Impressive how he changes his accent like a machine 😶 That's an IMPRESSIVE amount of control 👏
This was entertaining. I grew up in New York, my parents are from the Caribbean, and I went to school in Boston and spent 11 years there. People always struggle to determine where I am from.
This was one of the most interesting videos that the algo chose for me. Dude is a linguistic G
im from norcal, and yes, some of us speak this way!!! 1000% RIGHT about "hella" and when we were kids, we used " heca" instead of hella :face-green-smiling::person-turqouise-waving:
I am a New Yorker, born and bred. The accent you’re referring to with deez and doz is a Brooklyn accent; I never speak that way. I used to on a rare occasion when kidding around but that was a very long time ago. I grew up in Queens and I say these and those.
English teacher here in Havana, this material is pure gold, thx maestro!!!
So NYC accent is basically Italian mafia accent😄
I’m from central mass and you really can’t hear too much of an accent where I’m from but if you get people to start yelling or angry it comes out 😂
I'll agree with his basic concepts on southern twang, but Texas itself is so big that you can typically hear at a minimum four different regional accents. East Texas is some weird mix of southern drawl and cajun, Central Texas is more of the twang but surprisingly neutral due to the large European (most notably German) influence, West Texas is your true Texas Twang, and north Texas, especially Dallas-Ft. Worth is primarily twang but has some of it's own unique sounds.
Former Southern Californian here now on the east coast....you nailed it braaahhhhhh!
My granddaughter lives talking with different accents. Listening to all the southern accents, I wanted to understand the differences with accents and found this channel. I plan to watch many of them.
Watched this out of pure curiosity, This was absolutely hilarious to hear, informative and clear to learn from ❤
Dude, I'm 50 and still stoked. lol. I find this very useful for my students preparing to study in the US or other western countries (Aust., NZ, UK, Canada, US.) This is a great example to use for my phonics classes as well. Keep up the great work.
I am a first-generation immigrant. I spent 3 years in NJ and then settled in CA. My husband always says that I should pronounce the ‘th’ sound more clearly, and now I know where that came from. 😂
I was born in Texas. At age 11, I moved to Colorado... oh man I got pummeled in 6th grade. Over Christmas break (2 weeks) I watched local and cable TV news all day and literally repeated their words exactly. When we went back to school in January. I had dropped all the drawl/twang. No one hassled me ever again.
6:15 Yes California is notorious for slang
Dude, this was hilarious! 😆 What an awesome explanation of the main American accents, and you are excellent at switching from one to another 👍 I'm in CA, but the New York accent is probably one of my favorites. It sounds so charismatic and cozy at the same time.
I absolutely love listening to southern accents, especially Kentucky, Alabama and Louisiana! They seem so soft and sweet! And I love the anecdotes I’ve heard weaved into conversations! ❤
I'm from the San Gabriel Valley in LA county, SoCal, lived from 60 on. In the mid 90s I moved to "The Valley", that's the San Fernando Valley only about 60mi from where I grew up. Remember "Valley Girl" the song? It's exaggerated, but it's not a myth.
@bluedancelilly