@@terdferguson1736 um Australia was a British colony as well. It's the same lineage. But it does sound more Australian than it sounds British or Irish. The Irish accent doesn't rly sound anything like the Boston one even tho it is derived from said accent
Look at å in norwegian.. I was struggling to pronounce it and my stepdaughter said it's like ahr or au, as she proonounced it. I said, but we don't have that in our language and she said august...then stared at me and said Paul...my name 😆
My sister and her husband moved to the Boston area 10 years ago. One of their neighbors introduced himself as Mack. Years later, it occurred to them that his name was actually Mark.
No this is some expert Boston shit that even the “language” experts get wrong about the Boston accent. When someone says a word that ENDS IN AN AHH SOUND, There’s a chance for us do the exact fucking opposite. We say rrrr. Or aaaarrr. So like, “hold on lemmie get my brar on.” (Lemmie get my bra on) Is a phrase I’ve made fun of my step mother for saying it. Also sometimes we will delay the r but it will still be there. “I’m tryina turn my fahkin Cah ron” (Car on) It will sound like caaaa roan. Rhymes with moron. Turn my caa Ron ya moron. Never heard someone say sofar but i could believe it.
She says "the letta ah" but in some pahts of New England they say "the letter ah." Because we pronounce Rs, or even add them, in front certain vowel sounds. Like the word "drawing," I pronounce as "drawring."
I've been to Boston three times and I was really surprised that every person spoke this way. Strangers would walk up to me in public to share a story which was interesting since most places people try to avoid each other.
@@ianfaris4806 Except for being a world-leading city in medicine, education, and science yeah.. lol what are you talking about If you just google "Best Hospitals in the world" "Best Universities in the world" and anything along the lines of medicine/tech/virtually any science/education and you see "___, Boston" "___, Boston" "___, Boston" which is absolutely wild for a city less than 1 million people proper. Not to mention law (oldest continually operating constitution in the world), sports, actually as I am writing this comment I am realizing Boston is the best city in the U.S. and top 10 in the world.
@@rinoking88 lmao bostons trash, did u know players used to read malcom x and mlk speeches in locker rooms before playing against the celtics because of how racist the fans are? Look it up that city is one of the most racist in america
It's funny but also true of the entire English language in all its variants. Phonetic spelling got messed up to the point where the proper pronunciation of each individual word must be taught/learned - as if it were Chinese. Because of all the English mispronunciation, William Shakespeare's original text's rhyme and rhythm are easier to understand for non-English readers today.
@@JeffBuonassisi You can just fake it with a soft d sound until you can do it right, I think doing that actually helped me learn to roll them off the tongue better.
Im from boston and became fluent in spanish later in life. I have no problem rolling r’s but the single r’s come out with my accent and people always think im portuguese. I say “probar” and it comes out like probah
As an Australian travelling to the US, people in Texas couldn’t understand a word I said but people in Boston caught every word straight away. They also had a sense of humour that felt a lot like home. It was nice.
My ex was born and raised north shore Boston. I’m originally from the Midwest. One night he walked in with a new jacket on. It looked nice on him. I complimented it. He said, “Thanks, it’s my new cah-ha!” Not at all knowing what had just come out of his mouth, I said, “Excuse me?” Then realized he had just said, “Carhartt.” That word is their kryptonite.
It's like Irish after one generation of American. You know what's interesting to me is Transatlantic accent or mid Atlantic. That is still spoken around the upper class new England areas(coastal) here, and it's been used for centuries, especially entertainment like movies, plays. Google that accent term and read about it
Ozzies are destroying the English language, especially women. Heyarr, theyarrr. Its here and there.. sounds shocking, and theyre all doing it, even on tv and radio.
My niece, born and raised in Los Angeles County, in the state of California, had a 40 hour per week babysitter who moved there directly from England (the island of Great Britain). It was astonishing to see my niece rapidly develop a deep southern U.S.A. accent, as if she was actually raised in the state of Alabama or the state of Georgia. It made me wonder if the Georgia U.S.A. accent, distinct from a British accent, is a single evolution of a British accent that has not evolved a second time (or very much more) in the last 250 years.
