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Post by Bismarck Jr on Mar 5, 2017 12:15:49 GMT
I am pretty sure not all of the South speaks in a horrible accent like "hell no we don't lost the civil war! We wons that war kiddy!" That's not even near Hek no wn't lost civil wr! W wn war kiddy! This is closer, but I'm not sure about few words I've spent alot of time in the deep south, and most of them speak in the stereotype Khurram gave actually. However, some states such as Florida have a very northern sounding accent.
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Post by Bismarck Jr on Mar 5, 2017 12:17:55 GMT
Well I've spoken to only one man from Texas, but this is how he was speaking No human mouth can talk without any vowels, which is what that depicts. People with a heavy Southern Drawl (like some Texans) can blend their words together, in massive contraction, so "we haven't" may be contracted to "we ain't", and even the first e can be dropped, creating a 1-syllable word Actually, some click languages have single sound words which are consonants only. Furthermore, more glottal languages can have vowless words, but these are usually conlangs. Pravilitischer, a conlang by me, for example, as a word: K'vr
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Post by Desophaeus on Mar 5, 2017 20:37:21 GMT
That's not even near Hek no wn't lost civil wr! W wn war kiddy! This is closer, but I'm not sure about few words I've spent alot of time in the deep south, and most of them speak in the stereotype Khurram gave actually. However, some states such as Florida have a very northern sounding accent. Well you have to understand that Florida is sorta of spilt into 3 parts. The main peninsula of Florida is more of a fusion of snowbirds (retirees from cold areas) and the south, combining into some second-generation Florians making a permanent living in there, plus continous swarms of those snowbirds. Miami is more of an Americanized and wealthier Cuba. Panhandle Florida is extremely similar to Alabama, which is definitely Deep South. Pensacola in that area is pretty much either rednecks or beach bums, and that sums it up.
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