Hercule
Practically Family
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- Western Reserve (Cleveland)
Very little will diminish my opinion of somebody faster than hearing them say "exspecially" and (especially so) "ax," as in "ax a question."
Ain' dat sumpin. It's mostly an East Coast working-class thing, although there are also some Southern dialects that will do it.
Ain' dat sumpin. It's mostly an East Coast working-class thing, although there are also some Southern dialects that will do it.
Everyday pronunciations I tend to use --
Brudda -- your male sibling.
Wadda -- what comes out of a bubbla.
Anudda -- not dis one, but dat one.
Tagedda -- widdis one annat one.
Wedda -- izzit gonna rain or snow?
Weddaman -- da guy dat predix da wedda.
What always makes my ears grind is when people whose natural dialect drops the trailing "G" hypercorrect it so that it sounds like "Are you goingggggg swimmingggg?" Nothing is more of a dead giveaway to someone trying to code-switch than that.
Very little will diminish my opinion of somebody faster than hearing them say "exspecially" and (especially so) "ax," as in "ax a question."
Still much German in it.
Exspresso, anyone?
Single shot or double...
Don' bodda me a bit. I love dialects and the variety they lend to speech. Overly-precise diction makes me think of all those faky, pretentious voices I used to know in radio.
Exspresso, anyone?
Single shot or double...
So, you don't care for obsolete words? "Ax" derives from the word "acsian", the root of our modern "ask". If one reads many old blackletter books one will notice that "ax" was the preferred literary variant until well into the seventeenth century. That pronunciation was extremely common throughout the United States until the 1920's, and carried class connotations only in the Northeast. By the twenty-first century it had become primarily a race signifier, and so when this usage becomes controversial, as it does from time to time, it is generally (perhaps never) a purely grammatical objection.
On the other hand, the pronunciation "exspecially" should, I think, be used only by musicians of talent.
When I was in kindergarten my teacher inquired as to my background, for even then my speech patterns were not usual for Northeast Ohio. I pronounce all of my terminal consonants carefully, the fricatives are precise, I have always tended toward the long A, though, again, I don't hit it at all hard, and strike my "r's" very lightly except when I roll them. When I was younger I sounded a great deal like Norman Brokenshire. For a time I worked to make my speech more standard. Now, I don't bother.
I tend to blame or credit my grandparents for this. My parent's speech has always been relatively standard Midwestern American English. I spent most of my first five years around the old folks. Their influence was profound. One set of grandparents (and their friends) spoke heavily accented, though quite literary, Czech-American and German-American English. Another spoke a sort of pidgin Ruthenian-English. My third pair (families are complicated) consisted of a Grandmother who was a graduate of Miss Porter's School and Barnard College (and who sounded almost precisely like Eleanor Roosevelt) and a grandfather who was plucked off of a Southern Michigan farm at the age of thirteen and sent to Lawrence Academy and then to Bowdoin College. HIS speech was a really interesting amalgam of non-rhotic Mid-Atlantic English and Midwestern twang. Think of Franklin Roosevelt very occasionally hitting a hard "r" by accident, calling a suitcase a "grip", and letting "chimbley", "wadder" and "crackin' good!" slip out from time to time...
Very little will diminish my opinion of somebody faster than hearing them say "exspecially" and (especially so) "ax," as in "ax a question."
If only... prior to posting it, you do realize that YOU were probably the ONLY person to know that?
. And apparently I pronounce milk as "melk" which is a signifier of where I am from. Whereas the country accent only comes out when I've gone back home, "melk" I cannot pronounce as "milk" no matter how I try. A bunch of college friends tried to get me to pronounce "milk" for several hours, they gave up. I honestly can't hear the difference.