She doesn't have the thickest Boston accent. The thickest Boston accents are almost completely devoid of that R sound and it'd be "lettah". "That was a wicked pissah lettah you wrote, bub"
As a foreigner who’s lived in Boston for almost 30 years I can say this is certainly a Boston accent. I also noticed that there are variations depending on ethnic background, social status and location, for example whether they have Italian background, Irish or Wasp, or whether they are from Dorchester, Malden, The North End or Beacon Hill. I love their mean sense of humor. You have to have a thick skin around here to survive 😂
It comes and goes because you get tired of not being understood, so you adopt a standard American accent to be able to communicate. I had to repeat myself 3-4 times when asking a store clerk for a “cahtin of Mahboro Lights.”
This guy is ignorant. He needs to look up non-rhotic accents. A rhotic accent is an accent that always pronounces the rhotic /r/ consonant sound whenever it appears in words. The opposite of rhotic is non-rhotic (not pronouncing /r/ if it comes after a vowel and is followed by a consonant, or if it is at the end of a word). Most American English accents are rhotic.
I remember visiting Boston around 2008 or 09. By the aquarium an exhibit advertisement said SHAHHHHHHKS. It was great how they really lean into their speech impediment. Friendly people, too, except the ones from HAHTFUD I met at a red socks game.
@@brendanhigginson7996 pretty funny choice now that I look back on it. Went on some whale watching, visited the Kennedy library, that was amazing. Red socks game, legal seafoods, etc. the bunker hill site. Quite a bit of interesting history!!
I lived in Boston for 4 years and ironically, in actual Boston you rarely heard accents like this unless you walked by construction workers. However, I can confirm that accents like this and even more pronounced exist in rural parts of the state, New Hampshire, and Vermont
ive lived in Mass for my entire 17 year existence and the accents are extremely common. In Boston the accents arent as prominent mostly because alot of the people are outsiders that live there and/or they are more professional. My Nana and Father have the worst Boston accents ive ever heard and the accents tend to get less extreme in New Hampshire, Vermont, and Maine. Id say about 60% of anyone over the age of 25 in the Massachusetts area have the accent to a degree
@@_.sciascia._Accents are common but not the Hollywood stereotype. A lot of people from Boston don't have those strong accents at least from my experience
As someone from the Boston area. There’s very few people from her generation who talk like this. This is much more of an old school Boston accent. The modern Boston accent is much more present in diction for example words like “wicked” “clicker” “dunks” “ripper”, are all words more common in the Boston area compared to other places
My next door neighbor (RIP) had the most classic Boston accent. She’d say it like Sah-da-dee. And often, when I told her one of my accomplishments at school or in sports, her first reaction would always be “No suh!” Miss her a lot. 🥲
Interesting to hear the crossover between some Australian accents and the Boston accent, particularly as there is such a deep Irish foundation in both places. Like I would say “R” the exact same way and I’ve lived in Melbourne/London most of my life. Pretty fascinating
@@bremCZ yeah bad example I realise that the American accents main influence in that sense is the “r” ur referring to . But still . Lots of crossover don’t u think?
@@ThadeusMandel The reason the Australian accent formed as it did was various regional British accents attempting to find a common understanding of eachother. School is the place where accents develop and the children naturally adapt to speak as similarly as possible. When a large group of various dialects gets together, the children change quickly. Once they've changed to a shared dialect it changes very slowly over generations.
@@bremCZ depends where what city and suburb. I’m from melbs which at least while I was growing up had the highest population of Greeks outside Athens, I learned heaps of lingual habits, expressions/ words that I wouldn’t have elsewhere.. similarly western Sydney you couldn’t ever compare to freo or cairns… definitely boils down to more than British dialects .. obviously depending on ur locale and the locals ( I definitely agree with the school point)
@@ThadeusMandel Greek immigration has very little to do with the general Australian accent which had already significantly developed before their arrival. The peak of Greek immigration was the early 70s and didn't begin in big numbers until after WW2. Certainly there are Greek effected accents, and you can hear them change even from neighbourhood to neighbourhood but general Australian accent didn't get the influence because of the Greek migrants banding together so much.
I’m from Boston. Stopped for gas in Baltimore. The young attendant asked me “what country are you from?”. I laughed so hard! I’m from Boston! He said “Oh Maasatusits” 😅
Throw Scranton and Pittsburgh in there too. Both of those cities are full of people who sounds like they simultaneously grew up in both north Jersey and Milwaukee. “Yeah, I seent ‘im down dere wit a couple-two-tree uh’is buddies. Dey was goin’ tada Scran’n cat’lic dicees bazaaaaar ta get beers ‘n’ hoddugs.” “Yas’ll be headin’ up dee Eynon ‘round half past tree, heyna?”
