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Thread started 06/23/11 4:40pm

sextonseven

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Which English-speaking accents are hardest for you to understand?

Scottish?

Irish?

Aussie?

American Bostonian?

I find it funny when movies spoken in English are subtitled in English--which happens occasionally in the states. I admit though that I would have found subtitles useful when watching The Town. lol

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Reply #1 posted 06/23/11 4:44pm

NMuzakNSoul

Ill go with a welsh accent. I really need to listen well to follow.

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Reply #2 posted 06/23/11 5:53pm

Shyra

Who was the chick that Simon Cowell fired from the X Factor before it even airs here in the states? They showed a clip of her talkiing, and I couldn't understand a word she said, and she was speaking English! confused I find that Asians can be quite difficult to understand if they have thick accents, but of course, I digress. That wasn't your question, huh? I think Aussie's can be tricky.

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Reply #3 posted 06/23/11 6:25pm

sextonseven

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Shyra said:

I think Aussie's can be tricky.

You aren't alone apparently considering the first Mad Max film was dubbed with American accents when it was released in the cinema in the U.S.

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Reply #4 posted 06/23/11 6:31pm

Serious

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West Indian bawl! If you can call that English rolleyes!

With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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Reply #5 posted 06/23/11 6:59pm

Hershe

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Serious said:


West Indian bawl! If you can call that English rolleyes!



I would freeze whenever my ex-husband would talk about people in public while standing near them. He would say, they don't understand me, and I guess that's true because he never got his face punched in.
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Reply #6 posted 06/23/11 7:03pm

Serious

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Hershe said:

Serious said:

West Indian bawl! If you can call that English rolleyes!

I would freeze whenever my ex-husband would talk about people in public while standing near them. He would say, they don't understand me, and I guess that's true because he never got his face punched in.

falloff worship Where is he from?

It is so hard for me to understand it, especially as English is not my first language.

With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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Reply #7 posted 06/23/11 7:09pm

Hershe

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Serious said:



Hershe said:


Serious said:


West Indian bawl! If you can call that English rolleyes!



I would freeze whenever my ex-husband would talk about people in public while standing near them. He would say, they don't understand me, and I guess that's true because he never got his face punched in.

falloff worship Where is he from?


It is so hard for me to understand it, especially as English is not my first language.



Sangre Grande. (sp)
Yeah, he would remind me that I could understand and that's why I thought others could too.
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Reply #8 posted 06/23/11 7:13pm

Serious

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Hershe said:

Serious said:

falloff worship Where is he from?

It is so hard for me to understand it, especially as English is not my first language.

Sangre Grande. (sp) Yeah, he would remind me that I could understand and that's why I thought others could too.

Are you talking about SG, T&T? That is the nearest big city to where my bf lives lol.

With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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Reply #9 posted 06/23/11 7:16pm

Hershe

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Serious said:



Hershe said:


Serious said:


falloff worship Where is he from?


It is so hard for me to understand it, especially as English is not my first language.



Sangre Grande. (sp) Yeah, he would remind me that I could understand and that's why I thought others could too.

Are you talking about SG, T&T? That is the nearest big city to where my bf lives lol.



:nod: Yes. smile
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Reply #10 posted 06/23/11 7:23pm

Serious

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Hershe said:

Serious said:

Are you talking about SG, T&T? That is the nearest big city to where my bf lives lol.

nod Yes. smile

Hey that's crazy, I go there all the time when I am overthere and I have wonderful friends who live there lol. And they are hard to understand because of their accents bawl lol.

With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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Reply #11 posted 06/23/11 7:32pm

imago

Because I work in a very international environment, I have become exceptionally good at understanding most everyone.

I recently had some issue understanding a Nigerian student and a Korean. The problem with the Nigerian student was, aside from his accent, his grammar was perfect and he spoke in long, fluid sentences with quite complex vocabulary at blazingly fast speeds. lol It took me about 2 weeks, and I now I understand him and that accent quite well.

As for Koreans, they hate to speak English here, so it's not so much there accent as it is their pronunciation---the simply don't pronounce words correctly.

Thais....oh lawd, they are deficient in just about every aspect of English you can think of, but I'm half Thai so I have never had a problem understanding them.

Oh, and I can't understand shit Souljia Boi(spelling?) says when he's talking. And he's American! lol

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Reply #12 posted 06/23/11 7:33pm

jone70

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Mumblers or those who don't enunciate are hard regardless of accent; and thick Scottish brogues.

The check. The string he dropped. The Mona Lisa. The musical notes taken out of a hat. The glass. The toy shotgun painting. The things he found. Therefore, everything seen–every object, that is, plus the process of looking at it–is a Duchamp.
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Reply #13 posted 06/23/11 7:46pm

Serious

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I have a friend from Pakistan who speaks in a mixture of English and German. He mixes the languages within one sentence. One word in English, the next 2 in German, the next in English and so on. And he speaks very fast and mumbles with a pretty low voice with a Pakistani accent in both German and English, so hard to understand.

With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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Reply #14 posted 06/23/11 8:02pm

Hershe

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Serious said:



Hershe said:


Serious said:


Are you talking about SG, T&T? That is the nearest big city to where my bf lives lol.



nod Yes. smile

Hey that's crazy, I go there all the time when I am overthere and I have wonderful friends who live there lol. And they are hard to understand because of their accents bawl lol.



