Which American Accent Do You Have? Take the Quiz
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It's not an accent per se. They should've said dialect instead of accent.
You're turning into @trashboat ? know it all
@trashboat is my ic bae. -
Lmfao that ? said I have a Canadian accent.
That's weird cause I got Western
Western is kind of neutral, but not quite since it`s still possible to tell where you`re from. So you might not actually be from the West (but you probably are). If you really want to sound "neutral," learn how to say "stock" and "stalk" differently.
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Like Water wrote: »I took the 25 questions joint... That ? pinpointed me as a Clevelander.
You actually from Cleveland? I took it and it pinpointed me as Atlanta or South Florida -
Mine says NY/Yonkers/Jersey City
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Spot on! Detroit and the Carolinas.
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Northerner
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? says i sound like im from B'ham but I ? hate alabama
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Yea, I got neutral too
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First link said I was neutral.
The second link pin pointed me directly to the cities I lived in the past and present. ? must be using my GPS signal. -
afro thunder wrote: »First link said I was neutral.
The second link pin pointed me directly to the cities I lived in the past and present. ? must be using my GPS signal.
Yea the second link is GOAT.
All you flavorless ass ? that got neutral on the first one should take the 2nd one
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It's not an accent per se. They should've said dialect instead of accent.
@Noir ain't that the same thing? -
Technically, no. Your dialect is how you use words. For example, in California, people say, "yous", but in the Southern states, people say, y'all". Another example, people in the Midwest say, " pop", the south says, "coke", and the west says, " soda".
An accent is how a person pronounce words according to their dialect.
Dialect is based on the descriptive grammar rules and accents are based on verbal speech pattern and pallette placement.
@Stiff -
Technically, no. Your dialect is how you use words. For example, in California, people say, "yous", but in the Southern states, people say, y'all". Another example, people in the Midwest say, " pop", the south says, "coke", and the west says, " soda".
An accent is how a person pronounce words according to their dialect.
Dialect is based on the descriptive grammar rules and accents are based on verbal speech pattern and pallette placement.
@Stiff
Gotcha..well they both kinda cover both because they ask about pronunciation and also word usage -
Damn everybody getting neutral? If you're interested there's another one that's a little bit more thorough, 25 questions.
nytimes.com/interactive/2013/12/20/sunday-review/dialect-quiz-map.html
Accurate as ? .
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Raised in NYC so spot on
Which American accent do you have?
Northeastern
This could either mean an r-less NYC or Providence accent or one from Jersey which doesn't sound the same. Just because you got this result doesn't mean you don`t pronounce R's.(People in Jersey don`t call their state "Joisey" in real life)
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Western
Western is kind of neutral, but not quite since it`s still possible to tell where you`re from. So you might not actually be from the West (but you probably are). If you really want to sound "neutral," learn how to say "stock" and "stalk" differently.
Didn't expect that at all. -
From Texas and they said Southern
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Hood accent bao
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They said i have a southern dialect. I've spent no more then 2 months on scattered visits to the south. People do say i that i don't sound like i'm from NYC.
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Bruh...
Lmao shoutout to the DMV. -
I got southern....NY/Boston ? say DC ? sound country... down south ? say we sound northern
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It said my accent was most like that in the Southeast region, but the cities it said were most representative of the way I speak were Richmond, VA, Ft. Lauderdale, FL, and Honolulu, Hawaii. That's pretty weird since I haven't spent a large amount of time in any of those cities. What's also weird is that I was born and raised in Columbia, SC, and of all the highlighted regions in the Southeast, that area was the lightest.