Jeanna wrote:
Bonafan wrote:
Haha
Didn't realise anyone else did that: replicating others accents! I got asked if I was a tour guide in America when we went on holiday!
Is that an Aspie thing then? Like echolalia?
That's interesting... I usually start talking like the person I'm having a conversation with. Don't even try or notice I'm changing my accent, it just happens. Makes talking to several different people at the same time rather confusing.
Then again, my "real" accent isn't even real, and I have no idea where it came from. I've had people ask me if I lived/studied overseas.
^This.
I have trouble watching movies that take place in locations with accents, because halfway through, I end up with the same accent. My own accent is a mash-up of ones from the region where I live, but it may be because I moved into my grandparents' home when I was four, so I have accents from all over the South. My daughter, who is also an Aspie, does the same thing.
As for actual speech problems, I can't pronounce words that have either "M" or "N" and "a" together, like "mama" or "nanah". My daughter's name is pronounced "Ahnna", because I can't say it the way most people do. People think she is mistaken on the pronunciation, because we don't say "An". It happened a couple of days ago, and she is fourteen.