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  #31  
Old 04-02-2008, 09:24 AM
ForeverRoses ForeverRoses is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SWTXBelle View Post
In my personal experience, children of immigrants seem to be more influenced by their surrounding community. Rarely do you hear the children having the accent of their elders. But within non-immigrant families, I think more of the over-all accent/linguistic standards of the family seem to be apparent in the children. I grew up all over the country, and while I don't have a deep southern accent, there's no doubt where I'm from when I speak.
Anyone have any thoughts?
I agree with this. I am the daughter of an immigrant, and while my mother has a very thick Bavarian accent (even 40 years later), none of my siblings have a one-- although we can all mimic the Bavarian pronounciation of english words (the th at the end of a word in more like an s, etc.). Interestingly, I spent three years in speech therapy as a child because the school said I didn't pronounce my th, s, and z sounds correctly-- I pronounced them they way my mother did.

I also notice slight regional differences even within the "Midwest" accent.
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  #32  
Old 04-02-2008, 09:27 AM
cheerfulgreek cheerfulgreek is offline
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Originally Posted by DSTCHAOS View Post
No harm no foul.

But once again, Ebonics isn't "slang" and you should find another way to joke about a GC translator than to call the crappy translated sentences Ebonics.
o.k. I was wrong, and I went back to edit the original post.
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  #33  
Old 04-02-2008, 09:38 AM
DSTCHAOS DSTCHAOS is offline
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Originally Posted by ree-Xi View Post
Now, Dunkin Donuts is a regional thing, at least up until the past few years. I heard from my inlaws that Arkansas now has them. Only, they actually go there for the donuts, not the coffee or bagels, which cancels out the true Dunk's experience.

It's funny because now that Krispy Kreme is up here in the north, people are so excited because they love the donuts. Because, you know, no one really gets donuts at Dunk's.

I personally love the munchkins. Only chocolate though. Mostly because they have no calories, being donut holes and all.

Krispy Kreme for the donuts and Dunkin for the coffee.

I wouldn't have it any other way.

And unless you have the KK with the big glass window where you can see the donuts coming from the ovens, you have NADA!

I'm a KK glazed donut enthusiast but I only eat them once a twice a year because they are empty calories and lack nutrition. They tried to fool healthy folk like myself by getting the whole wheat versions but I knew it was just marketing.
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  #34  
Old 04-02-2008, 09:41 AM
SWTXBelle SWTXBelle is offline
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Krispy Kreme are doughnuts of the gods. Yummm.. .and I too only have them once or twice a year. And they've gotta be HOT.
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  #35  
Old 04-02-2008, 09:46 AM
DSTCHAOS DSTCHAOS is offline
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Originally Posted by SWTXBelle View Post
Krispy Kreme are doughnuts of the gods. Yummm.. .and I too only have them once or twice a year. And they've gotta be HOT.
I eat them warm or room temperature. I'll take KK any way I can get them since I eat them so infrequently.

Oh...to keep this on topic...ever notice those frosty accents their donuts have?
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  #36  
Old 04-02-2008, 10:05 AM
SWTXBelle SWTXBelle is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cheerfulgreek View Post
I'm not just talking about Ebonics here. I'm talking about how things have changed, and how things could change in the future based on patterns. When I mentioned Shakespear's English which is about 400 years old, I think reading his English and comparing it to English today, along with other historical trends are very useful guides to the way it could change in the future. One common prediction is that Modern English is following the same path as classsical Latin which at one time was a global language that evolved gradually, broke apart and was eventually buried. Even Latin split into distinct regional dialects as time went on and later, it evolved into unintelligible languages.

I don't think we should totally rely on history because it can only take us so far, but the way global communications are today, are far from anything seen in the past. I think vocabulary changes not so much because new words are invented but because words take new meanings and are combined in new ways, which is why I don't see anything wrong with urban slang and why I was not making fun of it. I think with this, more than likely a couple hundred years from now the English language will be harder to understand. I think the vowels have changed the most. The consonants have pretty much been fairly stable. I would have to do some research on that to find out why though.

I'm not just talking about Ebonics, either. Shakespeare's English is actually closer to modern day American English than British English and some Applachian dialects are VERY close. Language tends to be more conservative when spoken by those who have left the motherland - they seem to want to hold on to the way it was as a form of identification. Those in the native country continue to be a part of the language evolving and changing, with less regard for keeping the status quo as a way of cultural identity.

One of the reasons English is so hard to pin down is because it has been influenced by so many different languages. Grammar often doesn't make sense because it is based on the Latin models - scholars tried to "force" English to fit the model they were familiar with, with mixed results.

Latin didn't just break into sections and die - it became the basis of the romance languages. Romance = Rome, not lovey-dovey. Because what influences the change in language is unpredictable - politics, for example - it would be very difficult to guess where it is going. Linguists have their hands full just trying to keep up with current trends.(!) Just 20 years ago who would have guessed the impact of the internet and texting, for example? I always like discussions of the word of the year, and the words being added to the OED.

