It also the accent most similar to what Victorian brits would have spoken
random thoughts Send a noteboard - 27/07/2015 07:45:09 PM
Wiki only list it as the most common in the US but since the UK is divided into as many accent groups as the US with a smaller population and same is true for Canada especially considering a large number speak French. Australia's population is smaller than Texas. Can you name that is more common?
Y'all, you guys, yous guys, or hey you all?
25/07/2015 05:38:44 PM
- 1034 Views
Y'all may be the American South's greatest gift to the English language.
27/07/2015 12:14:47 AM
- 666 Views
"Hey, you guys!" is only correct if you are Rita Moreno
27/07/2015 04:15:07 AM
- 636 Views
Funny....
29/07/2015 12:13:35 AM
- 735 Views
That is because your fascist indoctrination prohibits viewing PBS' communist indoctrination
29/07/2015 01:54:30 AM
- 744 Views
well since language is a democracy and the souther dialetic is the largest Y'all wins
27/07/2015 02:07:22 PM
- 792 Views
The Southern dialect is the largest by what metric?
27/07/2015 06:26:20 PM
- 780 Views
It also the accent most similar to what Victorian brits would have spoken
27/07/2015 07:45:09 PM
- 708 Views
Whoa, now: The PIEDMONT accent may be closest to Received Pronunciation, but is not the whole South
28/07/2015 12:37:56 AM
- 788 Views
I don't make the catagories but all the southern accents tend to be close *NM*
28/07/2015 02:12:15 PM
- 495 Views
Except, as you noted, Virginias accent is closer to Englands (and New Englands, and South Africas)
28/07/2015 11:00:46 PM
- 753 Views
that is not what I said
29/07/2015 02:14:49 PM
- 764 Views
Sorry, I credited you w/knowing the Deep South, Appalachia and TX sound nothing like any UK accents
29/07/2015 07:42:21 PM
- 711 Views
read slower and then read again until you understand what I said
29/07/2015 08:14:19 PM
- 983 Views
"The people in the American South were Victorian Brits"?! I must have read that too fast
29/07/2015 10:39:08 PM
- 719 Views
Erm. Not really sure what you're saying here...
29/07/2015 11:35:26 PM
- 675 Views
Would "UK English" have been better?
30/07/2015 10:47:53 PM
- 718 Views
Not really.
31/07/2015 07:30:41 AM
- 673 Views
Like in most things Joel is wrong. The US has the larget population of English speakers
31/07/2015 03:20:51 PM
- 780 Views
As in most things, you admit failure to do your homework yet still claim absolute certainty
10/08/2015 02:30:34 AM
- 853 Views
David Crystal estimates proficient non-natives outnumber native English speakers 3:1
10/08/2015 02:45:58 AM
- 652 Views
what is not now considerd a proper British accent is called Received Pronunciation
31/07/2015 03:11:36 PM
- 949 Views
I already explicitly referenced RP at least twice in response to you (also: Still not a DIALECT)
10/08/2015 02:33:17 AM
- 950 Views
Actually, since you got me thinking, please enlighten us: What would you call YOUR English dialect?
30/07/2015 11:19:06 PM
- 773 Views
Sorry I did not put enough research into what I consider trivia but the point is stil valid
30/07/2015 01:30:39 PM
- 751 Views
Ok they sounded more like the British at the beggining of the Victorian era
30/07/2015 01:34:15 PM
- 789 Views
Trivial or not, absolute assertions absent even cursory verification invite trouble
30/07/2015 11:12:01 PM
- 759 Views
The Brits didn't change theway they spoke until the 19th century.
31/07/2015 02:50:23 PM
- 799 Views
Every land has always constantly changed how it speaks, RP was mostly complete by the 17th century &
10/08/2015 02:33:03 AM
- 742 Views
Who says "yous guys"? Seriously?
27/07/2015 07:56:28 PM
- 703 Views
Depends, are trying to sound cool, like a douche, or Joe Pesci? *NM*
29/07/2015 07:12:28 PM
- 554 Views