. The word emphasis is still used as well as accenting the first syllable of every word is still used. I think it comes from radio and TV announcement style of speaking.

  • @trapin68
    @trapin68 Год назад +109

    It’s not just the Minnesota accent, it’s prevalent through North Dakota, Wisconsin, and Michigan’s upper peninsula. I believe it’s actually called the Northern Accent.

    • @tranquilized13
      @tranquilized13 Год назад +13

      It's the Canadian accent lol

    • @hankamania
      @hankamania 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@tranquilized13 Except they punctuate with "ya?" rather than "eh?"

    • @shionkreth7536
      @shionkreth7536 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@tranquilized13 As a Canadian I had to rewatch that segment as I couldn't pick out 'what was different'. :D

    • @anderander5662
      @anderander5662 11 месяцев назад +4

      What I notice is the similarity to the Chicago accent where they say Chi KAAAH go and Minn e SOOOH tah

    • @buckjones4901
      @buckjones4901 11 месяцев назад +6

      Yup people from the Upper Pennisula in Michigan have an accent (Yoopers) compared to lower Michigan. It is very close to Canadian accent.. aye... lol

  • @southpaw487
    @southpaw487 11 месяцев назад +52

    I thought for sure he was going to do an over-exaggerated New York accent, but it was actually very good. I'm from Brooklyn and when my late husband would do a New York accent, I always had to tell him that, for most people, it was really more subtle than what he was doing.

    • @justin_your_cousin9273
      @justin_your_cousin9273 9 месяцев назад +2

      Upstate NY doesn't sound like that

    • @pamelamyers9613
      @pamelamyers9613 9 месяцев назад

      Massachusetts is the exaggerated accent. I like to listen to people talk in that state.

    • @Stormento2
      @Stormento2 9 месяцев назад

      @@justin_your_cousin9273 seems like he is doing a more southern ny accent in the video

    • @its.kaylin.8807
      @its.kaylin.8807 7 месяцев назад

      @@justin_your_cousin9273 bc nobody cares enough about upstate ny- its very forgetable for someone who isn't from NY/NJ.

    • @justin_your_cousin9273
      @justin_your_cousin9273 7 месяцев назад

      @@its.kaylin.8807 NYC smells

  • @c.chanelrienstraroman984
    @c.chanelrienstraroman984 7 месяцев назад +2

    I was born and raised in Minnesota, and I have to agree with what another gentleman pointed out, its pop in Minnesota. I have never heard the word soda in Minnesota.

  • @user-bq7js2gy4x
    @user-bq7js2gy4x 4 месяца назад +2

    As a native Minnesotan, one would say, “up on the rouf”, or “up the crick without a paddle” and of course lasagna is that Italian “hot dish.”

  • @kenstrauss5841
    @kenstrauss5841 Год назад +48

    I grew up in Long Beach New York . You described my accent pretty close BUT I can hear very distinct “ New York “ accents from Bronx, Yonkers, Brooklyn , and Jersey . All within a 30 mile radius of Manhattan !

    • @paulbedichek5177
      @paulbedichek5177 Год назад +6

      The Bronx accent is from the Dutch,and has lasted all these years. Instead of the, they say duh, all the t's are d's.

    • @AnvilMAn603
      @AnvilMAn603 11 месяцев назад +1

      theres no different accent for each of the boroughs of new york, thats down to racial accents like brooklyn italian and such.

    • @LUIS-ox1bv
      @LUIS-ox1bv 11 месяцев назад

      @@paulbedichek5177 In Chicago they also use d in place of the t, and there was no large settlement of Dutch, or Dutch influence in Chicago.

    • @tomfields3682
      @tomfields3682 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@LUIS-ox1bvIt was the German settlers who brought that to Chicago. Germans speak Deutsch, which is often confused with Dutch.

    • @MetroCollectablesandvlogs
      @MetroCollectablesandvlogs 11 месяцев назад

      Yeah, def does not apply to Strong Island .

  • @Mark-sy2bx
    @Mark-sy2bx 11 месяцев назад +70

    I'm from Minnesota, my daughter did not grow up there, but when in another country talking to an American she was asked if she's from Minnesota because of her accent. I wasn't aware we had one other than the stereotypes.

    • @miadzag
      @miadzag 11 месяцев назад +9

      I'm from Detroit, and I went to the top of the mitten and got asked about my accent at a gas station. I was like "um, accent?" Apparently so 💁‍♀️

    • @nickpaine
      @nickpaine 11 месяцев назад +2

      "..top of the mitten". Wha...? The UP? Upper Peninsula ?

    • @merricat3025
      @merricat3025 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@Nick Cifuno you don't know the mitten?

