This guy has a nice, soft, gentle Boston accent that I associate with a wealthier, more proper Bostonian. It relaxes you rather than seems angry or tough guy. Its soothing.
I grew up in Boston and went to an international camp for teenagers in Colorado. We were told to bring a pencil to the party. So I told others to bring a pencil to the party. They were puzzled and wondered why they should bring a pencil to the pottie.
I am Australian but I worked in Boston for a while (well, just outside Boston). I actually felt at home there and no one had any trouble understanding me and, likewise!
I really need to send this video to my online friends because I once said “do you have an elastic?” And nobody understood what I said, and this is a good start to introducing people what the Boston Accent is.
Aw ok as a New Englander and Bostonian, I so love and appreciate this video: his authentic accent and your earnest attempts (and not for nothing, pat yourself on the pack!! I don’t sugarcoat it when people mess up our accent but I think you did very well!) Plus, like there are so many variations (thank you for addressing this, much appreciated) of the accent within Boston itself, let alone the different New England accents... It’s really difficult to catch on if you didn’t grow up hearing people talk like this
That's what I was thinking, the way they pronounce the "ar"s as "ah"s really shows how similar it could be. It's like trying to put on the Australian dialect as an American.
As a Massachusetts native I’d have to agree. But Australians tend to have a healthier sense of humor. A Boston native is influenced by Puritan restrictions and using words like “cunt” as an expletive will cause New Englanders to recoil in disgust. It never fails to amuse me how funny and wonderful Australians are in their conversations with friends.
This video was a revelation. I grew up in the suburbs of Boston and I do literally every one of these things except for the Dropped R, lol. I didn't think I had an accent because it wasn't the stereotypical urban Boston accent. But I do all those other things. I didn't know how difficult it was for people from elsewhere to pronounce vowels the way we do. Also this was really cute and funny.
I was laughing so hard because I thought the same thing not realizing I was doing some of the things they were talking about like the awe instead of the o sound. I told my husband now I realize why he makes fun of my accent so much. xD I was so clueless and being like what'chu mean? I don't have an accent. xD
@@JustMe-gs9xi 6:14 so fucking true! I was born and raised 10 miles south of Boston in Weymouth. Never knew I had a thick accent until I moved to Florida in my late 20’s and everyone kept on repeating myself back to me and laughing .
Hilarious, as an Aussie hearing someone do my own accent, and calling it Bostonian, when I did Brighton Beach Memoirs a few years ago, we were all smooshing out something a bit more Noy Yoyk. I hope your production was as special and memorable as ours!
The intrusive 'R' also comes at the end of a syllable when it's followed by a vowel; for example, "drawing" is pronounced "drawring". As in: "Yawe drawring? I nevah sawrit."
I heard having a thick Australian accent makes the Boston accent pretty easy but that's a straight up lie. Dropping the R's were easy but saying 'lobster' with that accent gave me an aneurysm
As a Bostonian.. Yeah pretty much. Wicked good. Also extra marks for the Brady jersey :) but seriously guys obviously from Boston he shouldn't be giving our secrets away ;) just kidding. Anyway if you want a movie that really showcases a real Bostonian accent well you should all watch Gone baby Gone with Casey Affleck. Me and a friend grew up with that kind of neighborhood and he had to leave the theater because it was so realistic to how he grew up. Casey and the mom are the most real in that film. Reminds me of people I grew up with in Dorchester. EDIT: Go Sox! EDIT2: "I work at camp hi howareahya" "do you teach archery?" okay that made me ma laugh out loud lol
I second thoughts you may be right...damn. Australians sound like that but you will notice with a Australian accent will start low and gradually increase.
Well spokem Madeleine and husband, I was convinced that you were imitating an Australian accent and yet I shall say that the Bostonian accent to me sounds like the transatlantic accent which I like as well. I would be glad to assist you with an educated Australian accent. Both of you entertained me.
The depth and level of detail, especially by those well chosen examples, very good! A lot of the minor things that even Bostonians don't realize they're doing. The "draw'r" example is an intrusive "R" that I forgot I do! You're good!
Yes, I heard somewhere especially in Melbourne you pronounce it like Melbin or some also would say, Melburn) like we do in my area of Massachusetts (southeastern Massachusetts, closer to Rhode Island than Baw-stin (Boston). Is that true?