I highly recommend Bill Bryson's book The Story of English for a really interesting look at the way English has evolved.
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  #37  
Old 04-02-2008, 11:09 AM
Taualumna Taualumna is offline
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Re Shakespearean English:

Isn't it harder to understand because of the Renaissance slang? I mean, it's kind of like400 years from now and someone reads something (provided that people still read in 400 years) where a character says "You got Punk'd!" or something like that.

Also, has anyone noticed regional tone (not accent), especially for some ethnic groups? For some reason, I can always tell a "Chinese" voice/style even if the person speaks completely accentless English. There's also an Italian voice.style (think Rudy Guiliani or Martin Scorsese) that I've noticed in Italian-Americans and Italian-Canadians over a certain age.
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  #38  
Old 04-02-2008, 11:38 AM
cheerfulgreek cheerfulgreek is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SWTXBelle View Post
I'm not just talking about Ebonics, either. Shakespeare's English is actually closer to modern day American English than British English and some Applachian dialects are VERY close. Language tends to be more conservative when spoken by those who have left the motherland - they seem to want to hold on to the way it was as a form of identification. Those in the native country continue to be a part of the language evolving and changing, with less regard for keeping the status quo as a way of cultural identity.

One of the reasons English is so hard to pin down is because it has been influenced by so many different languages. Grammar often doesn't make sense because it is based on the Latin models - scholars tried to "force" English to fit the model they were familiar with, with mixed results.

Latin didn't just break into sections and die - it became the basis of the romance languages. Romance = Rome, not lovey-dovey. Because what influences the change in language is unpredictable - politics, for example - it would be very difficult to guess where it is going. Linguists have their hands full just trying to keep up with current trends.(!) Just 20 years ago who would have guessed the impact of the internet and texting, for example? I always like discussions of the word of the year, and the words being added to the OED.

I highly recommend Bill Bryson's book The Story of English for a really interesting look at the way English has evolved.
I agree. I was speaking of classical Latin which like I said was actually a global language belonging to a powerful empire which was broken apart and pretty much buried, and this was done by it's own progeny. As early as 300AD or so, the Latin of the masses had a vocabulary, pronunciation and grammar largely distinct from the elites classical Latin. Yes, the unintelligible languages I was referring to were the forerunners of today's Italian, Spanish, French and other Romance languages. Old English had a rich system of inflections for conjugating verbs and marking nouns with inflections to indicate such things as possessive, indirect objects or the objects of a preposition. Eventually the system began to collapse, mainly because words borrowed from Latin, French and Norse had stress on their 1st syllables. Norse speakers also introduced new endings and English began as a language like Latin, where word order mattered little.

Yes, you're right. Shakespear's English is closer to today's English. What you have to remember though is not only were a lot of the same words used today used back then, they were used in a different way from today. For example, when I was in undergrad we read about a laguage historian and he said that Shakespear knew what the word "hot", "dog", "ice" and "cream" meant, but he wouldn't know what we mean by "hot dog" or "ice cream". And this is what I was talking about in my OP. A lot of the words now are getting more and more difficult to dissect.
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  #39  
Old 04-02-2008, 11:41 AM
cheerfulgreek cheerfulgreek is offline
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Originally Posted by SWTXBelle View Post
Krispy Kreme are doughnuts of the gods. Yummm.. .and I too only have them once or twice a year. And they've gotta be HOT.
Ewwww. They're too messy and sticky. Yuk.
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  #40  
Old 04-02-2008, 11:56 AM
SWTXBelle SWTXBelle is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cheerfulgreek View Post
Ewwww. They're too messy and sticky. Yuk.
BLASPHEMY!
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  #41  
Old 04-02-2008, 03:18 PM
RaggedyAnn RaggedyAnn is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ree-Xi View Post
Now, Dunkin Donuts is a regional thing, at least up until the past few years. I heard from my inlaws that Arkansas now has them. Only, they actually go there for the donuts, not the coffee or bagels, which cancels out the true Dunk's experience.

It's funny because now that Krispy Kreme is up here in the north, people are so excited because they love the donuts. Because, you know, no one really gets donuts at Dunk's.

I personally love the munchkins. Only chocolate though. Mostly because they have no calories, being donut holes and all.
They power walk to municipal building to enjoy a tasty wheat bagel with cream cheese.

FYI, did you know each shot of cream has 12 grams of fat?
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  #42  
Old 04-02-2008, 03:50 PM
RU OX Alum RU OX Alum is offline
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y'all are wicked lame

this thread hella drags
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  #43  
Old 04-02-2008, 03:51 PM
Senusret I Senusret I is offline
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Originally Posted by RU OX Alum View Post
y'all are wicked lame

this thread hella drags
Do you drink your wahtah from a bubblah?
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  #44  
Old 04-02-2008, 04:02 PM
Fawn Liebowitz Fawn Liebowitz is offline
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I have a friend from Boston that introduced me to the word "bubblah" - it still makes me laugh every time he says it - you don't hear that very much here in Alabama.
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  #45  
Old 04-03-2008, 08:57 AM
RU OX Alum RU OX Alum is offline
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Originally Posted by Senusret I View Post
Do you drink your wahtah from a bubblah?
hahaha

nawh, it's wuttah from a g-lass
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