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Accents... what determines them?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I was amazed that she could understand perfectly Rab C Nesbit and could not detect his strong Scottish accent at all.
I have known Parisiennes who could not easily understand French country people, so there are definitely regional accents in France, and imagine that is the case all over the world.
Yes, there are definitely regional accents in France. You can't mistake someone from Paris or from Marseille or from Strasbourg etc they also have their dialects and slang. However, the UK does seem to have a lot more accents; you only need to go 15 miles to notice a change whereas in France you'd need to travel about 200 miles to notice a difference.
The smaller the community you live in the more accents there are, I suppose.
North Germans cannot understand South Germans and vice versa.
That's why there is a common language (high German), comparable to Oxford English.
This common languate is taught in schools and accents and dialects are actually said to be dying out.
I know in France there are differences, too.
Maybe you should listen to the old locals.
If you listen carefully accents change in only 4 or 5 miles. A stranger to the area would probably not notice the difference. eg as you approach the Lancashire border from Yokshire it is possible to discern the 'looooook' for 'luck'.
Retired Prof Stanley Ellis (Leeds Uni) is able to pinpoint accents - and the different words used - within short distances. It was he who said from which area in the North-East that the infamous 'Ripper Tapes' came. And accents within city centres are quite different from those in the surrounding areas. They tend to more lazy. Try listening to a Glaswegian - it is difficult for English people to 'translate'. (eg' Rab C Nesbit').
My German is reasonable but on one ocassion at a Trade Fare I went onto a German stand with a German friend. When we left the stand after some 15 minutes I told my friend that I had been unable to understand much of what the salesman on the stand had been saying. "Oh" he said "he is from Bavaria." It was alsmost a different language.
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