“Fallout 4” the massive hit video game was set in post apocalyptic Boston. I went in for the audition and read a couple of monologues. When I was done and stepped out of the sound booth, the producer looked at me and smiled, asked me where I was from (I’m originally from East Boston) and I was called a few hours later and got the job. :-) ua-cam.com/video/MNkvc5ybdb0/v-deo.htmlfeature=shared
I was born and raised in Brooklyn. You would think that this would be an easy transition as our accents are somewhat similar, save a few vowel differences and the fact that Bostonians tend to speak more quickly and shorten some of their word endings. Unless I speak slowly, I fall right back into my Brooklyn accent. The Intrusive R occurs in some people who have Brooklyn accents too.
I’m from from blue collar, ethnic Italian,, East Boston and I am often mistaken for somebody from Brooklyn. We (you and I) know the obvious differences between the two and the more subtle ones but a lot of people from outside the Northeast have a hard time distinguishing the two.
I swear are so entertaining and made me laugh right from the getgo. I read and laughed along with you. You guys are so funny. Yet really great teachers. I learned a lot! Thanks!!😊
So much of this sounds identical with the way we speak in Australia. I only heard a difference in the pronunciation of vowels like in "towed", "not", "calling" and "pocket". But we pronounce "lobster" exactly the same. We also say "aye" in the same way as well as inserting an "r" between "saw" + "it" or "raw" + "eggs". And beer, the same! Wow I wonder if it's the Irish influence
I tried telling my husband that I think its because of the irish influence and he tried calling me a liar said it was because of the british influence. I think its both.
Ha ha. Lived in East Boston my whole life until I took a job in Seattle when I was 36 years old. I was working at a bank and was on an elevator with one of my coworkers and a woman who I had seen once or twice in meetings and I was chatting with my coworker. I got off the elevator and they continued on to another floor. Later that day, my coworker said that the woman he was with asked him what part of Australia I was from. :-)
I love this video and I'd love to see more about this accent and just more accent videos in general. Honestly the best video about the Boston accent as well. Thanks for this!
This is really good. Normally I just tell people to drop their ‘r’s and hit up a few Boston bars for regulars. Blake Lively’s accent was so good they asked her where she was from in Boston. She had no idea what neighborhood to tell them.
This is pretty funny. I grew up in Salem, MA not too far outside of Boston and I grew up speaking like that! Im a voice actor now and I worked very hard to lose it, lol. Sometimes a word will slip out now and then.
I would be amazed if an American was able to teach this, I don't doubt there are some linguistic geniuses out there. The problem is that you can't really just learn the accent it's a whole different way of talking such that Scots is now regarded as a separate language. There is such a thing as a Scottish dialect of English, which is based on Anglic rather than Saxon. Edinburgh is probably closest to English, Glasgow much further and Inverness can be almost completely impenetrable. That's without going into Gaidhlig, which is completely unrelated to English.
Im from Chicago but moved to Pittsburgh. When I recently spoke to friends back in Chicago they told me I developed a Boston accent lol I guess that’s what you get when you mix Chicago and Pittsburgh
In general, if you want to learn the Boston accent because you’re an actor who needs to for an upcoming role, that’s one thing. But if you’re a visitor or a new resident who is learning the accent to fit in, don’t bother. Bostonians will detect an acquired accent pretty quickly, and they’ll just think you’re making fun of them. Just be yourself.
The whole time I was going through this tutorial I kept coming back to "This isn't as distinct sounding when I say it" but I realised that a lot of the vocal behaviours are similar to my Australian accent, being less heavy on R's and T's is natural to me. Just that our Ah sound instead of -ar or -er is less nasal sounding
Lived in East Boston my whole life until I took a job in Seattle when I was 36 years old. I was working at a bank and was on an elevator with one of my coworkers and a woman who I had seen once or twice in meetings and I was chatting with my coworker. I got off the elevator and they continued on to another floor. Later that day, my coworker said that the woman he was with asked him what part of Australia I was from. :-)
Oh, will this be a new series? I hope you make this a regular thing, because I've been learning about impressions and accents for the last few months. I'd appreciate any help you can give!
You two are amazing!! Thank you so much for this. 🙂 Signed myself up for a Voice Over job that required a Boston accent and it's been stressing me out - but you broke it down so well! I've GOT this now!
So helpful! Auditioning became a breeze! I'm a big fan of the accent. I used to have it naturally (Despite living in the west) but I lost it as I grew older. I love watching videos of myself when younger because I love the sound of my Baw-stuhn voice. Thank you so much for this video and the videos on singing! Your assistance is wonderful.