Nah son, Baltimore stands alone in butchering the Englush language. "Aaron earned an iron urn" would still be understood in all of those other accents.
Right? Just makes me think she exaggerates it since she clearly likes the attention. Lmao "thank you I appreciate it" is never a normal response so someone saying you have the thickest accent
That last 2 seconds where they just look at each other in a mutual agreement to give up understanding the other person is I think how all humans should be
People in the comments clearly aren’t from the Boston area
1000% they don’t know sh!t
Craziest Boston accent. She sounds foreign
Right? Lived here my whole life and I've never heard anyone sound like this.
Boston has the trashiest accent anywhere
@@kevincooneyy we heard mark walberg and she doesn't sound like him. Doesn't even sound like Margo and she fakes hers with nails lol
"Peetah, the horse is here."
Thats rhode Island
@@johnbowse4693 Rhode Island is very close to Boston
@@johnbowse4693 People from Rhode Island actually talk like that? 💀💀💀
You hell 💀🤣🤣🤣
*"heeuh" not "here"
The Boston accent so strong you become Australian
I though the same as I'm Australian 🤣
Um ya Australian ? More like it’s from our British lineage . Makes more sense ya since we were A British hub at one time
If she starts shouting out, “Oi, cunt.” The transition is complete.
@@terdferguson1736 Australian accent is a mix of English and Irish probably similar to Boston.
@@terdferguson1736 um Australia was a British colony as well. It's the same lineage. But it does sound more Australian than it sounds British or Irish. The Irish accent doesn't rly sound anything like the Boston one even tho it is derived from said accent
I studied Linguistics. The Boston accent comes from old English. Which makes absilute sense. Thats why it also sounds Aussie.
Look at å in norwegian.. I was struggling to pronounce it and my stepdaughter said it's like ahr or au, as she proonounced it. I said, but we don't have that in our language and she said august...then stared at me and said Paul...my name 😆
And old english is strongly influenced by old norske.
Absilutely makes sense, and speling
You had to study to figure that out?
huh.. weird. it’s almost like some English folk came to the east coast several hundred years ago…
"You have one of the thiccest--"
I see. A kindred spirit. 😂
nice joke
you are so unfunny its crazy
@@restepozz thx
@@restepozzWho hurt you?
The letter “Ahh” is a great letter
It really is a great lettah
It’s ritahhded
What an awful accent
Lettah*
I don’t recall them teaching me that in school when I learned the abc’s. It probably comes after Zed.
"It's not an accent. It's a whole city of people saying most words wrong. It's just stupidity in a massive region." - Louis CK
I don't recall that bit, but I'm all in on this cornerstone of explaining how naturally stupid spreads.
Louis CK no one asked you nerd
Sounds like all of America, stupid in a massive region
Dont go to Baltimore. They talk funny AF.
@@brandonbullins chill on us bro
"Thank you, I appreciate it"
"That wasn't a compliment"
“I appeeciate it”
She said thanks like it was a compliment 😂
My sister and her husband moved to the Boston area 10 years ago. One of their neighbors introduced himself as Mack. Years later, it occurred to them that his name was actually Mark.
Hilarious!
"Mock"* or "Mahhck"
"Mach". Like Mach 1. Im having too much fun with this.
Mawwwk
Was it Mahck Waalberg?
Boston dentists be like “say R”
nice
Wtf 😂😂😂😂
😂😂😂
Underrated comment
😅😅
A buddy, from Boston, once said “We got in the “cah” and went shopping for a “sofer”.
It's sofah
@@capecodder04 It's "sofah" but it's "sofer and table."
Park the car in harvard yard 😂
@@krisluvs1
It's Harvard (capital H)
No this is some expert Boston shit that even the “language” experts get wrong about the Boston accent.
When someone says a word that ENDS IN AN AHH SOUND,
There’s a chance for us do the exact fucking opposite. We say rrrr. Or aaaarrr.
So like, “hold on lemmie get my brar on.”
(Lemmie get my bra on)
Is a phrase I’ve made fun of my step mother for saying it.
Also sometimes we will delay the r but it will still be there.
“I’m tryina turn my fahkin Cah ron”
(Car on)
It will sound like caaaa roan. Rhymes with moron.
Turn my caa Ron ya moron.
Never heard someone say sofar but i could believe it.
Ah, yes, the letter “ah”.
