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Nightingale121
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24 Apr 2013, 1:07 am

I speak German with no real accent, I just speak the "normal" German. But when I am a longer time at my grandparent´s house I tend to speak a bit with their accent. But after a few days this is gone again.


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TenPencePiece
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24 Apr 2013, 4:11 pm

A local accent, quite typically. But I've learned to sound a good deal more well-spoken than a lot of the locals...


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Sciuridae
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03 May 2013, 6:23 am

Midwestern, but unusually featuring the pin-pen merger.



OliveOilMom
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06 May 2013, 11:20 pm

I have a very thick Southern accent.


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WitchsCat
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30 May 2013, 9:47 am

I have a slight New England accent due to spending the first ten years of my life in Maine.


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pcgoblin
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31 May 2013, 8:54 am

US Midwestern monotone. Although I've never pronounced the 'L' in words like old, cold, sold... I didn't realize it until someone I knew in college pointed it out. "ode" "code" "sode"

I'm not sure where that comes from.



Maywynn
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10 Feb 2014, 3:35 pm

British: proper Home Counties grammar school educated (posh, okay) and a bit of American (my mom says about a third).
When I'm angry or trying to act, I pick up a bit of a foreign accent. I don't know why.


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babybird
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12 Feb 2014, 8:16 am

Mancunian with a hint of Salfordian.


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guzzle
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21 Feb 2014, 5:36 pm

English it's a South East accent although some have said I can sound like someone from the West Country.
When I have to speak Dutch I have a North Holland accent. Years ago I had an Amsterdam accent but I lost that after I moved.
And I have a West Flemish accent as a mother tongue.



RedStar98
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22 Feb 2014, 8:47 am

I've got a typical kind of English accent but I sometimes have a slight Russian accent I get from my grandmother, although I haven't been to Russia since I was about 6.



FeralRobot
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20 Apr 2014, 6:21 pm

British English.
Beyond that, it is quite relative; I have been told by southerners that I have a northern (specifically, Lancashire) accent, and by fellow northerners that I speak the "queen's English" and sound like I am from West London. I use the same vowel pronunciation as in the South (apart from the letter A, which I pronounce in the short "alpha" way rather than the long "are" way for words like "bath" and "laugh"). I do not roll my 'r's. My inflection varies slightly, seemingly randomly, between something closer to that of Lancashire and something closer to that of the home counties, though not very much.


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a_dork
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27 Apr 2014, 6:38 pm

I've lived in California my entire life, and most of my speech is on par with a California accent.


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ImeldaJace
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27 Apr 2014, 10:53 pm

I have a very typical American accent, but with one slight regional variation. Like a lot of people from Connecticut, I sort of swallow my t's in the middle of words if the t or tt comes between two vowels. For instance, when I say the word cotton, I say the "co" and then it's like I pause for the amount of time it would take to say the t sound, and then I say the the final "on." Altogether it sort of comes out as "co-in"
But there are some words that the t is still pronounced in the middle, for example, autism.

When I speak Spanish (I'm not close to being fluent but I can usually get across what I'm trying to say) I seem to not have any specific accent. I lost my American accent at the beginning of high school when I was around a lot of fluent speakers from a mix of different countries. They would comment that I didn't have an American accent, but when I asked them what accent I did have, they were always stumped for an answer. Since finishing high school I have lost a little bit of my accent, but I have actually lost more of my vocabulary than my accent, which was the opposite of what I had expected.



CharlotteEstevez
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03 May 2014, 5:42 am

My english teacher used to say I had a "hoood-ish" slang in my voice whenever I talked for a long time. I don't even know what that means. :-D


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TheMighty_Moo
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11 May 2014, 7:53 am

Ah, I can pull of a lot of accents, actually.
British, American, Australian... I use American mostly, 'cause it's easier to form the words that way.
I've heard native speakers speaking English all my life, so I don't have a "Turkish" accent at all. I don't even remember how to pull of a Turkish accent anymore.
My real accent is Irish though, or something really close to it.


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Campin_Cat
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19 May 2014, 11:29 pm

Mostly when I get really tired, I'm super southern (American). Mostly I think I'm just "regular". I, like so many others here, pick-up accents extremely easily. When Madonna had gotten married to Guy Richie and lived in Britain for so long, everybody said she was faking a British accent----but, I figured she was just the same as us and just picked it up, and it sorta clung to her. She could've been doing it for attention, though, of course.