Moonbaby wrote: » It is very confusing having problems comunicating with a chinese person who speaks with a waa waa Belfast accent. And doesnt consider your flat midlands monotone to be English.
hullaballoo wrote: » I'm from Greystones, living in Cork and the local domino's pizza guy is Polish but has a Cork accent over it. Some of the Phillipino people who work with my girlfriend have really strong Cork accents as well. I suppose it's just not something we're used to but it can be awful funny.
Latchy wrote: » I do remember a few years ago meeting a girl in liverpool who had a very soft south county Dublin accent .When I asked her how long she was living over here she replied
stovelid wrote: » She sounded American, in other words.
netwhizkid wrote: » A few lebanese took on Irish accents from dealing with the Irish soldiers stationed there for years, I remember an RTÉ news article about the Irish soldiers been withdrawn from UN peacekeeping duties and the lebanese old shopkeeper who dealt exclusivly with the Irish being sorry to see them go speak in a fine a brogue as any country mick. It is the one thing I really love is my accent and it is a great bonus with women from certain countries who just love to hear it.:pac:
Jeremiah 16:1 wrote: » Some people from Newfoundland speak with Irish accents and they've never been to Ireland.
Originally Posted by Jeremiah 16:1 Some people from Newfoundland speak with Irish accents and they've never been to Ireland.
realcam wrote: » I'm one of them. I'm not doing it because I want to please anyone or because I want to sound Irish. It's just something that happens to you over time. I would have had fairly solid English before I came to Ireland but I really learned to speak English as an every day language here. And these little expressions and idiosyncrasies just creep into your own lingo when this is what you hear every day. Can't help it and rarely even aware of it unless someone points it out to me.
Terry wrote: » I was out in Liffey valley tonight and had to ask a security guard for directions. We called him over and he said "Alright, bud. What's the story" in a Dublin accent. So we start asking him for directions and then his accent slowly began sounding more and more foreign until we could barely understand what he was saying. He looked European, but I'd be hard pressed to say which part of Europe because he could very easily (and did) pass as Irish at first glance (you know the sallow skin that some Dublin people have). Has anyone else encountered this? I know you get the odd knob coming back after three months abroad with a strange put on accent, but this dude did actually sound like he was from Dublin at the start.
nitrogen wrote: » I met a Newfie who had a waterford accent and has never crossed the Atlantic. Couldn't say a bad thing about people from Newfoundland, mighty craic.