She says "the letta ah" but in some pahts of New England they say "the letter ah." Because we pronounce Rs, or even add them, in front certain vowel sounds. Like the word "drawing," I pronounce as "drawring."
More like aa 😅
The Aussies and Bostonians take deep pride in their alcohol based heritage
Lol
I’ve heard that before, and I just don’t hear it
Bloody oath we do mate.
They’re Irish
Yes, yes we do
She’s a mix between Boston, Australian and deaf.
Great comment
🤣🤣🤣
I’m going to hell for laughing at this 💀
Wth lol
Sweet Jesus. 😂
I've been to Boston three times and I was really surprised that every person spoke this way. Strangers would walk up to me in public to share a story which was interesting since most places people try to avoid each other.
They were probably on crack or something cause usually Bostonians won’t approach or talk to you
She went from Boston straight into the outback of crocodile dundy 😂
As an Aussie, she basically sounded Australian there. Lol
💯
Not really 😂
a little bit
@@Andres18199 how are you going to tell an Aussie what an Aussie sounds like lol the internet is full of morons I swear 😆
That’s exactly what I thought as well. It’s a mixture of the British and the Australian accents
As an Aussie, one of the only American accents I fully understand
Difference is australia is a beautiful country filled with cool people and boston is a contender for shittiest places ever
@@ianfaris4806well, yeah 😂
@@ianfaris4806 Except for being a world-leading city in medicine, education, and science yeah.. lol what are you talking about
If you just google "Best Hospitals in the world" "Best Universities in the world" and anything along the lines of medicine/tech/virtually any science/education and you see "___, Boston" "___, Boston" "___, Boston" which is absolutely wild for a city less than 1 million people proper. Not to mention law (oldest continually operating constitution in the world), sports, actually as I am writing this comment I am realizing Boston is the best city in the U.S. and top 10 in the world.
@@rinoking88 lmao bostons trash, did u know players used to read malcom x and mlk speeches in locker rooms before playing against the celtics because of how racist the fans are? Look it up that city is one of the most racist in america
@ohdear8888 Boston is a shitty city in a world class shitty location.
They actually say the R like we do here in New Zealand. Like "Ah" instead of "Arr"
You guys literally have one joke and beat it to absolute death
seriously, it's so overdone at this point!
And yet, you continue to click, view, and comment on their videos like the good viewer you are
@@sugarbomb1346you ah*
"People call it the Boston accent. It's not an accent. It's a whole city of people saying most words wrong." - Louis CK
It's funny but also true of the entire English language in all its variants. Phonetic spelling got messed up to the point where the proper pronunciation of each individual word must be taught/learned - as if it were Chinese.
Because of all the English mispronunciation, William Shakespeare's original text's rhyme and rhythm are easier to understand for non-English readers today.
@@jpdj2715shakespeare was a hack, is why. He was considered daytime drama in his day, he was looked down upon as a loser.
Girl I like em thick!!!... your accent....
It brings me joy to see this reference 😂
Louis CK who can't even write CORRECTLY.
Literally thought she was aussie
😂😂😂
Doesn't even sound australian
Boston is an absolute joke and Chicago or swamp people hahaha
@@zayi8153 she sounds Australian
Definitely sounds Australian
Thats where the Australian accent comes from 😂😂
They both come from suffolk
My husband and I sometimes try talking in a Boston accent 🤣you are both hilarious 😆much love from the middle of America ✌️💖🤩
My son and I are from Boston, now living in Wisconsin and we are teaching his daughter (my granddaughter) how to speak “Boston” -it’s adorable!😅
The letter "Ah"
The letter "Ahh"
The letter "Aahhh"
😂
Excuse me, lettah Aah.
Lettah*
Bostonians should make friends with east Asians.
“Letter R doesn’t exist in Boston because it went south to escape the winter”
@@loganbaileysfunwithtrains606 So what they got there now is just winte? Why only R left?
As an Aussie the Boston accent is probably the easiest to understand, our words are pronounced pretty similarly.
I'm from everett right outside boston, and I've always said the Australian accent is easily understandable to me.
Truer words have never been spoken so close 😂
I live in the middle of Massachusetts near Worcester or Wustah. Yeah I can understand Aussies .
Wicked Pissa worcester area. Aussie's are mad easy to understand.
Years ago the Wall Street Journal had an article discussing the similarities between the Boston and Australian accents.
Even the Aussies are impressed
imagine a Boston pirate "ARRRRR"
Try to get her to roll her ahh(R) with Spanish words.
