MadPoet: you’re in the SCA?? (as in the Society for Creative Anachronism?)
cool!! I’ve been involved (to the best of my ability, given my free time) for just over a year…
as for accents, I think Sean Connery’s is my favorite, but I like listening to my Aunt’s Boston accent… especially getting her and her friends to say ‘quarter’… they’re a blast…
Glenoled: Yah, I’ve been a fringie SCA player for about 6 years.
Boston accents are funny… I lived there 8 years and never picked it up. Boston is the only place where autistic people go to museams and you need a quota for the arcade.
I just love Chicagoan accents (I have one myself). I never realized how pronounced ours was until seeing the “Superfans” on SNL. Ever since then, I really notice the way we all talk around here. There’s even a noticeable difference between North-siders, and us South-siders. My husband says my accent gets thicker when I’m sleepy or sometimes when I’m angry.
The French absolutely love hearing an American speak French - at least when it is spoken relatively fluently. I lost count years ago of the number of times I was told I had a charming accent - of course, it could just have been that nutty French sense of humor…
Did they think you were Canadian or did they just ask if you were Canadian?
In my own experience, people abroad will often hear a North American accent and ask if it’s Canadian because they figure (correctly, I’m sure) that a Canuck is more likely than a Yank to be offended if they guess wrong.
And in an area of about 8 or so counties in north central and northwest Arkansas, as well as a similar sized area of south central and southwestern Missouri. Not to mention western North Carolina. The terrain of north Arkansas is very similar to the Smokies, so when things got too crowded to suit the hillbillies there, they picked up and headed west until they found something very similar and settle in there.
As for other accents, I’m also very partial to Irish, but since no one else has, I’ll put in a good word here for the rhythm and idioms of Yiddish.
“Ain’t no man can avoid being born average, but there ain’t no man got to be common.” –Satchel Paige
As far as accents that caress the ear, I’d go with Irish (don’t know enough to distinguish beyond the general), various lilting Caribbean accents–Jamaican and Barbadian come to mind–and American Southern of most types.
FWIW, I purely love accents of all sorts, even though I have a tin ear for languages overall. New Yawk/Bronx, hillbilly twang, Yiddish, German, musical English-of-India, the huge variation in Brit-English, Japanese, you name it.
They’re the spice in an increasingly bland “in media retch” blahness. Give me a twang or a drawl or a burr or a real whatever over the polished blankness of generic human-speak.
It was probably a bit of both. There were a few people who asked me specifically what part of Canada I was from. I thought they might be making that assumption because of the British Commonwealth link, although you make a good point about not wanting to insult a Canuck by calling them a Yank.
Come to think of it, the only area where people viewed me as a Yank from the get-go was around the military base at Woomera (no surprise, since the U.S. Air Force has people stationed there).
JTI: How do I tell a Canadian accent? Well, there’s the obvious way they (Or you?) pronounce the word “about.” Or anything that ends in “out.” Or words that end in an “o” sound, like “go.” I might say it with a straight “o” sound, but a Canadian would pronounce it with a faint “u” at the end, so it would be “go-u.” Those are what I pick up on the most. I’m sure there are other examples that I’m just forgetting right now.
I hope all that made sense.
The accent is not very obvious many times, but the difference is noticable.
Only people who live in the boonies actually pronounce it like that. Maybe it’s not as obvious for me because I live in Canada but I think that the easiest things to notice about the accent are the way the ending -er is pronounced and the enuciation of T’s.