I’m from Boston and wanted to know if I talk like this, and I do without knowing it. Boston dialect is very different than other accents. It’s could be compared to New York dialect but still very different depending where you’re from
Really nice! I’m Brazilian and I’m trying to learn English but it’s really hard to me. I live in New Bedford Massachusetts and I think it’s best place to learn because sounds like Brazilian Portuguese often! You are awesome! Keep doing that job and god bless you!!!
I have a speech impediment where I always mess up my r’s and w’s but for some reason everyone thinks I’m from Boston 💀 Thought I’d learn to perfect the accent
Notice though, if your voice raises or lowers at ends of words could turn the pronunciation into something New York Also, I think women say things softer then men. ( although your husband speaks the accent softly - ) Living so many other places, especially with non English speakers has mitigated my Boston accent. It was totally lovely to hear your husbands accent!!!
I had a boyfriend from Boston (we were on the west coast). He had been away for a while so his accent had mellowed a lot. His brother came to visit, and I could understand him fine with the heavier accent except if he ever said "saw it" in a sentence. It always sounded like "sorry" more than anything. Which was confusing because it never made sense. 'What do you mean you're sorry?' 'Huh? I said I SARIT! Sar. It. I didn't say sahry. Get the wax outta yah eeahs.' lol That was decades ago and I still remember it.
I was writing a little bit in my story where a person is speaking in a hilariously overdone Boston accent while trying to park her car in New York (bit of a long story how they got to that) but realized that I couldn't imagine the accent in my head to spell out the dialect and I didn't know any colloquialisms. Thank you so much, your video was a huge help!
Okay now this is nice, and as a Bostonian this actually makes it sound Beautiful. However, I think all of us from MA know it really comes out when we go in the rotary.
POV: You're an actor and need to learn a Bostonian accent for a play. You then start to wonder if your attempts at a New York accent have leaned more Boston all this time. LOL
I grew up in southeastern Connecticut, with many of the people having a thick, Bostonesque accent, but unique to that path of the world. When I was first introduced to Southerners, it was all but impossible to communicate back and fawth!
I’m from the Boston area, and in my experience only in extreme cases do people completely drop the rhotic “R” sound. It’s just more subtle. The difference is how the vowels are shaped. The rhotic “r” sound is formed when the mouth is opened more narrowly and the tongue is pushed further back in the mouth. In the Boston accent, the “Ah” vowel is brighter sounding because the the mouth is open wider and the spread more laterally, this makes the “r” sound less obvious even though it’s in there. In fact, when most people use the “park your car at Harvard yard” they are doing it wrong. What they should be doing is sneaking the rhotic “r” sound at the end of “car” since the next word starts with a vowel. That’s how a real Bostonian should do it. It’s just brighter and more “splatty” sounding.
I think it moreso comes from the rest of America(only America in terms of English speaking countries) pronouncing the letter R like they have a small bomb implanted in their brains that will instantly kill them if it isn't the most distinct letter pronounced in every single word. So when you don't do that and speak normal it'd be a pretty big change
One of the main characteristics of the prototypical Boston accent, is the “nasal-ness” or “nasality” while speaking. If you keep that in mind while doing the obvious sounding words,, that will always lean toward a more Boston accent. Without it and if talking more out of the lower front of your mouth, there’s a lot of similarities with Brooklyn - minus the obvious differences (Ah’s vs Aw’s when saying certain ‘r’ words/sounds for example). I’m from East Boston and got mistaken for Brooklyn often when I lived on the West Coast.
As a native Bostonian, I’ve never heard the term gawker blocker… but everything else was pretty spot on! Certainly words definitely depend on who brought you up and where. My mother swears she uses the word “packie” for the liquor store, but I know for a fact I never heard her say that shit growing up!! 😂
At about 1:42 (literally right after I scanned through the subtitles) I thought of the practice sentence "Park the car at Harvard Yard." Could you do a St. Louis accent sometime?
Parts of the Bostonian accent are close to a soft Australian accent. The "if you park your car..." example sounded like something you'd hear in Melbourne.
I used to annoyed by the Boston accent, but it’s really growing on me! And it’s wicked hard to do. I’m from Oklahoma but don’t really have an accent (or so I’m told). I tend to over-annunciate and so this is hard for me!
