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Date: 2005-04-15 05:03 pm (UTC)60% General American English,
30% Yankee
10% Dixie,
0/0 for Midwestern.
I'm lots less discernable. *nod*
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Date: 2005-04-15 05:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-15 05:25 pm (UTC)Might have to do it though since it keeps showing up on my friends list ... see what they peg a Canuck as ... *L* probably 'general'.
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Date: 2005-04-15 05:31 pm (UTC)It should be noted that I retain a few very New York City specific linguistic quirks no matter how hard I'm trying to cover my tracks. I have attempted to pick up other region-specific quirks to obscure this fact, but I was always taught that people who are waiting for the bank or museum or what have you stand on line, not in line, and that the thing in front of the house that is too small to be a porch is the stoop, not the front steps, and that the things you slide down at the park that scorch kids with shorts are sliding ponds, not slides.
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Date: 2005-04-15 05:38 pm (UTC)As for the 'new york references' ... I'd heard of all of them somehow, but not sliding ponds. That's a new one for me *L* interesting term for it!
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Date: 2005-04-15 05:41 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-15 07:05 pm (UTC)60% General
20% Dixie
20% Yankee
No Midwestern.
Considering I left the USA 30 yrs ago, and that I've lived on both coasts and my family is from the south but I lived my formative years in New England, I think the test reflects my background fairly well. However, as was said above, it's too short to really measure anything. AND it leaves my British years out completely. A rather famous phonetician visited my university once and was asked to place me: he listened a while and then said: Mid-Atlantic. Halfway between Newfoundland and Dover. I thought that was pretty damned good.
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Date: 2005-04-15 09:39 pm (UTC)60% General American English
20% Yankee
10% Dixie
5% Midwestern
5% Upper Midwestern
but, whatever its source I cannot take seriously a linguistic quiz that can't spell the word "something." Really, ouch. And everyone knows that rain when the sun is shining means that monkeys are getting married. ;)
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Date: 2005-04-16 07:52 am (UTC)"Oh, you mean queing", says the California boy.
-M
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Date: 2005-04-16 03:50 pm (UTC)New Yorkers have been on line forever. Computers caught up to them, not the other way around.
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Date: 2005-04-16 10:02 pm (UTC)70% General American English
15% Yankee
10% Upper Midwestern
0% Dixie
0% Midwestern
This test seems to show what you're used to hearing. If everyone around you speaks with a Yankee accent, you'll more likely choose a Yankee word. Plus, what is a Yankee?
Little AZ girl who places people by hearing Spanish or Indigenous accents. And who also was amused by the cutesy words used in the East. Too bad there's no allowance for Southwest or West Coast accents...
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Date: 2005-04-16 10:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-17 03:59 pm (UTC)Seeing as I've been to Virginia once (years & years ago), D.C./Baltimore a few times, and other than that I've never been South, the Dixie rating was rather surprising. The best I can guess is that it's mislabeling British influences.
"Upper Midwestern" might be the same as Canadian for some things. I know "Canadian Raising" ("about", "house", etc) is also common in some northern (mid-)western states.
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Date: 2005-04-17 09:05 pm (UTC)