You'll get it someday. And listen for it to spring up from your own voice someday too. lol
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Reply #15 posted 06/23/11 8:17pm

Serious

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Hershe said:

Serious said:

Hey that's crazy, I go there all the time when I am overthere and I have wonderful friends who live there lol. And they are hard to understand because of their accents bawl lol.

You'll get it someday. And listen for it to spring up from your own voice someday too. lol

lol I already start to make some "mistakes" they make : mad !

With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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Reply #16 posted 06/23/11 8:53pm

whistle

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the weegies

everyone's a fruit & nut case
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Reply #17 posted 06/23/11 11:30pm

ZombieKitten

sextonseven said:



Shyra said:


I think Aussie's can be tricky.




You aren't alone apparently considering the first Mad Max film was dubbed with American accents when it was released in the cinema in the U.S.


You don't seem to have any trouble with it! lol
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Reply #18 posted 06/23/11 11:44pm

sextonseven

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ZombieKitten said:


sextonseven said:

You aren't alone apparently considering the first Mad Max film was dubbed with American accents when it was released in the cinema in the U.S.

You don't seem to have any trouble with it! lol

Most of the time, no. In the Bride Flight movie though, when the Dutchie started speaking Kiwi, I was all "What???" lol

I actually started this thread with you in mind and your problem with Brendan Gleeson. How much of this trailer do you understand?

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Reply #19 posted 06/24/11 12:18am

davetherave676
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Comming from the u.k its easy 2 do all of them xcept No4 what the hell lingo is that???

Dave Is Nuttier Than A Can Of Planters Peanuts...(Ottensen)
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Reply #20 posted 06/24/11 12:42am

Shaolin325

Serious said:

West Indian bawl! If you can call that English rolleyes!

My ex sister-in-law is West Indian (from Grenada). When she would get angry it was virtually impossible for anyone to understand her...except my brother I guess biggrin .

But she spoke perfect English and was very understandable when she was calm.

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Reply #21 posted 06/24/11 2:33am

ZombieKitten

sextonseven said:

ZombieKitten said:


You don't seem to have any trouble with it! lol

Most of the time, no. In the Bride Flight movie though, when the Dutchie started speaking Kiwi, I was all "What???" lol

I actually started this thread with you in mind and your problem with Brendan Gleeson. How much of this trailer do you understand?

lol that looks quite funny! But I'd need it subtitled for sure, as soon as there is noise and music over the talking I can't make out all the words, especially if I can't see the lips moving err

I can probably cope with the Bostonian accent though hmmm I'll get the town and let you know how I go!

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Reply #22 posted 06/24/11 4:30am

Cerebus

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Honestly, none of them. And I'm solid with Indian (love that one, actually), Spanish, French, Italian - all of Europe, really. But for some reason there is a certain type Asian accent that just leaves me looking at the person speaking like they didn't even use English. Its something I've tried to work on, too, since I often work with people who speak that way. For whatever reason I just can't get my brain to process it on the first pass. I have to ask them to repeat themselves a lot. But its only a certain type of Asian accent, not all of them.

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Reply #23 posted 06/24/11 4:53am

vainandy

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You don't have to listen to overseas accents to find some hard to understand ones. There are some hard to understand accents right here in the States. We get phone calls from Northerners all the time at work and they talk so fast. They talk ninety miles a minute. Sometimes, I just have to stop and tell them...."Hey, slow down. You're talking too fast. We talk much slower down here". lol

Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #24 posted 06/24/11 7:05am

Ottensen

The bayou swampland region of the United States.

New Orleans and its' surrounding region...one of the reality shows they're doing there right now actually uses sub-titles lol

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Reply #25 posted 06/24/11 7:36am

Serious

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Shaolin325 said:

Serious said:

West Indian bawl! If you can call that English rolleyes!

My ex sister-in-law is West Indian (from Grenada). When she would get angry it was virtually impossible for anyone to understand her...except my brother I guess biggrin .

But she spoke perfect English and was very understandable when she was calm.

lol I can understand my bf okay most of the times now, but when he talks to other locals and not me it is still hard.

With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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Reply #26 posted 06/24/11 7:38am

ZombieKitten

Ottensen said:

The bayou swampland region of the United States.

New Orleans and its' surrounding region...one of the reality shows they're doing there right now actually uses sub-titles lol

where are you from originally aunt Ottie?

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Reply #27 posted 06/24/11 7:44am

Serious

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Ottensen said:

The bayou swampland region of the United States.

New Orleans and its' surrounding region...one of the reality shows they're doing there right now actually uses sub-titles lol

ON German TV they sometimes (not often though) use subtitles when Austrians speak German lol.

With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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Reply #28 posted 06/24/11 7:48am

ZombieKitten

Serious said:

Ottensen said:

The bayou swampland region of the United States.

New Orleans and its' surrounding region...one of the reality shows they're doing there right now actually uses sub-titles lol

ON German TV they sometimes (not often though) use subtitles when Austrians speak German lol.

hah! what about the swiss german speakers? lol

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Reply #29 posted 06/24/11 7:51am

Serious

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ZombieKitten said:

Serious said:

ON German TV they sometimes (not often though) use subtitles when Austrians speak German lol.

hah! what about the swiss german speakers? lol

I can hardly understand one word when they talk. When I was in Switzerland I understood their French better at times than their "German" and my French isn't good at all falloff. Germans hardly understand them either, Austrians are a lot easier for them to understand.

With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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