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|    Message 144,626 of 144,831    |
|    occam to Roger House    |
|    Re: British, um, accents? I'm re-asking     |
|    12 Aug 23 10:05:14    |
      From: occam@nowhere.nix              On 24/07/2023 13:59, Roger House wrote:       > Whenever I, or maybe I should say, my ears, hear a British person say a word       that ends with an A, the last part of the word doesn't sound the same as it       does when a, shall we say, born and raised in the U.S.A., "W.A.S.P."-y person       says the same word.        Also, it's like this every time I hear it, no matter what the word is, as long       as it's one that ends with the letter A, and it's a British person saying it.        I'll give you an example. As I would guess most people know, when it's       properly pronounced, the        word banana sounds like, (although I don't know/remember where the accent       goes), Buh - na - nuh; with the NA part sounding like it does in the word       NANNY. Using my example, whenever I hear a British person, let's say Elton       John, for example, say the        word banana, it sounds to MY ears like Buh - na - ner; with the ER part       sounding like it does in the word HER. If you understand WHAT I'm asking based       on how I'm asking it, and my ears are not deceiving me, why is that?              You should listen more to BBC News, rather than Elton John. You would       have a much better appreciation of the British accent as-she-should-be       spoken. 'Ba-na-ner' is anything but typical English pronunciation.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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