    • @miadzag
      @miadzag 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@nickpaine nooo lol the north part of the lower peninsula thats shaped like a mitten

    • @sgtelias2258
      @sgtelias2258 8 месяцев назад +3

      My company HQ's are based in MN and I think it really depends. I actually expected everyone to have a heavy MN accent but they don't. Those from up north have more distinct accents than those from Minneapolis. Also, the Wisconsin employees have a very noticeable accent... similar in many ways but slightly different.

  • @manontherails4937
    @manontherails4937 3 месяца назад +2

    Californian and Angelino since 1960. The biggest difference between all the accents you listed and the Valley-Girl accent is, the Valley-Girl accent only spoken in a brief period of time; I think exclusively during the 80s. Not before or after like the New York, Southern, Minnesota, Boston or the Louisiana accent which are deep-rooted and have long time-span ethnic beginnings - and are still heard today. However, you are correct in stating that all these accents are very stereotypical.

  • @brendanfarrow3674
    @brendanfarrow3674 9 месяцев назад +2

    I'd say in Appalachian there's a lot of minor differences in grammar aswell. Like, instead of saying: "I can't wait to get one of those," I'd say, "I can't wait to get me one of them." Reflexives are super, super common, and "them" often replaces "those"

    • @SandfordSmythe
      @SandfordSmythe 7 месяцев назад +1

      I worked with an Israeli who was fluent in 6 languages including English. We were interviewing someone from Appalachia, West Virginia. He looked at me helpless and said he couldn't understand what the man was saying.

  • @michelleonardo4389
    @michelleonardo4389 Год назад +104

    As an English major, this is definitely one of my favorite topics. ❤️

    • @InteractiveEng
      @InteractiveEng  Год назад +13

      Glad you enjoy it! 😊

    • @xapaga1
      @xapaga1 Год назад +7

      In British English (BrE), "an English major" means a British Army officer with the NATO rank code of OF-4 below the rank of lieutenant colonel and above the rank of captain whose ethnic background lies in England. But in American English (AmE), it means a university/college student who studies (or reads in BrE) English and/or its related literature as his/her speciality (or specialty in AmE).

    • @VivekPatel-ze6jy
      @VivekPatel-ze6jy Год назад +1

      ​@@xapaga1 I'm from England, but due to the amount of American media I see, my first thought was the 'studied English at uni' meaning

    • @xapaga1
      @xapaga1 Год назад

      @@VivekPatel-ze6jy
      As an Anglophile I find the situation quite deplorable. I feel as though I acted more in tune with the English than the real life Englishman.

  • @daveymeshell6337
    @daveymeshell6337 Год назад +111

    I think that the hardest accent to replicate is the accent between Maryland and Philadelphia. It’s a mix of northern and southern. As well, it would be interesting to see a video about the connection between a Brooklyn accent, and a New Orleans accent.

    • @jamesp13152
      @jamesp13152 Год назад +12

      Philadelphia here. Meeting people across America for the first time, some thought I was Southern, some Northern.😄. Philadelphia not only has a unique accent they also destroy the language. Hello=( Yo sup). How are you= (How yizz doin.) On and on 🤣

    • @christopherfritz3840
      @christopherfritz3840 Год назад +6

      Isn't that the accent that Kate Winslet had to Master in that movie she played a detective?

    • @jamesp13152
      @jamesp13152 Год назад +4

      @@christopherfritz3840 😀Yes. Water= wooter. Singular person is, yizz. Multiple people is, youze. How yizz doin Christofer?

    • @GeoGuy388
      @GeoGuy388 Год назад +6

      It's definitely a challenging accent.
      The actor Dominic West, who's from England, played the lead character on The Wire which was a police officer from Baltimore. West had so much trouble getting down the Baltimore accent that he and the producers agreed that he should just go with a "generic northeastern" accent.
      Very few of the actors on that show were able to speak with a Baltimore accent, and the ones who did were natives of the area in real life.

    • @daveymeshell6337
      @daveymeshell6337 Год назад

      There’s definitely a connection between Baltimore and Philly as far as their accents go.
      In both places an “oa” sound seems to come out as an “ew” sound as in hoagie to hewgie and a Coke to a Cewk.
      The mixture of the northern and southern accent is the most interesting thing to me.
      It seems to be the epicenter where the north and south meet, long-term culturally, at least.
      Although, you find the same thing in a New Orleans accent. I grew up in Brooklyn and the New Orleans accent is the closest thing to a Brooklyn accent that I’ve heard. The Brooklyn accent really must “still” lean heavily on when Brooklyn was a part of Amsterdam. When I was in Amsterdam, the way they spoke English reminded me of NYC in general. “ee” sounds becoming “uh” sounds. Get the phone, get the door becoming get duh phone, get duh door.