I'm from Boston my wife from Portugal she tries to teach me but I can't roll my Rs.
@@JeffBuonassisi You can just fake it with a soft d sound until you can do it right, I think doing that actually helped me learn to roll them off the tongue better.
@@zachsdickDOTmpg good idea but I just learned I can't roll my Ds also lmfao my tongue dont move like that lol.
It’s just gargling
Im from boston and became fluent in spanish later in life. I have no problem rolling r’s but the single r’s come out with my accent and people always think im portuguese. I say “probar” and it comes out like probah
“The lettah ah” is crazy 😂
"only when the vowel a is followed the letter R" but the R is also silent after letter e in some of the examples she gives, eg. Carter
As an Australian travelling to the US, people in Texas couldn’t understand a word I said but people in Boston caught every word straight away. They also had a sense of humour that felt a lot like home. It was nice.
We don't pull any punches in the northeast. 🤣
Not sure I'd describe our humor as "nice"
What? Were they racist?
Not racist just mean. It's fun for us. And let's us know who can hang. Though some guys in Southie are pretty fuckin racist.😬
@@colonelangus7535 Boston produces a ton of comedians. They do have a nice sense of humor. Nobody is afraid to give and take it
Your people settled there
I wanna hear a Bostonian pirate now
Aye, we finds the tweashuh, we wule the Seven Seas.
"Aaaaah!"
Jack Sparruh
@@NN-rn1oz yep 😂
Haa 👌
The confused "hmm" at the endb😂😂😂
Almost Australian 😂
Every fallout 4 character should have sounded like this
Facts bro honestly. I’m from Mass and it ticks me off to this day.
Thankfully they have subtitles, just in case.
yes
Wa ah
There are some NPC's that clearly have a Boston accent. The guy that tries to sell you a charge card, if you don't buy he calls you a 'retahhd'.
If you say "rise up lights" you will sound Australian saying "razor blades"
I just did this and I can’t stop laughing
OMG rofl, i thought you were trolling, but now I can't stop giggling at myself every time I say it.
I just tried it and it didn't work!
Ohhhhhhhh wait I just tried it again and it actually worked! Omg this is awesome!!
If you say “beer can” you will sound like a Jamaican saying “bacon”
Those hmmms at the end after the letter Ahh is what did it for me 😂
When it's so Boston you're still British... 😂
My ex was born and raised north shore Boston. I’m originally from the Midwest. One night he walked in with a new jacket on. It looked nice on him. I complimented it. He said, “Thanks, it’s my new cah-ha!” Not at all knowing what had just come out of his mouth, I said, “Excuse me?” Then realized he had just said, “Carhartt.” That word is their kryptonite.
🤣 too good
ask him to say garbage. my former BIL liked to tease my sister about that word
And we all wear them lol
You miss are not lying at all/ these comments put the complex deep into my hart / wicked deep
😂😂😂😂😂
I’m Australian and was surprised to hear that her individual pronunciations sounded Australian!
I was about to say the same thing, very interesting
It's like Irish after one generation of American. You know what's interesting to me is Transatlantic accent or mid Atlantic. That is still spoken around the upper class new England areas(coastal) here, and it's been used for centuries, especially entertainment like movies, plays. Google that accent term and read about it
I'm a Kiwi... sounds similar to mine too
I love the Australian accent. It's like the British accent grew a pair of balls.
Ozzies are destroying the English language, especially women. Heyarr, theyarrr. Its here and there.. sounds shocking, and theyre all doing it, even on tv and radio.
That’s the most Aussie sounding Boston accent I’ve ever heard 😂
Nurse: “now say r”
Dentist: “give me a big R”
My boy is wicked smaaat
So the heavy set one told me I was a few pounds overweight and I had a receding hairline so I told her to go fahk herself
#GoodwillHunting
You like apples?
The kehds gonna be the next fackin Steve jahbs
Wickkked smaaaaat bub
Well, this explains why pirates never come from Boston. "Aaaahhh matey"
A pirates favorite letter is the sea.
🤦🏻♂️👉🏼👎🏼
Cute 😊😊😊😊😊
@marktatum2592 Witty 😊😊😊😊
Close. We got our accent from the English colonists.
When he says "grammar" after a phonological explanation.... it hurts.....
TF2 Scout would be proud
When Godzilla attacks:
LA: Ahhhhhh!!!
Japan: Ahhhhhhh!!!
