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 From:  Serg (NUKKLEAR)  
 To:  99% of gargoyles look like (MR_BASTARD)     
39798.49 In reply to 39798.38 

Presumably your experience hasn't extended to Nespresso, then.


I have to agree with this - it might not be THE ultimate word in coffee, but I can go from "hm, I think I fancy a coffee" to actually having a coffee in my hand (while sitting on the sofa) in about 2 minutes, with no further cleaning etc to be done.

However, this makes me realise that I seem to be very middle-aged (or more :-O ) in my habits, and not under-30. Ah well, who cares, I like it.
[...Insert Brain Here...]
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 From:  Serg (NUKKLEAR)  
 To:  Ken (SHIELDSIT)     
39798.50 In reply to 39798.48 
Well as an American I can tell you that we aren't born talking that way. We do pick up an accent depending on the area we live I suppose but IMO I don't think I'd pick up a British accent if I moved over there. Especially at my age. I could be wrong I guess because I've never tested this or even looked it up. I'm just shooting from the hip. Mostly because I hate Madonna.


No, you most likely wouldn't pick up an accent. I'd be surprised if you would change your accent at all to be honest!
Most people's brains seem to change a lot before they hit puberty, anything that comes afterwards tends to just wash over..
[...Insert Brain Here...]
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 From:  Ken (SHIELDSIT)  
 To:  Serg (NUKKLEAR)     
39798.51 In reply to 39798.50 
So she's faking it but in reality she's like a virgin!


By reading my posts you agree to my terms of service.
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 From:  ANT_THOMAS   
 To:  Serg (NUKKLEAR)     
39798.52 In reply to 39798.50 
Some people's accent change with location and/or depending on who they're around, even when they're very much adults. It's rare it'll go the full way but there will usually be a degree of change. I know I was relatively young at the time (18-21) but whilst at Uni my accent changed slightly between home and uni, and some other people's changed quite drastically.
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 From:  Ken (SHIELDSIT)  
 To:  ANT_THOMAS      
39798.53 In reply to 39798.52 
Don't stick up for her unless you want to claim her as one of your own!


By reading my posts you agree to my terms of service.
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 From:  graphitone  
 To:  ANT_THOMAS      
39798.54 In reply to 39798.52 

I'm with you on this one - my wife's brother went to uni in London. His Yorkshire accent gradually dwindled and although there's traces there, he's started using the long 'a' sound in words like grass and bath.

 

One of her cousins went over to Tasmania after her post doc and has got a heavy Australian accent now with hints of British coming through. She's been there for around 12 years.

 

Conversely we've got Londoners at work here who've not lost their accents, so the whole thing must come down to who/what you're around, like you say, and the susceptibility of the individual to those outside influences. Also if you're proud of your accent you'll probably be more conscious of trying to preserve it, likewise, if you come from Romford (and have any wits about you) you'll be trying your best to disguise it.

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 From:  patch  
 To:  Ken (SHIELDSIT)     
39798.55 In reply to 39798.48 

I think you'd be surprised. It took less than a year and a half in Australia for my already confused accent to start changing. Nearly a year after I got back to the UK, people still thought I was an Australian. Which was annoying, as I thought I was sounding more and more British the longer I stayed in Oz.

 

Mind you, I met a couple of ten-pound tourists in Vancouver who had been there for nearly 40 years but who still sounded like they'd just popped over from Liverpool and Essex. The poor sods.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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 From:  Linn (INDYLS)  
 To:  patch     
39798.56 In reply to 39798.55 
I had a friend that moved to Dominican Republic. She visited after two years and had developed a Spanish accent. Which was weird because she couldn't say more than "hola" IN Spanish.
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 From:  Drew (X3N0PH0N)  
 To:  Ken (SHIELDSIT)     
39798.57 In reply to 39798.48 
My accent shifts within hours when I'm talking to people. It is beyond my control.
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 From:  Linn (INDYLS)  
 To:  Drew (X3N0PH0N)     
39798.58 In reply to 39798.57 
I have that affliction too. And I'm always embarrassed when I realize I'm doing it - afraid that someone will think I'm mocking them.
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 From:  Drew (X3N0PH0N)  
 To:  Linn (INDYLS)     
39798.59 In reply to 39798.58 
Yeah people often think I'm mocking them but it just happens.

I think it's because we're PEOPLE PEOPLE, Lindy.
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 From:  Linn (INDYLS)  
 To:  Drew (X3N0PH0N)     
39798.60 In reply to 39798.59 
YES! That is so true. After all, there are so many other reasons to mock people - why would anyone pick on an accent?
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 From:  Ken (SHIELDSIT)  
 To:  Drew (X3N0PH0N)     
39798.61 In reply to 39798.57 
Mine does that when I go south. After living in VA and FL for a few years I was back into talking lazy like they do. Do you think I still sound southern?

I never picked up the accent from ND though.

And besides, stop sticking up for Madonna. She's a cunt.


By reading my posts you agree to my terms of service.
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 From:  Drew (X3N0PH0N)  
 To:  Linn (INDYLS)     
39798.62 In reply to 39798.60 
Exactly. Like liking poptarts for example.
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 From:  Drew (X3N0PH0N)  
 To:  Ken (SHIELDSIT)     
39798.63 In reply to 39798.61 
I'm not defending Madonna. Though I would. Insofar as back in the 80s she was cool. She's not currently on my radar, so to speak, so I don't care.

And yes you do sound pleasantly southern. Not entirely southern, just a bit of that going on.
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 From:  milko  
 To:  ALL
39798.64 

I've got the accent sponge thing a bit too. I've tried very hard to resist picking up too much southern though. I'm not going to start saying grarse or barth or anything, ew.

 

It's most embarrassing talking to foreigners and adopting their slightly broken English. What a pisstake!

 

I think this might be the most famous sufferer - former England football manager goes to work in the Netherlands and adopts comedy Dutch accent for interviews.

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xhtq1ObGHy8


milko
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 From:  99% of gargoyles look like (MR_BASTARD)  
 To:  graphitone     
39798.65 In reply to 39798.54 
So the whole of the UK needs to move the the home counties (except Romford), and we can expect an improvement in the general enunciation of the nation! Nice!

bastard by name, bastard by nature

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 From:  99% of gargoyles look like (MR_BASTARD)  
 To:  Drew (X3N0PH0N)     
39798.66 In reply to 39798.59 
Actually, you're just easy hos (metaphorically speaking!).

bastard by name, bastard by nature

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 From:  Drew (X3N0PH0N)  
 To:  99% of gargoyles look like (MR_BASTARD)     
39798.67 In reply to 39798.66 
You're lucky that was a metaphor otherwise I'd be teaching you a lesson in manners, young man :Y
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 From:  Manthorp  
 To:  Drew (X3N0PH0N)     
39798.68 In reply to 39798.67 
What is a meta for anyway? I hate those metas. They think they're above everything else.

"We all have flaws, and mine is being wicked."
James Thurber, The Thirteen Clocks 1951

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