  • @davidplotkin5173
    @davidplotkin5173 20 дней назад

    Somehow this came onto my feed and I'm glad it did! I very much like to mimic accents, even international ones, and you did a good high level summary of how the major dialects emphasize, like, different thangs. Thank ye so much!

  • @A3._coffie
    @A3._coffie 28 дней назад +1

    Im from southern Florida so you hear less of the Southern accent here but you definitely nailed it with the Southern Twang. I always forget we gots that here until it accidentally slips out in conversation. Also if you're talking to someone else with a southern accent (either kind) you subconsciously feed off eachothers accent and it becomes more noticable

  • @Lemoncatsf
    @Lemoncatsf 11 месяцев назад +34

    Grew up in a coastal, beach community in California but picked up a little of my mother’s Minnesota accent. I love all of the regional US accents but will never forget a childhood cross country trip and my SoCal raised father not being able to understand the clerks at a convenience store outside of Atlanta in the 80s 😂

  • @tonyrodd6348
    @tonyrodd6348 Год назад +10

    I'm from the UK and my daughter says "like" all the time. Obviously picked it up from American dominated SM. Does my head in as we say here.

  • @cristinaharrison8435
    @cristinaharrison8435 2 месяца назад +3

    Wonderful rendition of American accents.I am an Italian linguist teaching languages in Los Angeles and found your presentation very interesting! Well done!

  • @ursulakolb3760
    @ursulakolb3760 4 месяца назад +2

    You never picked up on the Southwest accent or Arizona accent. It's wild and unique. I'm a NYC/Philly transplant. I moved to Arizona in 1980. First up to Northern AZ right of the Apache Rez then to Tucson. In Arizona we mix reservation lingo/sounds with Spanglish and California Valley spill over. Body language and certain facial expressions also play an important role especially among the indigenous peoples.

  • @nissevelli
    @nissevelli Год назад +9

    Interesting watch. As a MN native, he got the long O’s and the “ayg” concepts correct, but the pronunciations were wrong. We hold the vowels much longer than the examples given here.

  • @BORN-to-Run
    @BORN-to-Run 11 месяцев назад +65

    Good Job.
    As a native Californian, I think our accent is a conglomeration of
    all other US accents, seeing that EVERYBODY and their uncle moved
    to California and pitched their accent into the fray.

    • @eliteteamkiller319
      @eliteteamkiller319 11 месяцев назад +5

      The L.A. stoner accent is unmistakable. I think it's actually a San Bernardino accent.

    • @shaunsteele6926
      @shaunsteele6926 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@eliteteamkiller319 you mean the "valley girl" accent?

    • @BORN-to-Run
      @BORN-to-Run 11 месяцев назад +3

      @H WHEN I was growing-up, "EVERYBODY'S" parents were from
      somewhere else.
      We children were born in California, but ALL OF OUR THE PARENTS
      were from other states; None of them were native Californians.

    • @BORN-to-Run
      @BORN-to-Run 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@shaunsteele6926 The Valley girl accent is a "Southern" California
      "Upper Class" accent (not ghetto), that originated in the San Fernando Valley
      area of Los Angeles.

    • @BORN-to-Run
      @BORN-to-Run 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@eliteteamkiller319 Hmm, I need to hear that.
      I'm from southern California, and we don't hear ourselves as
      sounding different from others.

  • @SuperPhilthyrich
    @SuperPhilthyrich 27 дней назад +1

    Terms crack me up. I work for a major corporation in WA, and if I ever greeted a coworker with, “What can I do for you, baby?”, it’d likely be the beginning of the end of my career. But this is a totally acceptable and common greeting in the south.

  • @sidimuslim9353
    @sidimuslim9353 3 месяца назад +3

    Dropping the R is also called rhoticity. As a non-native speaker, I searched for a long time for the official word. But I always spoke and speak rhotic English, which is my natural way of speaking English. When I was in the US in 2015, some people even thought I was American. Thank you for this informative and beautiful video. Greetings from Austria

    • @royjohnson465
      @royjohnson465 2 месяца назад +1

      Yes, I know very well about Rhoticity in English. The “Rhotic” 👍 English dialect like you and me speak is the very best one and the most purest and accurate form of English.
      “But” the R dropping “Non-Rhotic” 👎 dialect is terribly incorrect and they slaughter the English language being very wrong.