Wicked awesome, kid. I want a lobstah roll now. Oah, maybe a wicked good cheesesteak or tunar. Her attempts at the accent sound more like Brooklyn, Long Island, or Jersey. I grew up in Mass, but now live in Texas. Commonwealth Avenue is just "CommAve". 😅
Amazing video on this. Thank you so much !!! :D reminded me of Peter griffin from family guy and the whole show " Ray Donovan " . wonderful accent i really love it. it's soooooo dope !.
Great video. I’m from RI and there are some small differences between the RI and Boston accent but it’s not too different. I think RI does not have the Intrusive R sound as extreme.
I'm originally from Malden and I say nawth for north, my north shore comes out as not sure: example "where did ya go shoppin'?" "Not sure " You don't know where you went?"
I’m from Massachusetts, and I literally parked my car not in, but near, Harvard Yard! We really do talk like that, love Dunkin Donuts, and our sports teams 🇺🇸🇺🇸
This guy has a nice, soft, gentle Boston accent that I associate with a wealthier, more proper Bostonian. It relaxes you rather than seems angry or tough guy. Its soothing.
He sounds a bit Australian too it’s weird
Proper Bostonian accent is more Kennedy- ish.
He has a regular accent like that of people with good manners!
I grew up in Boston and went to an international camp for teenagers in Colorado. We were told to bring a pencil to the party. So I told others to bring a pencil to the party. They were puzzled and wondered why they should bring a pencil to the pottie.
If you're a mathematician, sometimes you have to work it out with a pencil.
@@OrdenJustwell played
That's hilarious because in southeastern Massachusetts we say Pahty.
I never knew I would click so fast for a video of an accent I never even heard before-
I am Australian but I worked in Boston for a while (well, just outside Boston). I actually felt at home there and no one had any trouble understanding me and, likewise!
I can finally fit into my city
Christopher Mainieri same
Nah... unless you're born here, you'll never fit in with the accent
Was you born here kid because if your not you can’t fit in this city
I really need to send this video to my online friends because I once said “do you have an elastic?” And nobody understood what I said, and this is a good start to introducing people what the Boston Accent is.
Aw ok as a New Englander and Bostonian, I so love and appreciate this video: his authentic accent and your earnest attempts (and not for nothing, pat yourself on the pack!! I don’t sugarcoat it when people mess up our accent but I think you did very well!) Plus, like there are so many variations (thank you for addressing this, much appreciated) of the accent within Boston itself, let alone the different New England accents... It’s really difficult to catch on if you didn’t grow up hearing people talk like this
Yeah, I agree if you didn't grow up here its impossible to notice the difference in the accent from town to town city to city , But we can lol
A little like Shaw's Henry Higgens, I swear I can tell if someone comes from Quincey or from Lowell.
I'm able to add to this as an Australan New Englander, due to my location being in the New England region of NSW.
As an Australian I can tell you this accent is at times IDENTICAL to the Australian accent. weird.
I routinely tell people that can't hit an Australian accent but can do any kind of British that Australian is the Bostonian of British accents 😂
That's what I was thinking, the way they pronounce the "ar"s as "ah"s really shows how similar it could be. It's like trying to put on the Australian dialect as an American.
Or English home counties with something a little extra. It is the silent R that does is most. His vowels are different though.
not at ALL
As a Massachusetts native I’d have to agree. But Australians tend to have a healthier sense of humor. A Boston native is influenced by Puritan restrictions and using words like “cunt” as an expletive will cause New Englanders to recoil in disgust. It never fails to amuse me how funny and wonderful Australians are in their conversations with friends.
This video was a revelation. I grew up in the suburbs of Boston and
I do literally every one of these things except for the Dropped R, lol. I didn't think I had an accent because it wasn't the stereotypical urban Boston accent. But I do all those other things. I didn't know how difficult it was for people from elsewhere to pronounce vowels the way we do. Also this was really cute and funny.
I was laughing so hard because I thought the same thing not realizing I was doing some of the things they were talking about like the awe instead of the o sound. I told my husband now I realize why he makes fun of my accent so much. xD I was so clueless and being like what'chu mean? I don't have an accent. xD
I think the best American accent is the Boston accent.
lol, cool, -- i grew up in boston, and everyone sounded the same. we didn't know we had accents,,, im telling you this is true.
Agreed! But I'm biased!
I like the Brooklyn accent as well both top 2
@@JustMe-gs9xi 6:14 so fucking true! I was born and raised 10 miles south of Boston in Weymouth. Never knew I had a thick accent until I moved to Florida in my late 20’s and everyone kept on repeating myself back to me and laughing .
