Hello, I ate chocolate today Jesus was with me and telling me jokes about human's mind creation like money & hierarchy and how it fuck*d up the world, we had a good laugh
This is an American accent. Most Canadians talk with a stereotypical non-regional American accent. As an American, I wouldn't be able to tell she was Canadian if not specified.
@@pricc-om Interesting, so no wonder I can't hear the difference then. But I know that they do utter some words differently. Like aluminium. Wonder what this girl does. And I assume that the accent is most similar to a Northern American accent, like what they speak in say Seattle?
@@ragnarkisten If you're getting into pronunciation of particular words, I think that's way more anecdotal to an individual's experience, less of a regional thing. You can have people grow up in the same region but they might pronounce aluminum differently. Not really an accent just a trivial shift in perspective. As well, I guess you could say it's identical to what's spoken in Seattle, but the reality is the accent there is really the default accent, so to speak, for North American english. You can find that accent in any region of the U.S., though in many areas in the South, Midwest, New England and California will have predominantly accents respective to their areas. If you were going to learn english and wanted to get down the most widespread dialect and accent, I'd say go for what's in this video.
@@pricc-om So in short, there is an RP for North America, that is pretty much the default accent for vast geographical distances? Almost a bit sad that the differences are so small. It is probably easier to hear the difference between the Australian and New Zealand accent.
@@ragnarkisten Sorry about the extremely verbose comment, I started to kind of ramble, but: Yeah, I think three-letter agencies have gone and are going to great lengths to wipe out human cultural nuance in order to get the masses to succumb to consumerism and give up free will. That may sound crazy, but when you look at the fact that most of the language spoken in a whole continent is basically identical, you can start to think about how facilitating everyone to speak the same language is a step in the direction of getting everyone to function under an invariable train of thought. The NZ accent is fairly similar to the AUS accent but there are indeed differences, especially in vocab. Whereas in the US, slang words may be the only difference you find in the english spoken by individuals born in America or have lived here a long time. The aforementioned regions in my other comment you will find the most variation in a general area; other than those places you will find that Black people talk a different way, particularly from low-income areas where education isn't a virtue in the communities, as well as non-Blacks that will then imitate the culture lived by Black people. Black people have had their own culture because they've been given a crooked reality alternative to Anglo descendants. However, there's now a shift where non-Blacks take interest in the Black diaspora as a source of American entertainment, so most culture in the US is kind of a trickled down, watered-down, performative result of unempathetically dissecting the Black experience.
Miss Nyback looking beautiful
GIRRLLL LOOK AT YOU ALL OFFICIAL WITH THE MIC🔥🔥🔥🫡
I wonder where someone might purchase a pair of her used unwashed panties. Asking for a friend.
laughing about paying for feet pic
Sorry I’m Lateflt Ltn Nyback” Too You❤”
No way this is kaylee from highschool… how did this pop up on my feed-
PAUSEE who is this😭😭
Podcasts Don’t Edit , Am I Right?❤
Hello, I ate chocolate today
Jesus was with me and telling me jokes about human's mind creation like money & hierarchy and how it fuck*d up the world, we had a good laugh
Hello HRH Collection👍
what are you talking about?
Hello Brooke Schofield👍
Are you gonna visit the US?
hopefully soon🤞
Questions to Americans: can you hear that this is a Canadian accent?
This is an American accent. Most Canadians talk with a stereotypical non-regional American accent. As an American, I wouldn't be able to tell she was Canadian if not specified.
@@pricc-om Interesting, so no wonder I can't hear the difference then. But I know that they do utter some words differently. Like aluminium. Wonder what this girl does. And I assume that the accent is most similar to a Northern American accent, like what they speak in say Seattle?
@@ragnarkisten If you're getting into pronunciation of particular words, I think that's way more anecdotal to an individual's experience, less of a regional thing. You can have people grow up in the same region but they might pronounce aluminum differently. Not really an accent just a trivial shift in perspective. As well, I guess you could say it's identical to what's spoken in Seattle, but the reality is the accent there is really the default accent, so to speak, for North American english. You can find that accent in any region of the U.S., though in many areas in the South, Midwest, New England and California will have predominantly accents respective to their areas. If you were going to learn english and wanted to get down the most widespread dialect and accent, I'd say go for what's in this video.
@@pricc-om So in short, there is an RP for North America, that is pretty much the default accent for vast geographical distances? Almost a bit sad that the differences are so small. It is probably easier to hear the difference between the Australian and New Zealand accent.
@@ragnarkisten Sorry about the extremely verbose comment, I started to kind of ramble, but: Yeah, I think three-letter agencies have gone and are going to great lengths to wipe out human cultural nuance in order to get the masses to succumb to consumerism and give up free will. That may sound crazy, but when you look at the fact that most of the language spoken in a whole continent is basically identical, you can start to think about how facilitating everyone to speak the same language is a step in the direction of getting everyone to function under an invariable train of thought. The NZ accent is fairly similar to the AUS accent but there are indeed differences, especially in vocab. Whereas in the US, slang words may be the only difference you find in the english spoken by individuals born in America or have lived here a long time. The aforementioned regions in my other comment you will find the most variation in a general area; other than those places you will find that Black people talk a different way, particularly from low-income areas where education isn't a virtue in the communities, as well as non-Blacks that will then imitate the culture lived by Black people. Black people have had their own culture because they've been given a crooked reality alternative to Anglo descendants. However, there's now a shift where non-Blacks take interest in the Black diaspora as a source of American entertainment, so most culture in the US is kind of a trickled down, watered-down, performative result of unempathetically dissecting the Black experience.
i have wife
good