    • @sidimuslim9353
      @sidimuslim9353 2 месяца назад +1

      @@royjohnson465 👍

  • @slippperss
    @slippperss 11 месяцев назад +5

    I was born in California and lived there for 9 years, but am now living in a different state and I just realized that I do have that Valley Californian accent. It’s barely noticeable since I’m so used to it, haha

  • @Lil_Angry_Bitch
    @Lil_Angry_Bitch 8 месяцев назад +3

    I lived in California for 37 years, including in the San Fernando Valley and I only ever heard something resembling a "Valley" accent once, and it was from somebody who wasn't from California. The "Valley" accent is just a stereotype found in TV and Film. It may have been common in the 70s and 80s but it is now mostly extinct.
    Also the word "Hella" is commonly used in Northern California, like in the Bay Area, and isn't commonly used in Southern California, or in the San Fernando Valley, where the "Valley" accent originates.

  • @ellalouise5152
    @ellalouise5152 10 месяцев назад +7

    I am a Minnesotan and 2 months ago I went to California for a National Competition and this other high school kid who was from Ohio (we were all high schoolers) was purposely trying to find people with a Minnesotan accent. I made him very happy haha!

  • @dustang5.O
    @dustang5.O 6 месяцев назад +3

    In the South we would say, “I can’t wait to git me one of them.” We substitute and use “them” instead of ever using “those.”
    Also, there are about 5 different ways to use “y’all.” It’s quite interesting how we’ve taken one slang word and given it 5 different ways of being used.

  • @bob456fk6
    @bob456fk6 10 месяцев назад +11

    In Dallas, TX we speak the purest form of American English, haha 🙂
    Of course we say "ya'll can come over. " and "I'm fixing to wa(r)sh my hands."
    In rural areas they have a different accent that can be a challenge for foreigners who are used to the city accent.
    This whole subject is very fascinating.

  • @theophilhist6455
    @theophilhist6455 11 месяцев назад +22

    What a great lesson. We have similar language interests! Having taught for nearly 40 years and having taught in New Hampshire, New Jersey, Virginia, Ohio and Michigan.... when ever people hear me speak they pickup on what I have adapted by long term exposure to hearing natives speaking their accents. I've used these in my teaching style on purpose and for fun. Interestingly for example Ohio ( O-hii ) has several accents within the state such as south-eastern has a West Virginia drawl and Appalachian vocab...and then west of I-75 there's some speak with Indiana and Kentucky-isms...northwest sometimes sounds like Michigan farmers (melk vs, milk)....and the Cleveland historic New England connection has some inflections that the "natives" don't know they have but an outsider from the northeast will notice. Fun stuff...thanks

  • @justincanter8037
    @justincanter8037 11 месяцев назад +12

    I recently moved to Alaska, from Northern California. One ove the most distinctive accents I have ever heard is the native Inuit accent…I’ve grown to like it…it’s similar to the native accents I heard in the south west, but distinctive in its own way

  • @davemiller6055
    @davemiller6055 10 месяцев назад +2

    I'm glad he mentioned dialect vs accent. Many videos like this don't mention that.
    Accent is how words are pronounced. Talk vs Tawk
    Dialect is which words are used. Pop vs Soda

  • @JGNM-mp9cs
    @JGNM-mp9cs 5 месяцев назад +2

    There are 2 prominent "valleys" in CA. Folks in the San Joaquin Valley can still have a southern twang in some places that have descendants from the dust bowl.

  • @jpadma9
    @jpadma9 Год назад +17

    Awesome!! I lived in California, Michigan, NC, CO, and TX. I'm a Spanish speaker and now I'm a mix of accents!

    • @InteractiveEng
      @InteractiveEng  Год назад

      Very cool! Thanks for commenting & checking out the lesson. 👍

  • @sarco64
    @sarco64 Год назад +63

    When I moved from New Yor to North Carolina I noticed that the southern drawl/southern twang distinctions tended to be more related to social class than geography. Affluent, urban, and educated people tended to talk more like Scarlet O'Hara and rural working-class people more like Gomer Pyle.

    • @echt114
      @echt114 Год назад +4

      From my time in the south, that Scarlet Ohara thing seemed almost non-existent.

    • @sarco64
      @sarco64 Год назад +4

      @@echt114 That may well be the case today. I moved to a small town in NC in the early 1980s and lived there for three years. I suspect that NC has become much less "southern" since then. There are probably a lot fewer fast-food restaurants that have liver mush biscuits on their breakfast menu.

    • @kylepatrick113
      @kylepatrick113 Год назад +4

      Gomer Pyle 😅 I moved to sc from ny and I can attest to this.