Boston: RRRRRRRR!!!
LMAOOO
Criminally underrated comment.
😂😂😂
Lol
Best comment on here
This man’s whole personality is his girl’s accent
I hope for his sake they never break up or he'll be a poor man. Also, why does it feel this is what he only likes about her?
tbh if my girl sounded like that it would be mine too
@@Tumeg2108bc that’s the only thing he ever comments on, not her looks, not her interests, not their commonalities, only her accent. 😂
And the accent is not real. She over exaggerates.
i wonder how her accent sounds humming and moaning
"Are you a knock?"
Boston Accent- Then the guy not even trying-“I’m gonna go park the car in the Harvard Yard.”
Now I wanna become a dentist so I can move to Boston and tell people to say R before working on their teeth
Everything that has ever happened will make absolute sense when this comes true.
Am dentist. Will test this next time I get someone from Boston.
@@weseggett7091 thank you. Please do share your results
It’s an accent not a speech impediment we can say the letter R this lady is just forcing it way to hard
Yo this joke is so f* good lol "Aaaaaah"
All she gotta do is be more nasally and higher pitched and she turns into Lois Griffin I swear 😂😂
Accurate asf lmfao😂
Lois. Not louis
That’s because Louis Griffin is from Rhode Island which is only an hour south of Boston so their accents are similar.
@@XxYERMOM123xX nobody cares buddy we all understood what he was tryna say
That’s the Rhode Island accent
Ri accent is half Boston half ny
I love how she said "I appreciate it." Kinda melodious. And yes, totally sounds like Aussie accent.
My late grandmother, born in 1927 who passed at 92… lived in Boston her whole life, had this accent.
never heard someone who is so bostonian that they sound australian, that's insane
I mean Aussies are pretty much a mix of Hawaiians and Californians in attitude with Boston shit talking and the thickest boston accent possible.
Bostralian
Australians sound like Bostons, Boston was first lol
Something different happened to her because we dont sound that foreign.
@@starofdabloc exactly
"You have one of the thickest Boston accents I believe"
"Thank you"
"That wasn't a compliment"
Especially for a woman lol
@@Fent- oh look we have an asshole over here
@@Fent- I think it's gorgeous, but to each lame ass dude their own
Why does it make her even hotter to me?
@@jamiestewart48 Because every person has their own taste.
The lettah "ah"! I love it!
I talked like that as a child and it was considered a speech impediment
🤣
My niece, born and raised in Los Angeles County, in the state of California, had a 40 hour per week babysitter who moved there directly from England (the island of Great Britain).
It was astonishing to see my niece rapidly develop a deep southern U.S.A. accent, as if she was actually raised in the state of Alabama or the state of Georgia.
It made me wonder if the Georgia U.S.A. accent, distinct from a British accent, is a single evolution of a British accent that has not evolved a second time (or very much more) in the last 250 years.
R in cross stitch samplers in New England was often omitted!
@@ieatoutoften872England is not an island
@@austrianpainter42069Great Britain is an island which is what they said
As an Aussie it makes a whole bunch of sense.
💀💀💀
I understood it all.
It’s so strong, it makes her sound Australian 😂
She pronounced “letter” correctly. Clearly correct pronunciation of the letter “R” isn’t the issue.
She doesn't have the thickest Boston accent. The thickest Boston accents are almost completely devoid of that R sound and it'd be "lettah". "That was a wicked pissah lettah you wrote, bub"
As a foreigner who’s lived in Boston for almost 30 years I can say this is certainly a Boston accent. I also noticed that there are variations depending on ethnic background, social status and location, for example whether they have Italian background, Irish or Wasp, or whether they are from Dorchester, Malden, The North End or Beacon Hill. I love their mean sense of humor. You have to have a thick skin around here to survive 😂
North shore accent is strong. I’m from Reveah
@@Coffeendonuts Your from Oregon
yea people never account for environmental influences. they really think there's just one standard singular accent
She sounds Australian lol
I'm from Lowell ma and the accent does change from town to town. Remember F You. Means we love you
As s Midwesterner with Bostonian family, the accent comes and goes, and boy does it throw people off. It's hilarious.
I drive a cab in Las Vegas. The Boston accent is the easiest to recognize. Though that accent does show up in RI so it is possible to call it wrong.
I was gonna say, it's more a slightly regional thing. Us Rhode Islandahs definitely have it a bit. R and Gs are wasted breath at the end words.