Nah, Chicagoan. Minnesota takes 1st for funniest, though. "He's a righteous dude"
I have an audition for Brighton Beach Memoirs this week, you don't know how helpful this is! Thank you!
How'd it go?
Hilarious, as an Aussie hearing someone do my own accent, and calling it Bostonian, when I did Brighton Beach Memoirs a few years ago, we were all smooshing out something a bit more Noy Yoyk. I hope your production was as special and memorable as ours!
I think my new band name is going to be "tricky diphthongs" . So thank you.
LOL, best comment evah! Was “Gawker-blockers” taken? Asking for a friend.
The intrusive 'R' also comes at the end of a syllable when it's followed by a vowel; for example, "drawing" is pronounced "drawring". As in: "Yawe drawring? I nevah sawrit."
When there are two words or syllables in which the first word/syllable ends with a vowel sound and the second begins with a vowel, an R is added.
Because moving from vowel to vowel is difficult. The r is inserted where it doesn't belong to make the move from vowel to vowel easier.
I heard having a thick Australian accent makes the Boston accent pretty easy but that's a straight up lie. Dropping the R's were easy but saying 'lobster' with that accent gave me an aneurysm
As a Bostonian.. Yeah pretty much. Wicked good. Also extra marks for the Brady jersey :) but seriously guys obviously from Boston he shouldn't be giving our secrets away ;) just kidding. Anyway if you want a movie that really showcases a real Bostonian accent well you should all watch Gone baby Gone with Casey Affleck. Me and a friend grew up with that kind of neighborhood and he had to leave the theater because it was so realistic to how he grew up. Casey and the mom are the most real in that film. Reminds me of people I grew up with in Dorchester. EDIT: Go Sox! EDIT2: "I work at camp hi howareahya" "do you teach archery?" okay that made me ma laugh out loud lol
Funny, a lot of this sounds very much like the Australian accent!
I resent that mate.
I second thoughts you may be right...damn. Australians sound like that but you will notice with a Australian accent will start low and gradually increase.
every time i try to do the bostonian accent i end up sounding a little aussie
@@giuseppe-sabra I slip into it on certain words. Specifically works that start with R.
No, not at all
Well spokem Madeleine and husband, I was convinced that you were imitating an Australian accent and yet I shall say that the Bostonian accent to me sounds like the transatlantic accent which I like as well. I would be glad to assist you with an educated Australian accent. Both of you entertained me.
The absence of expletives makes me call this lesson into question ;D
The ar to ah sounding words sound Australian hehe
Yeah, I was watching this like "these words are just exactly how I'd normally say them"
Very scouser too
The depth and level of detail, especially by those well chosen examples, very good! A lot of the minor things that even Bostonians don't realize they're doing.
The "draw'r" example is an intrusive "R" that I forgot I do!
You're good!
This sounds quite Australian! And yes I am an Aussie, we drop our vowels too
Yes, I heard somewhere especially in Melbourne you pronounce it like Melbin or some also would say, Melburn) like we do in my area of Massachusetts (southeastern Massachusetts, closer to Rhode Island than Baw-stin (Boston). Is that true?
just had an audition for a character with a Boston accent. This video helped tremendously. Thank you both.
“Fallout 4” the massive hit video game was set in post apocalyptic Boston. I went in for the audition and read a couple of monologues. When I was done and stepped out of the sound booth, the producer looked at me and smiled, asked me where I was from (I’m originally from East Boston) and I was called a few hours later and got the job. :-)
ua-cam.com/video/MNkvc5ybdb0/v-deo.htmlfeature=shared
I was born and raised in Brooklyn. You would think that this would be an easy transition as our accents are somewhat similar, save a few vowel differences and the fact that Bostonians tend to speak more quickly and shorten some of their word endings. Unless I speak slowly, I fall right back into my Brooklyn accent. The Intrusive R
occurs in some people who have Brooklyn accents too.
I’m from from blue collar, ethnic Italian,, East Boston and I am often mistaken for somebody from Brooklyn. We (you and I) know the obvious differences between the two and the more subtle ones but a lot of people from outside the Northeast have a hard time distinguishing the two.
I have the same problem, it's hard for me to do the Boston accent without falling into an exaggerated version of my Brooklyn accent.