    • @kristenb5177
      @kristenb5177 Год назад

      Northerners have nasal voices it's like nails on a chalkboard . When I hear them talk , I wanna pass them a hankie and say blow your darn nose

    • @fluffysquirrel8385
      @fluffysquirrel8385 11 месяцев назад +5

      no, it is real. North Carolina has definitely "desouthernized" a little bit recently, but in rural areas this is true.

  • @GM_Flynx
    @GM_Flynx 9 месяцев назад +1

    Indeed, there are many accents across the vast and varied regions of the States. Surprisingly, dialect only varies a bit, and is not as intense as other languages and countries. You can usually intuit the nature of a dialectical difference from context. I love playing with the Lower Alabama Twang that I gained from the Florida Panhandle, but if I am in Georgia, I can easily switch to the Valdosta and bottomland lilt. I was visiting near Savannah with some friends. We stopped at a micro-brewery. The locals were palavering on and the friend who was a locale and I immediately switched to talk they them and interpret to our other friends what was being said, as they were not familiar with the dialectical and accent differences. It was very amusing!

  • @carolynridlon3988
    @carolynridlon3988 10 месяцев назад +1

    I've got a real mixture of accents - born in northern CA (where there really isn't a defined accent) from Missouri & Oklahoma parents /family with British Isles ancestry - i had the ability to slip into a southern/british accent very easily in high school for a British based play. I still say "Missoura" when I say the state name due to the region my mom's family came from (Southern Ozark's - Joplin area)
    Then has my husband & I started traveling in our retirement, We ended up in Texas for a couple of years. Then we started picking up the dialect & verbage from the Texas southern.
    Now we have resettled in western Kentucky, where our area does have a slight southern accent, but due to our family & travels - we can fit in well.

  • @terrioestreich4007
    @terrioestreich4007 Год назад +6

    I'm from Minnesota and grew up with my Swedish great grandparents and Swedish and Norwegian grandparents,, even my kids tease me how I say certain words, like bag. I guess that I say it like bayg, just like this gentleman said

  • @davidwalter2002
    @davidwalter2002 Год назад +8

    6:36. My mother grew up in Tennessee, and although she lived in New York most of her life, she never completely lost her Southern accent (you can take the girl out of the South, but you can't take the South out of the girl). She added diphthongs to single-syllable words, saying "foe-er" for four and "doe-er" for door. But she balanced it out by removing syllables from other words. She definitely said "Dubya" when spelling our last name, and my father was not "Howard," he was "Hawrd."

  • @CrimsonRaven51
    @CrimsonRaven51 24 дня назад +1

    In the 1950’s Beatnicks (pre hippie) used to begin sentences with the filler “like,” just as in California Valley speak. For instance “Like uh man, that jazz was righteous.” Or “Like uh man ahm feelin it kick in.” Blast from the extreme past. Don’t forget to wear your tam and dust off your bongos.😊

  • @ethandouro4334
    @ethandouro4334 4 месяца назад +2

    I'm a Brazilian and I got a mindblow by how new York accent is just like our Portuguese accent, we tend to make our Ls at the end of a syllable sound like /w/ too, that's why we say /brazew/ instead of /brazel/ like other languages

    • @InteractiveEng
      @InteractiveEng  4 месяца назад +1

      Thanks for commenting & checking out the lesson. 👍

  • @Xsetsu
    @Xsetsu Год назад +28

    This is probably true with most of them, but one thing I have noticed about a southern accent is that there is very fine line between doing it right and overdoing it. Usually with most actors, especially from the UK, they tend to over do it just a bit. The southern accent(s) has an almost singsong rhythm to them. Words are shortened or drawn out to keep a steady rhythm in many cases.

    • @colinafobe2152
      @colinafobe2152 Год назад +3

      to me, the thicker Southern accent the better :) sounds so nice

    • @Xsetsu
      @Xsetsu Год назад +2

      @@colinafobe2152 I love it as well.
      My personal accent is all jacked up though as I have lived in NC, Texas and Alabama so it is all over the place.

    • @colinafobe2152
      @colinafobe2152 Год назад +1

      @@Xsetsu i wish i can speak english that way

    • @ledhed5717
      @ledhed5717 Год назад +3

      The “sing/song” is the Irish/Scots influence. A good example of a UK actor overdoing a Southern accent to me was Lauren Cohen as Maggie in the Walking Dead. There were several instances that her “Southern” accent seemed strained and just not quite right.
      But it doesn’t have to be someone from the UK. David Carradine did a horrible “Southern” accent in the North and South mini series back in the mid-80’s. Hew was from California trying to do a South Carolina gentleman. I remember laughing even as a young kid.

