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35 votes
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Why tackling accent bias matters at work
35 votes -
The Canterbury Tales, or, how technology changes the way we speak
14 votes -
Does your Irish child speak with an American accent? The change may not last forever, linguistic expert says.
16 votes -
A brief history of the United States’ accents and dialects
12 votes -
There's a better English alphabet
8 votes -
The impact of an accent on charisma/persuasion
Five years ago, I moved from the southeast US to the northwest. I took my southern accent with me, and, as far as I know, it's been fine. I've been able to get work, make friends, and mostly...
Five years ago, I moved from the southeast US to the northwest. I took my southern accent with me, and, as far as I know, it's been fine. I've been able to get work, make friends, and mostly function as normal.
My accent is light. It doesn't sound southern to other southerners, but it does sound southern anywhere else in the US. People who have commented on it say they like it (but what else would you say, I guess 😅).
But I'm about to take on something that will require me to be persuasive. I'm wondering what Tildes thinks: will my accent diminish my ability to be persuasive? Should I try to train my accent out and develop a more neutral accent?
I find myself torn. On the one hand, a southern accent could immediately call to mind the stereotypes of the south: stubborn people without much education. Maybe it makes sense to let that go and start on a more level playing field. On the other hand, my time growing up in the south is part of my history. It makes me unique and maybe the upset expectations (if someone hears me and expects me to embody those stereotypes I mentioned before) could make me more memorable.
I generally don't like the idea of filing the rough edges off things, especially when those things are people, but at the same time, I have goals I want to achieve and I'm willing to do what it takes to reach them. So, what do you think?
Edit: I appreciate all the comments so far! For a little additional context, I want to be active in local politics. Not trying to run for office or anything. Not sure exactly where I'll be taking that on yet, but it won't be in the south.
41 votes -
A very interesting video on the phonetics of English regional accents, spoken by a polyglot in the accents
22 votes -
Accent diversity is fascinating
I committed an embarrassing gaffe today. I had ordered a keyboard online from a store from the Tyneside of north-eastern England: an area with a regional accent and dialect often referred to as...
I committed an embarrassing gaffe today. I had ordered a keyboard online from a store from the Tyneside of north-eastern England: an area with a regional accent and dialect often referred to as ‘Geordie’. I habitually speak in a ‘home counties’ accent, which is sometimes regarded as a contemporary variety of received pronunciation (RP), though it sounds quite different to historical and conservative varieties of that accent. A salesman called me earlier to inform me that the keyboard I wanted was out of stock, but that they would be happy to refund me if I didn’t want to wait for new inventory. Seemingly between the accent difference and the poor audio quality inherent to phone calls I misinterpreted ‘keyboard’ as ‘cable’, insisting with increasing urgency that I have USB-C cables in plenty and that they needn’t worry about supplying one with the order. We both went about in circles for a few minutes until it dawned on me what I was doing, at which point intense embarrassment flushed over me. Oops!
Accent diversity in Britain is rich and regional. It's not hard to place where someone grew up based on their accent. Would you consider your country to be diverse in accents? Even so, are there instances of accent discrimination?
45 votes -
The strange history of Deanna Troi's accent
6 votes -
The tiny US island with a British accent
11 votes -
A very quick lesson on the southern accent
5 votes -
Accentuation on tags? ("á", "ã", "é", "í", etc)
I was trying to add andré bazin as a tag on an article about the film theorist André Bazin, but the box became red and prevented me from submiting. So I had to use the incorrect andre bazin. I...
I was trying to add
andré bazin
as a tag on an article about the film theorist André Bazin, but the box became red and prevented me from submiting. So I had to use the incorrectandre bazin
.I suppose there's a very rational technical reason for not using accentuation on tags -- even so, I believe it would be useful to suport those characters, since many languages use them.
11 votes -
US parents say Peppa Pig is giving their kids British accents
12 votes -
Why do cartoon villains speak in foreign accents?
7 votes -
A dialect dissection of Britney Spears
8 votes -
Whistling while they work: Cooperative laguna dolphins have a unique accent
6 votes -
Movie scenes recreated with 'sexiest' New Zealand accent
7 votes -
Oi! We’re not lazy yarners, so let’s kill the cringe and love our Aussie accent(s).
5 votes -
How Spanish got its ñ - the story behind that "n with a tilde"
5 votes -
How did Americans lose their British accents
24 votes -
Barracking, sheilas and shouts: How the Irish influenced Australian English
3 votes