Every time I try to do an NYC accent, I fall back into a MA accent halfway through the sentence
I swear are so entertaining and made me laugh right from the getgo. I read and laughed along with you. You guys are so funny. Yet really great teachers. I learned a lot! Thanks!!😊
So much of this sounds identical with the way we speak in Australia. I only heard a difference in the pronunciation of vowels like in "towed", "not", "calling" and "pocket". But we pronounce "lobster" exactly the same. We also say "aye" in the same way as well as inserting an "r" between "saw" + "it" or "raw" + "eggs". And beer, the same! Wow I wonder if it's the Irish influence
I tried telling my husband that I think its because of the irish influence and he tried calling me a liar said it was because of the british influence. I think its both.
Ha ha. Lived in East Boston my whole life until I took a job in Seattle when I was 36 years old.
I was working at a bank and was on an elevator with one of my coworkers and a woman who I had seen once or twice in meetings and I was chatting with my coworker. I got off the elevator and they continued on to another floor.
Later that day, my coworker said that the woman he was with asked him what part of Australia I was from. :-)
Madeleine!! 😍😂 I love this so much!! You two are freaking adorable.
I love you too, friend! ❤️
Sure does sound like aussie accent with a sight hint of kiwi accent on some words love it!!
I love this video and I'd love to see more about this accent and just more accent videos in general. Honestly the best video about the Boston accent as well. Thanks for this!
This is really good. Normally I just tell people to drop their ‘r’s and hit up a few Boston bars for regulars. Blake Lively’s accent was so good they asked her where she was from in Boston. She had no idea what neighborhood to tell them.
I can seriously hear Australian in the Boston accent. Never knew you sounded like us Aussies.
This is pretty funny. I grew up in Salem, MA not too far outside of Boston and I grew up speaking like that! Im a voice actor now and I worked very hard to lose it, lol. Sometimes a word will slip out now and then.
I’m from Boston. Don’t know how I came across this. Obviously we don’t hear our accent. Good jawbah
Me trying to to learn the Boston accent while living in Boston 👁👄👁
That was so interesting and so much fun to try! I would love to see another one of these teaching a Scottish accent please.....✌❤🏴😁
YES
I would be amazed if an American was able to teach this, I don't doubt there are some linguistic geniuses out there. The problem is that you can't really just learn the accent it's a whole different way of talking such that Scots is now regarded as a separate language. There is such a thing as a Scottish dialect of English, which is based on Anglic rather than Saxon. Edinburgh is probably closest to English, Glasgow much further and Inverness can be almost completely impenetrable. That's without going into Gaidhlig, which is completely unrelated to English.
I can sorta do a Scottish accent. When I do a Russian one for too long it morphs into scottish... lol
The first time someone asked me to pass them the “click-ah” at work, I was mad confused. Now I kind of sound like this too😂
OMG...this is exactly what I need ...thanks a lot ...it helps me to create characters with deferent accent ...more of this please 🖤
i like your channel and support you wish you both all the best
I am English so the R dropping and the intrusive R are just how I speak. If I tried to do an American accent I'd probably sound Boston.
I’ve heard the English actors find the Boston or New York accent the easiest because they have a lot of similarities.
I'm from México and I love this city.
In my opinion is the best city of USA.
Im still learning english and it help me to sound like a bostonian
Im from Chicago but moved to Pittsburgh. When I recently spoke to friends back in Chicago they told me I developed a Boston accent lol I guess that’s what you get when you mix Chicago and Pittsburgh
That's something I never expected would happen. Both the Chicago and Pittsburgh accents have almost nothing in common with a Boston accent!
In general, if you want to learn the Boston accent because you’re an actor who needs to for an upcoming role, that’s one thing. But if you’re a visitor or a new resident who is learning the accent to fit in, don’t bother. Bostonians will detect an acquired accent pretty quickly, and they’ll just think you’re making fun of them. Just be yourself.
Haha. This is very similar to how we talk in Manchester, UK.
The whole time I was going through this tutorial I kept coming back to "This isn't as distinct sounding when I say it" but I realised that a lot of the vocal behaviours are similar to my Australian accent, being less heavy on R's and T's is natural to me. Just that our Ah sound instead of -ar or -er is less nasal sounding
Lived in East Boston my whole life until I took a job in Seattle when I was 36 years old.
I was working at a bank and was on an elevator with one of my coworkers and a woman who I had seen once or twice in meetings and I was chatting with my coworker. I got off the elevator and they continued on to another floor.