As someone from Boston one of our favorite words is bastard or we pronounce it "Bastahd".
It comes and goes because you get tired of not being understood, so you adopt a standard American accent to be able to communicate. I had to repeat myself 3-4 times when asking a store clerk for a “cahtin of Mahboro Lights.”
This guy is ignorant. He needs to look up non-rhotic accents. A rhotic accent is an accent that always pronounces the rhotic /r/ consonant sound whenever it appears in words. The opposite of rhotic is non-rhotic (not pronouncing /r/ if it comes after a vowel and is followed by a consonant, or if it is at the end of a word). Most American English accents are rhotic.
"Hahdah, hahdah, hahdah, oh that feels so good"
I remember visiting Boston around 2008 or 09. By the aquarium an exhibit advertisement said SHAHHHHHHKS. It was great how they really lean into their speech impediment. Friendly people, too, except the ones from HAHTFUD I met at a red socks game.
Red Sox fans fuckin suck I'm heavily biased as a New Yorker but the unbiased people will tell you the same thing lmao
Don’t know why you would want to visit Boston but too each there own
@@brendanhigginson7996 pretty funny choice now that I look back on it. Went on some whale watching, visited the Kennedy library, that was amazing. Red socks game, legal seafoods, etc. the bunker hill site. Quite a bit of interesting history!!
"Ah you, aw ah you not, a knock?"
That is one of the funniest dinner scenes of any movie!!!
Chikin nuggies!!!! 😋
I was on lsd when I saw this movie and literally crying tears when this scene happen..
LOVE THAT MOVIE!!!!
NAHHHHHHK*
I lived in Boston for 4 years and ironically, in actual Boston you rarely heard accents like this unless you walked by construction workers. However, I can confirm that accents like this and even more pronounced exist in rural parts of the state, New Hampshire, and Vermont
ive lived in Mass for my entire 17 year existence and the accents are extremely common. In Boston the accents arent as prominent mostly because alot of the people are outsiders that live there and/or they are more professional. My Nana and Father have the worst Boston accents ive ever heard and the accents tend to get less extreme in New Hampshire, Vermont, and Maine. Id say about 60% of anyone over the age of 25 in the Massachusetts area have the accent to a degree
I've lived in Mass for 46 years. The suburbs are where the true thick accent is. Boston is mostly college kids and people from out of state
@@colonelforbin73 yup this is exactly what i meant
that's bc whites were ethnically cleansed from all big cities in the last 50-60 years. terrorized into the suburbs.
@@_.sciascia._Accents are common but not the Hollywood stereotype. A lot of people from Boston don't have those strong accents at least from my experience
So Bostonian Ben Affleck is going to cast her in a movie
"The boston accent is not an accent, it's a city full of people pronouncing most words wrong".
-Louis CK
She said “thank you “ like it was a compliment 😂
It is. 🤙🏻
@@lucysmart1476 no it’s not you all sound ridiculous😂
@@hunterloyd7802 your mother
@@lucysmart1476 false
Well when you try that hard everything can be taken as a compliment
Very Inspiring to see this young def woman overcoming her disability. Keep it up! You sound great 😊
Damn, this was brutal
😂
This should have way more likes.
Funny 😂
Lololol I just spit
She said the letter, ahh😂😂😂
In Boston, your dentist says “say R”
I swear she sounds like an Australian in short answers ! 😂
Doesn’t sound Bostonian at all… I think it’s a troll and she’s Aussie
@@MattyP650😂
Yeah she sound Australian
As an Aussie myself, I agree
@@MattyP650 i have a friend from Boston and this is DEFINITELY a Boston accent.
I’d actually need to hear her speak a full sentence to know if she has or not🤦♀️
Yes it sounds like she’s exaggerating the shit out of those words and it’s pissin me tf off
As someone from the Boston area. There’s very few people from her generation who talk like this. This is much more of an old school Boston accent. The modern Boston accent is much more present in diction for example words like “wicked” “clicker” “dunks” “ripper”, are all words more common in the Boston area compared to other places
Chill bro dont let such small things piss you off
@@litclass8361 I’m an east coasta. Just about everything pisses me off
“The letter Ahhh” 😂
“I appeeciate it”
As a British person, I cant hear a Boston accent without thinking of Matt Damon in The Departed - IYKYK.
That "Hmmm" was personal
I want to hear her say “park the car.”
