owenc wrote: » That top one sounds like australians, and the bottom one is crap compared to top i love the top one, but still that ain't posh.... is that the most common dublin accent?? why don't you hear it on tv as much then...
Grimebox wrote: » I have the so called D4 accent. Had it all my life and will probably have it for the rest of my life. So I deserve a slap do I? Its no act. I used to be ashamed because of people like you but fcuk that. I'm now glad I speak the way I do and don't have the horrible typical dublin accent.
Cheap Thrills! wrote: » But listen theres hope!! Scientists are working on a cure...Someday you wont have to live this way any more, one day you too can be normal instead of nWWWoArrRRmal. Stay strong, be brave. Science will cure you one day!
owenc wrote: » i wonder what accent you have?:rolleyes:
Cheap Thrills! wrote: » Oh jiminy! What an original argument! If you don't speak in a manufactured, affected Americanised ba$tardisation of an accent then you MUST be a Scobie..... Cue, vitriolic monologue about Scobies, tracksuits, shoplifting, heroin, hoop earrings and Croydon facelifts, pramfaces....yada yada... Sorry to dissapoint but I have neither a Scobie nor a D4 accent. I speak in an organic Dublin accent without any affectation in either direction.
owenc wrote: » aw right your from croyden, well then, you should know were your placed then.. (croyden accent is awful)
Dublin4Life wrote: » You might think the D4's are gay but I would not f*k with them after watching these video's I know this is in another thread but I think the mods will agree that it belongs herehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hiyakyVX9c4http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ayndgvqnBqUhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GhgP0qEjNn8http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HO_DWRsn0d4
owenc wrote: » eh, dublin people do not have a snobby accent they can't even say three right..
ynwa_17 wrote: » I've lived in Cork for the past 10 years and have a cork accent with a slight hint of Northern Irish but if a relative phones me my voice automatically changes to a strong northern irish one. I actually have no idea why, it just comes on naturally
Killer Pigeon wrote: » Ballymun isn't organic now in fairness.
Chewbacca. wrote: » Ballymun is a place its not an accent, not everyone from there speaks like a skanger, it depends who people associate with, and how they live that develops their accent Anyway I don't find the D4 accent that bad, those fcuking culchies from the midlands piss me off
ricman wrote: » THE up inflection comes from oz soap operas , ie so an ordinary sentence sounds like a question.I think the d4 accent is now more mid atlantic because so many young teens watch mtv, and loads of american programs , ie now sky tv has dozens of american channels.IF you watch old rte programs middle class people in dublin had a more upper class english accent. The thing that annoys me is teens that use lots of american slang like cool,awesome ,its like they are pretending to live in beverly hills. I think theres alot of teens who mainly watch just american tv . i suppose the greed and materialism of the celtic tiger was similar to american pure capitalism so anything american was percieved as good and modern.
ricman wrote: » i suppose the greed and materialism of the celtic tiger was similar to american pure capitalism so anything american was percieved as good and modern.
Red_Marauder wrote: » It's just so obviously new and invented, where on earth was this accent in the 1980's or previous? I'm 23 and I'd reckon that I am older than it.
Latchy wrote: » Is there really a helluva difference between a nice dublin 4 accent or say a ' Noice ' ( excuse the Sarcasm ) Whitehall , Rathfarnham, Fairview Leixlip ,Malahide one ? . It's the same on Merseyside were you have what some might say is the harsh scouse accent , the mildly pleasent one and then you spread out into the suburbs or over into parts of the Wirral were you have your well spoken 'midle class ' ones, remembering that many of the residents would have originally come from across the water in Liverpool themselfs ( and in the main proud of it to) . So in many ways it's a case of the accent evolving to whatever your surrounding /envoirment is. Look at Irish people who move abroad to America ,Australia or Europe , they adapt and pick up on the local accent ok just as some non Irish person moving to Dublin /Ireland does to . I do recall meeting a girl in Liverpool and on hearing her Dublin accent asked how long she was living in England ? . '' I'm not from Dublin she replied , I'm from here Liverpool and worked in the bank of Ireland in Dublin for 5 years were I picked up on the local dilect '' Regardless of what part of a citys one is from there's nothing wrong with speaking or wanting to speak fluently and as pleasently as possible even if some have to work at it .
tommyhaas wrote: » The d4 accent, its a cancer on the city that gives a bad name to the good people of Ringsend
duckysauce wrote: » theres no good people in ringsend