Later that day, my coworker said that the woman he was with asked him what part of Australia I was from. :-)
Doubled over laughing at this (I’m from MA). Never realized how many little nuances the accent had.
Oh, will this be a new series? I hope you make this a regular thing, because I've been learning about impressions and accents for the last few months. I'd appreciate any help you can give!
You two are amazing!! Thank you so much for this. 🙂 Signed myself up for a Voice Over job that required a Boston accent and it's been stressing me out - but you broke it down so well! I've GOT this now!
I only watched this so i could sound like the scout from tf2 lmao
ME FUCKING TOO HIII
Such a fun accent.
So helpful! Auditioning became a breeze! I'm a big fan of the accent. I used to have it naturally (Despite living in the west) but I lost it as I grew older. I love watching videos of myself when younger because I love the sound of my Baw-stuhn voice. Thank you so much for this video and the videos on singing! Your assistance is wonderful.
Sounds very similar to how people talk in Scunthorpe, Lincolnshire.
Yep and Yorkshire which is a difficult accent to mimic
I’m from Boston and wanted to know if I talk like this, and I do without knowing it. Boston dialect is very different than other accents. It’s could be compared to New York dialect but still very different depending where you’re from
Indeed NY sound like due to the same immigrants BUT NO way Australian
This is so fun!!! I really like your technique of teaching with the text at the bottom of your video ^__^ thank uuu
Apart from the southern accent. I honestly think the Boston accent is one of my favourite accents in the world ❤️❤️
Much love, from Scotland 😎
I was born with a Boston accent and ive never been to Boston before in my life💀
Both of you are awesome, thank you..
Really nice! I’m Brazilian and I’m trying to learn English but it’s really hard to me. I live in New Bedford Massachusetts and I think it’s best place to learn because sounds like Brazilian Portuguese often! You are awesome! Keep doing that job and god bless you!!!
It is very similar to the Australian accent. When I was in the States, many thought I was Bostonian.
I like this accent a lot and find it really easy to vibe with. If I ever visit the US, I'm swinging by Boston for sure.
I have a speech impediment where I always mess up my r’s and w’s but for some reason everyone thinks I’m from Boston 💀 Thought I’d learn to perfect the accent
Notice though, if your voice raises or lowers at ends of words could turn the pronunciation into something New York
Also, I think women say things softer then men. ( although your husband speaks the accent softly - )
Living so many other places, especially with non English speakers has mitigated my Boston accent. It was totally lovely to hear your husbands accent!!!
I'm an ESL teacher and enjoyed the demonstration
it sounds like a Uk-Us mix
Hah! I’ve attempted to neutralize my accent over the years but “rawreggs” just cracked me up - can’t drop that one!
I love your accent videos! Please keep doing them!
I had a boyfriend from Boston (we were on the west coast). He had been away for a while so his accent had mellowed a lot. His brother came to visit, and I could understand him fine with the heavier accent except if he ever said "saw it" in a sentence. It always sounded like "sorry" more than anything. Which was confusing because it never made sense. 'What do you mean you're sorry?' 'Huh? I said I SARIT! Sar. It. I didn't say sahry. Get the wax outta yah eeahs.' lol That was decades ago and I still remember it.
I was writing a little bit in my story where a person is speaking in a hilariously overdone Boston accent while trying to park her car in New York (bit of a long story how they got to that) but realized that I couldn't imagine the accent in my head to spell out the dialect and I didn't know any colloquialisms. Thank you so much, your video was a huge help!
It's nice to see a husband and wife team in complete harmony...
That was a great refresha course, but you didnt mention "laugh" or "can't!" 😀
Possibly the best video on UA-cam for the boston accent.
Okay now this is nice, and as a Bostonian this actually makes it sound Beautiful. However, I think all of us from MA know it really comes out when we go in the rotary.
i'm italian and i find that Boston accent simplify english pronunciation... i love it!
People always ask for the Boston accent when they learn I’m from Massachusetts. I have to do it for people and now I got pretty good at it.
There are so many northern British accents like Mancunian or Lancastrian that sound just like this.
POV: You're an actor and need to learn a Bostonian accent for a play. You then start to wonder if your attempts at a New York accent have leaned more Boston all this time. LOL
I grew up in southeastern Connecticut, with many of the people having a thick, Bostonesque accent, but unique to that path of the world. When I was first introduced to Southerners, it was all but impossible to communicate back and fawth!