All i can think of is Bill Burr trying to explain “Satahdaaayy” on the Monday morning podcast
My next door neighbor (RIP) had the most classic Boston accent. She’d say it like Sah-da-dee. And often, when I told her one of my accomplishments at school or in sports, her first reaction would always be “No suh!” Miss her a lot. 🥲
new kink unlocked
How down bad you gotta be to get freaky with the Boston accent bro 😭
I’m with ya
When my gf get aroused watching Mark Wahlberg, I'm hard for his accent.
@@ohgoditsdave2837 i feel him tho, 100% 😂
There is literally no bigger turn off then it comes to accents, you tre definitely down bad
the letter "AHH"
The "ahh" for people from Boston is crazy similar to the same sound coming from Australian people. Once you hear it, you can't unhear it.
"You have one of the thickest Boston a...!!!"
Interesting to hear the crossover between some Australian accents and the Boston accent, particularly as there is such a deep Irish foundation in both places. Like I would say “R” the exact same way and I’ve lived in Melbourne/London most of my life. Pretty fascinating
Most Irish accents use a rhotic R.
@@bremCZ yeah bad example I realise that the American accents main influence in that sense is the “r” ur referring to . But still . Lots of crossover don’t u think?
@@ThadeusMandel The reason the Australian accent formed as it did was various regional British accents attempting to find a common understanding of eachother. School is the place where accents develop and the children naturally adapt to speak as similarly as possible. When a large group of various dialects gets together, the children change quickly. Once they've changed to a shared dialect it changes very slowly over generations.
@@bremCZ depends where what city and suburb. I’m from melbs which at least while I was growing up had the highest population of Greeks outside Athens, I learned heaps of lingual habits, expressions/ words that I wouldn’t have elsewhere.. similarly western Sydney you couldn’t ever compare to freo or cairns… definitely boils down to more than British dialects .. obviously depending on ur locale and the locals ( I definitely agree with the school point)
@@ThadeusMandel Greek immigration has very little to do with the general Australian accent which had already significantly developed before their arrival. The peak of Greek immigration was the early 70s and didn't begin in big numbers until after WW2. Certainly there are Greek effected accents, and you can hear them change even from neighbourhood to neighbourhood but general Australian accent didn't get the influence because of the Greek migrants banding together so much.
she got a speech impediment
It's an accent. Clearly you've got 107 idiots who believe you.
💀💀💀💀🐿🐿🐿💀💀💀
I have the same speech impediment. Lol
Lmao
Bib
Aaron earned an iron urn energy right here
I can see an Australian and a Bostonian getting along
“Oh hardah hardah, no stuff my face with Pepperidge Farm!”
That hahd Pepperidge Fahm sahsage is biggah than my ahm.
Haha what
Great Ted call out
Organize a convo between a Bostonian, a Baltimorean, an M/C Londoner, and a Western Sydneysider - and watch us BUTCHER the English language 😅.
Sounds good to me lol
Bring in a scot as well and it’ll be thoroughly killed
I’m from Boston. Stopped for gas in Baltimore. The young attendant asked me “what country are you from?”. I laughed so hard! I’m from Boston! He said “Oh Maasatusits” 😅
Throw Scranton and Pittsburgh in there too. Both of those cities are full of people who sounds like they simultaneously grew up in both north Jersey and Milwaukee. “Yeah, I seent ‘im down dere wit a couple-two-tree uh’is buddies. Dey was goin’ tada Scran’n cat’lic dicees bazaaaaar ta get beers ‘n’ hoddugs.” “Yas’ll be headin’ up dee Eynon ‘round half past tree, heyna?”
Nah son, Baltimore stands alone in butchering the Englush language. "Aaron earned an iron urn" would still be understood in all of those other accents.
I'm starting to believe Boston is just a slice of Australia in Massachusetts.
That’s cool. I hate how modernity, mass media, and social media are killing regional accents and dialects
I like that she said thank you, like if it was a compliment 😆
Right? Just makes me think she exaggerates it since she clearly likes the attention.
Lmao "thank you I appreciate it" is never a normal response so someone saying you have the thickest accent
Yes, just more narcissistic noise
Or maybe he is just making an observation, or maybe he finds it interesting or different, or maybe he really does like it.
Irish here.. love the accent..
It's awful. Sounds like a speech impediment.
A speech defect that became an accent
“The letter ah”
That last 2 seconds where they just look at each other in a mutual agreement to give up understanding the other person is I think how all humans should be