    • @citizencoy4393
      @citizencoy4393 11 месяцев назад +1

      Some clusters of ppl especially blk southerners literally sound like they are singing when they talk.

  • @celsofukuhara1794
    @celsofukuhara1794 11 месяцев назад +6

    I am from Brazil. The strangest thing about the English language is the difficulty of identifying the punctuation in sentences: .,!?. I always have the feeling that Americans and English speak straight, without punctuation. The difference is that in the Portuguese language of Brazil, this detail is very clear.

  • @mariedupuis7802
    @mariedupuis7802 Месяц назад +2

    For me who is French and have learned English from UK, the more difficult accent to understand from the US is from the south ! Often I understand nothing 😅but I like this cool accent like I like those from my country as their dialects because it speaks of history . ❤

  • @kimberlyperrotis8962
    @kimberlyperrotis8962 6 месяцев назад +4

    I’m a lifelong Californian and it seems to me that everyone west of the Rockies has the same accent, but I was curious to hear the different American accents. The only ones I can easily identify are NYC and “Southern”, undifferentiated, and a few flat Midwestern, especially Chicago area, ones. Mostly because they say Chicago differently, we Westerners say Chi-CAH-go, but they can use the A sound in cat instead, Chi-CAA-go. I spent a year at grad school in Indiana and couldn’t notice much of a difference in accent in the locals there, but of course, university towns have students and professors with every imaginable English accent.

  • @Blue-jd8jf
    @Blue-jd8jf Год назад +37

    Californian accents are basically🐻
    1)Californian TV broadcast English 📺🎙️📻
    2)Valley girl 👱‍♀️🌄
    3)Surfer, Skater, Val dude🏄🛹
    4)Urbanite inner city dweller Latino👨🏽🛣️🌆
    5)Urbanite inner city dweller black👨🏿🌉 🌃
    6)Rural whites in Central California👨‍🌾🖼️🌽

    • @diolaneiuma215
      @diolaneiuma215 Год назад +8

      There's a guy named Luke from my business class who is a stereotypical surfer dude with the thickest L.A. stoner DUUUUDE accent ever lol

    • @babyvanderwoodsen
      @babyvanderwoodsen Год назад +5

      you forgot gay

    • @Blue-jd8jf
      @Blue-jd8jf Год назад +11

      ​@@babyvanderwoodsenmost gays talk like blck women snapping their neck and fingers, other gays speak like Valley Girls

    • @MaquiagemparaEles
      @MaquiagemparaEles Год назад

      ​@@Blue-jd8jf what is latino? Because u put a brown guy.

    • @Blue-jd8jf
      @Blue-jd8jf Год назад +5

      @@MaquiagemparaEles the majority of latinos in California are Mestizos from Mexico and Central America. On average Mestizos are brown because they have Native American and Spanish ancestry

  • @hypno117
    @hypno117 11 месяцев назад +5

    I’m from Boston but I’ve been living in the Bay Area for 27 years. The Cali accent is the opposite of Boston’s, where they hit the R’s EXTRA hard. Especially in Southern California where sometimes words like car are pronounced “cor”.

    • @Niteowlette
      @Niteowlette 10 месяцев назад +3

      Californian here, and that is so true. Also, the "ar" and "or" sounds are very prounounced. "Orange" is ORange, while in NY/NJ its "AREange." "Marry" in California is "MAREey," and in NY/NJ its "MARRey."

  • @latetotheparty4785
    @latetotheparty4785 6 месяцев назад +2

    I’m 66 and was born and raised in NorCal. I say “ like” every sentence. However, I write without fillers.

  • @user-ek3km5or1q
    @user-ek3km5or1q 6 месяцев назад +1

    Another Bostonian regionalism came from a relative who has a native of Beantown.
    She was remarking about her husbands obsession with his car and meant to say, 'You and your goddamned car', when she got through with it sounded, 'YOU AND YOU GAWD DAM CAH'. The Massachusetts turnpike was remained, 'THE MASS TOUMPIKE' etc. The name of Reverend George became, 'RAVERIN JUDGE'.

  • @criiis
    @criiis Год назад +8

    you do a really good job at not over exaggerating the accents.

  • @nil2k
    @nil2k 11 месяцев назад +7

    As a texan who lives in california (also in the bay area), I can confidently say there are multiple accents in both places and I can tell where you likely grew up in either state with great accuracy. There are several much less common words that make it clear.. or at least as clear as it is when you hear most canadians say the word "against" or most texans say "nuclear"

  • @kylev5602
    @kylev5602 10 месяцев назад +10

    I'm originally from North Dakota right on the border with Minnesota. The Minnesota accent totally grew from the accents of Scandinavian immigrants (my heritage is German and Norwegian and speak both of those languages). It's funny on road trips through different states when I go to a convenience store and buy a few *pops* for the ride and the clerk asks me if I want a sack instead of a bag. This usually starts happening in central Missouri where the accent starts changing from Midwest to Southern about an hour south of Kansas City.