Not “path”, but “paht”
I’m sorry I’m 3 years late but omg! I love this girl!!
I’m from the Boston area, and in my experience only in extreme cases do people completely drop the rhotic “R” sound. It’s just more subtle. The difference is how the vowels are shaped. The rhotic “r” sound is formed when the mouth is opened more narrowly and the tongue is pushed further back in the mouth. In the Boston accent, the “Ah” vowel is brighter sounding because the the mouth is open wider and the spread more laterally, this makes the “r” sound less obvious even though it’s in there. In fact, when most people use the “park your car at Harvard yard” they are doing it wrong. What they should be doing is sneaking the rhotic “r” sound at the end of “car” since the next word starts with a vowel. That’s how a real Bostonian should do it. It’s just brighter and more “splatty” sounding.
I explain it like your reading it as follows: “Pahk ya cah RAT hahvuhd yahd.
(Ad the “R” to the beginning of the next word that starts with a vowel)
I think it moreso comes from the rest of America(only America in terms of English speaking countries) pronouncing the letter R like they have a small bomb implanted in their brains that will instantly kill them if it isn't the most distinct letter pronounced in every single word. So when you don't do that and speak normal it'd be a pretty big change
Is this just Boston or all of New England?
I was born and raised in the midwest, no one there talks like this.
Same
One of the main characteristics of the prototypical Boston accent, is the “nasal-ness” or “nasality” while speaking. If you keep that in mind while doing the obvious sounding words,, that will always lean toward a more Boston accent. Without it and if talking more out of the lower front of your mouth, there’s a lot of similarities with Brooklyn - minus the obvious differences (Ah’s vs Aw’s when saying certain ‘r’ words/sounds for example).
I’m from East Boston and got mistaken for Brooklyn often when I lived on the West Coast.
It’s the best tutor video for bostonian accent i’ve ever seen.👍
I'm from New Zealand and I only hear a slight accent used with a few words like "porch".
Great breakdown. thanks.
One of the toughest accents.
As a native Bostonian, I’ve never heard the term gawker blocker… but everything else was pretty spot on! Certainly words definitely depend on who brought you up and where. My mother swears she uses the word “packie” for the liquor store, but I know for a fact I never heard her say that shit growing up!! 😂
At about 1:42 (literally right after I scanned through the subtitles) I thought of the practice sentence "Park the car at Harvard Yard."
Could you do a St. Louis accent sometime?
Parts of the Bostonian accent are close to a soft Australian accent. The "if you park your car..." example sounded like something you'd hear in Melbourne.
I'm a little confused with, "Aye, use your blinker!" Did you mean to write 'hey' instead? Cos that makes sense if they chop off the 'h'.
im bostonian, i have a very very thick accent, his accent is great
I used to annoyed by the Boston accent, but it’s really growing on me! And it’s wicked hard to do. I’m from Oklahoma but don’t really have an accent (or so I’m told). I tend to over-annunciate and so this is hard for me!
This is so fun, one of my favourite videos on here
You guys are freakin adorable.
This was so much fun, I hear this all the time. I live on the border of Massachusetts, I work there at times.
Wicked awesome, kid. I want a lobstah roll now. Oah, maybe a wicked good cheesesteak or tunar. Her attempts at the accent sound more like Brooklyn, Long Island, or Jersey. I grew up in Mass, but now live in Texas. Commonwealth Avenue is just "CommAve". 😅
Madeleine can you tell difference between a New Zealand accent and and Aussie accent .
very similar both in sound w a few differences...italian n irish....at times it sound Brooklyn like etc
Amazing video on this. Thank you so much !!! :D reminded me of Peter griffin from family guy and the whole show " Ray Donovan " . wonderful accent i really love it. it's soooooo dope !.
Great video. I’m from RI and there are some small differences between the RI and Boston accent but it’s not too different. I think RI does not have the Intrusive R sound as extreme.
I'm originally from Malden and I say nawth for north, my north shore comes out as not sure: example "where did ya go shoppin'?"
"Not sure "
You don't know where you went?"
The “would you want to grab a beer” segment. We would most likely say “ Ya wanna grab a beeah”
Sorry did you say "He's going to LEARN me how to do it"? Is that of a specific American dialect? Thanks
I’m from Massachusetts, and I literally parked my car not in, but near, Harvard Yard! We really do talk like that, love Dunkin Donuts, and our sports teams 🇺🇸🇺🇸
Can you do more of this type of video, Madeleine?