Re: Off Topic
Posted: Sat Oct 05, 2013 6:54 pm
Just as much as you can be clever.OldClassicGamer wrote:Sergio can be serious?
Just as much as you can be clever.OldClassicGamer wrote:Sergio can be serious?
So they all sound like they're doing a parody of PSY? That sucks I really feel for you.ZeptoRay wrote:This is how most people sound here http://youtu.be/uB4osSd2bdk .MrBadGuy wrote:What like totally gangsta accents?
I'm not going to try and type what I think that is for fear of being labelled a racist.
Hm, I can be rather quiet when speaking at times, though seeing as I have a relative who's hard of hearing, raising my voice is something I have to do from time to time, though I don't think I feel it's like me to do so. I can stutter and talk a bit too fast at times, which can lead me to go blank, but seeing as I don't really talk with vigour to anyone but my closer relations, I don't feel bad for doing so.spiraldoor wrote:I'm prone to speaking quietly and assuming that other people will be able to hear me. I often have to make a conscious effort to raise my voice, which isn't something that comes naturally to me. I also tend to get muddled and slur a couple of words when I overthink what I'm saying, which always makes me feel like an idiot, especially in important conversations.Master wrote:Hm, yeah, I guess that rings true, I'm prone to saying things I don't wholly understand or saying words incorrectly, for the same reasons. Accent-wise, I'm not sure, I don't think I have the regional accent, but I do sometime slip into their ways of saying things.
Haha I think in English at this point. I believe my accent is a bit more toned down now after plenty time in the US.ZeptoRay wrote:Here everyone sound like they are about to start rapping in the middle of the street. I don't know about me, I got so used to write in English that I can't even think in my native tongue anymore and it changed a bit my accent but I don't even know, I rarely hear my own voice because I barely talk.
Ha, all of my family does that. Whenever we meet other people we tend to forget that and confuse them.ZeptoRay wrote:I accidentally slip English words in what I say and everyone in the family gets confused.
I don't think I can participate in the Dutch thread anymore as I have no idea how to spell just about anything, although oddly enough I can read it perfectly fine. I especially noticed it yesterday when I was at another community trying to explain to a fellow Dutchman we were English only and he asked me if I was using Google Translate.GNineify wrote:It's come to the point where I think almost entirely in English. Heck, I'm not surprised if my English skills have surpassed my Finnish skills. I wonder if it would've been a better idea to go to an English high school...
I'd be nice if we could sit back and think about what we say and revise our word choice in real life.Adsolution wrote:My online speak isn't all too similar to my real-life speak, though they do bear a mild resemblance. I speak extremely casually in person, and since I have trouble formulating my thoughts into words on the spot, I tend to avoid conversations that require that sort of thing constantly. On the odd occasion though, I'll have absolutely no trouble translating my thoughts quickly, and that's when I save my explanations for.
I have to think more about what I say in English because if I talk too long it all turns into gibberish. I can't really decide whether my accent is thick or not; there's people who can barely understand me and people who don't even know I'm not a native English speaker.Adsolution wrote:As for my accent, I'm not entirely sure how to identify it given that I don't live in the UK and I'm not accustomed to the naming scheme or homes of particular accents (beyond what I've heard about in videos here and there), but I'd say that it's mostly British. Where I live, much of the population is British and Australian, so those tend to get mixed in with the regular Canadian accent as well. Even though my family all have Canadian accents, since I barely spent time with them around when I was learning English, I picked up a different accent. Unfortunately, my mother wants me to speak in a Canadian accent, which I can do equally as well now since that's who I'm around half the time I speak. I plan to stick with the British-esque one though, as it for some reason lets me speak clearer an with a larger vocabulary.
Haha this is so true. About a month a friend of a friend who lives merely an hour away came up from Yorkshire and her accent was so very different. She sounded like a female version of Wallace from Wallace and Gromit. I really wish I had that accent.Adsolution wrote:It's amusing how that even though the US is probably twenty or thirty times the size of the UK, the accent varies an extraordinarily small amount in comparison. America has their... Southern and their Northern accents. Quite different, yes, though not nearly comparable to the difference between every little variation on the Brit accent.
I'm not a native English speaker either, I probably suck at speaking it as a whole.Keane wrote: I have to think more about what I say in English because if I talk too long it all turns into gibberish. I can't really decide whether my accent is thick or not; there's people who can barely understand me and people who don't even know I'm not a native English speaker.