  • @EdBrumley
    @EdBrumley 7 месяцев назад +2

    I’m from southeastern Illinois and know I have a bit of a southern accent. With some people having a more pronounced southern accent even within the same family. (Like the way my 2 brothers talk)
    I served in the U.S. Air Force and worked at an office with at least 10-15 new people coming to process paperwork everyday. I got extremely good at guessing where each person was from just from their accent.
    One peculiar thing I noticed from just about anyone from the north east coast of the U.S. is they might drop their R’s, (in words like Park, Car, Bar, Party, Star, etc) , but they liked to drop the A from the end of a word and ADD an ER. Example: “I called Linder (Linda), who lives out in Indianer, (Indiana) and she says her Alexer (Alexa) speaks perfect English.”

  • @HarvestLockwood
    @HarvestLockwood Год назад +24

    California native here! Can confirm we put EMPHASIS on certain WORDS in our SENTENCES? And also, we end our sentences in ways that sound like questions (though this truly is Valley Girl, and I personally don't do this, but I definitely hear it)? We also say "like" a lot as filler. I don't even notice it when I do it, for the most part, unless someone points it out to me.

    • @gregh7457
      @gregh7457 11 месяцев назад +1

      the valley girl sound is a dialect not accent and to my ears it like raking fingernails across a chalkboard

    • @Karnage60
      @Karnage60 11 месяцев назад

      Dude you like really are from california, like I havnt met many people from home.

    • @jjsan27
      @jjsan27 11 месяцев назад

      Also from California. The "like" "literally" "oh my god" words get very annoying. I've only gotten more annoyed to it as I've gotten older and I'm 30.

    • @elizabethm2353
      @elizabethm2353 11 месяцев назад +1

      Need to point out he made sure to say he demonstrated a stereotyped accent. Not all Californians speak this way. And I’m native Californian.

  • @Guts_Punch_Balls_Throwup
    @Guts_Punch_Balls_Throwup Год назад +20

    I learned in a linguistics class that the southern way of pronouncing tent/tint as tint, pen/pin as pin, etc, goes back to an old germanic vowel rule that combined those vowels before nasals. Git as opposed to get goes back to Old English, especially that fact that git is often pronound as gee-it; the Old English word was "gietan".

    • @anderander5662
      @anderander5662 11 месяцев назад +1

      Walter Brennan....😂

    • @tomfields3682
      @tomfields3682 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@anderander5662 A proud native of New Jersey!

    • @vivianjones9749
      @vivianjones9749 11 месяцев назад +1

      My college speech teacher was a hard liner for correct pronunciation! He was single handedly responsible for my losing the southern accent.
      But, as always, when around my family with the accents I’ll slip right back in

    • @kiajulian4619
      @kiajulian4619 11 месяцев назад

      I think they pronounce those words like that in many states... I know we pronounce them like that in CA...

    • @kiajulian4619
      @kiajulian4619 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@anderander5662 that's exactly who I thought of! 🤣

  • @jamesdeanharrelson9743
    @jamesdeanharrelson9743 9 месяцев назад +3

    i promise you no matter where you are from, once you come down south you’ll start saying “y’all”, its the best word ever

  • @bluemax73
    @bluemax73 10 месяцев назад +1

    My wife is from the Bronx, we live upstate and in all our travels when my wife talks everybody says " you're not from around here are you ". Very thick Bronx accent. Boy do I love her!

  • @antoniotorres7822
    @antoniotorres7822 Год назад +48

    I'm just here to learn American slangs.
    Thank you, guys!!
    I'm learning English language.
    I'm from Monterrey, Mexico.
    Best regards!!

    • @InteractiveEng
      @InteractiveEng  Год назад +1

      Glad you enjoyed the lesson. Thanks for your comment. 😊

    • @agoraphobicadam1171
      @agoraphobicadam1171 11 месяцев назад +1

      Loscientos mi Espanol no es buena. Dios teh bendiga mi amigo .

    • @grimcity
      @grimcity 11 месяцев назад +2

      Antonio, if your writing is anything like the way you speak, then you are doing a great job!

    • @paolopetrozzi2213
      @paolopetrozzi2213 11 месяцев назад

      This garbage is not English, is the garbage version of it, the one spoken in the U.S.

