When I was living in Richmond, BC, I was astounded how different the accent was only 10 kilometers away in Bellingham, WA. I could see the USA very clearly from my apt window, and yet, accent-wise, it was a very American-sounding drawl.
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I always found the use of "eh" intriguing. Don't even ask why. Interesting eh?
Eh (/ˈeɪ/ or /ˈɛ/) is a spoken interjection in English that is similar in meaning to "Excuse me," "Please repeat that" or "huh?" It is also commonly used as a question tag, i.e., method for inciting a reply, as in "It's nice here, eh?" In North America, it is most commonly associated with Canada and Canadian English, and also Michigan's Upper Peninsula. "Eh" is also used in situations to describe something bad or mediocre, in which case it is often pronounced with a short "e" sound and the "h" may even be noticeable. In addition, many Italian Americans, especially in the New York area, use the term "eh" as a general substitute for such basic greetings, such as "hey" or "hello". Source |
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I think the real reason it's so closely associated with Canadians is just that it's become an extremely exaggerated joke in the media. Because I hear it all the time in the US. Sure, we say it MORE (and I'm one of the worst, I'm always using it) but it's not some Canadian thing per se. |
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The southern Acadians who speak Chiac with each other understand it perfectly. It's not their problem that anglophones and francophones don't speak it. There's nothing unfortunate about the dialect of language that has evolved in Shediac/Southern NB. It is part of the diversity of Canada. |
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Chiac has to be the coolest name for a dialect, though.
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:haha: I wonder if it happened?
We have stories like that too. There's a neighbourhood of St. John's called Shea Heights. Libertarian paradise. It used to be a shanty town (no joke) on the Southside Hills. After we joined Canada, the feds said, b'ys, you either have to service this place with water, sewer, etc., or bulldoze it and house the residents elsewhere. Well, St. John's made the TRAGIC mistake of opting to service it. Now it's a mix of new housing developments, shanty town, etc. Very mainland lifestyle, cars in the backyard. Big garages, houses with half the siding missing. VERY bad reputation for fights, thefts, idiots, etc. So, first Gulf War, VOCM open line. He's asking for opinions about the U.S. sending troops to help the Shiites. Missus phones in, "Well, I'm some surprised the Americans are getting involved but it's about time they did something with that fucking crowd up in Shea Heights!" |
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:haha: This is almost as embarrassing as "Talking to Americans". Door-to-Door in St. John's.
Lots of the accents. http://i59.tinypic.com/34gadm8.png http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ll4Q_0Tyt-s |
The thing about Toronto is that half the people have at least a trace of a foreign accent. It's going to be really interesting with the different cultures mixing to hear the accents that the next generation of Torontonians are going to have. My suspicion is that the "yo guy" thing is going to pass at some point (although its survived for over 10 years now), but it is indicative of how multicultural TO already is and it is not out of the question that Toronto could one day have developed its own unique accent found nowhere else in the world.
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Do the Ford Brothers count as having a distinct accent?
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One thing that it seems everyone does (any English speaker, not just Canadian) is say "I mean" at the beginning of a second though. Something like:
Hey, I just went to that new coffee shop across the street. I mean they've got the best lunch menu in town. I'm not sure why it's such a common way to transition into the next thought but I've been trying to avoid it myself. It just makes me wonder "why didn't you just tell me what you meant in the first place." |
Friendly reminder that in Northern Ontario, "I've bought" becomes "I boughtten".
The word saw only refers to a tool that cuts word. I believe the word you are looking for is "seen", regardless of any grammatical rules. Or possibly "sawed", which is the past tense of the verb "to see". |
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***** That sounds much worse than I meant it to be, but yes. I noticed in Manitoba that a lot of families had junk cars in the yard. Some even had de-facto scrapyards. I thought it was utterly bizarre. Then, when I moved home, I noticed the EXACT same thing in Shea Heights and Goulds (a farming area of St. John's). I was fascinated. I couldn't figure out what it was about not relying on the sea that created that lifestyle, made that acceptable, necessary. WWWHHHYYY are they there? WWWHHHAAATTT are they for? You don't see it, ever, at all, in outports. And, really, I want to just call it inland instead of mainland but it doesn't apply to other inland communities here. You won't find any junk cars in Grand Falls-Windsor, etc. |
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