    • @sahhull
      @sahhull 11 месяцев назад +1

      If I were you. I would wait until the Americans actually start speaking English.
      There is British English and incorrect English :-)

  • @kleiner851
    @kleiner851 11 месяцев назад +7

    I grew up in Gaston County, NC. When I heard the Difference between the Southern Drawl, and then the Southern Twang, I was shocked at how much I did both, but I leaned closer to the Drawl. Thanks!

    • @Lina_al_j
      @Lina_al_j 11 месяцев назад

      I grew up in wake county and later moved to europe and the middle east, where i made an effort to lose the accent (which was not that strong in the first place) due to people struggling to understand me. I was convinced all my southern drawl was gone till i encountered a group of people from NC on a flight and they asked me whether i was from NC 😁

  • @brianarbenz1329
    @brianarbenz1329 4 месяца назад +1

    "And I was like _oh my gawd"_ That's the middle and upper middle class suburban youth way of speaking during the satellite TV/Cable and early Internet era, that being the 1980s through mid-90s. Popular media became so ever present that accents became a matter of cultural identity, rather than geography.

  • @Hazem-Gt
    @Hazem-Gt 7 месяцев назад +2

    I like how 'coffee' is spoken in a NY accent. Cwah'fee. Charming!

  • @danadoozer9990
    @danadoozer9990 11 месяцев назад +22

    The way you're able to do the various accents is really cool! I work for a call center and speak to people all over the US on a daily basis, and I find all the different accents to be really interesting! I'm from Wisconsin, and several times a week I get asked if I'm from Canada! I've lived in Wisconsin for my entire life, but had no idea that I had an accent at all, until people pointed it out to me!😂

    • @user-nv3fj8ql2l
      @user-nv3fj8ql2l 10 месяцев назад +2

      Same!

    • @pohkeee
      @pohkeee 10 месяцев назад +2

      Same for me, being from Northern Minnesota…even in Europe I was asked if I was Canadian!

    • @mpetersen6
      @mpetersen6 4 месяца назад +2

      We don't talk funny. Everyone else does.

    • @danadoozer9990
      @danadoozer9990 4 месяца назад

      @@mpetersen6 YES!!!! This EXACTLY!

    • @mpetersen6
      @mpetersen6 4 месяца назад +1

      @@danadoozer9990
      The same could be said by anyone speaking with a regional accent. Actually there are a variety of accents just in Wisconsin.

  • @danielhamid479
    @danielhamid479 Год назад +22

    I can’t even imitate my native language dialects they way he does it with his! The guy is a genius lesson creator and extremely dedicated! 👏🏻

  • @enischial965
    @enischial965 7 месяцев назад +3

    You did a pretty good job on us New Englanders. The only thing I will point out is packie s pronounced the same way as you would say pack, as in "pack your suitcase". Us and the New Yorkers are the only non-rhotic accents you will typically find in the US. The northeast is a bit of an outlier when it comes to the rule of American accents being rhotic.

  • @zhuguidai
    @zhuguidai Месяц назад +1

    9:47 After 15 years living in MN having moved from FL I can say only that on my first day here in a Target when buying a single item a chasier asked me if I wanted a "baeyg". I didn't want to keep asking what she was talking about since all I could think of that sounded like that was "bagel" so I just said no and left. I figured it out about 10 seconds after walking away when I had a moment to think clearly outside the situation.

  • @ngohung49
    @ngohung49 Год назад +53

    American accent usually up tone. It was fun for me when first time I came to visit the USA because I usually pronounce as British accent. Then my American friend recognized my British voice. That is so interesting 😊.I personally both like American and British accents 😊 thank you so much for sharing this great video

  • @justkat6
    @justkat6 11 месяцев назад +16

    I've been learning mostly the British accent (RP) and now pivoting to General American accent it's really surprising to see that New York accent shares a fundamental character with RP (the 'r' dropping feature) rather than it's counterpart.

    • @bassmeisterD
      @bassmeisterD 11 месяцев назад +4

      There are several non-rhotic accents along the east coast of the USA in what were the original colonies, from New England to Georgia.

  • @krakenoutofwater
    @krakenoutofwater 9 месяцев назад +1

    super neat and informational!! have you heard much of the utah/idaho accent? i moved to utah not too long ago from western massachusetts and the accent really stood out to me! the "g" sound is often hardened and replaced by a 'k' sound, and an "ing" sound is often more like an "een" sound. for example, "i'm going to take my dog swimming" vs "i'm goink to take my dok swimmeen" (or sometimes "swimmink"). in words that have an "ai" sound, they use more of an "eh" sound. for example, "he's in jail and i don't care" would become "he's in jell and i don't cehr." hope this helps!