Can American Guess The Accents in American (New York, Atlanta, California, North Carolina, Ohio)
Ойын-сауық
Can you guess the States by the Accents?
There are so many states in America, and they have each accents in English! Today, We invited 5 pannels from the states of America (New York, Atlanta, California, North Carolina, Ohio)!
Let's see the difference in each accents, and see what's her final guess!
Also, please follow our pannels!
-
🇺🇸 @ian_schutzman
@hunter_brenae
@shallensabino
@chelci_chuu_portfolio
@shannon.harperrr
Пікірлер: 831
This video was so much fun to film! Thank you for having me
@Ice_V
Жыл бұрын
You are welcome! good job👍 Hope to see you more here🤗
@gorgioarmanioso151
Жыл бұрын
Unnecessary comment but you are a very beautiful woman!
@mr.lacerda
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this interesting content! Come to visit us in Rio de Janeiro Brazil some day!!
@EdwardRock1
Жыл бұрын
"We're known for our beaches" "Ok, are you from New Mexico? Girl, come on 💀
Жыл бұрын
@@EdwardRock1 you know this is an edited video right? Lol all responses and questions are not in order. I’d love to see you try though 😂
As a native speaker, the accents here were very minor differences. They could have chosen people with harder accents from northeast, Boston, Brooklyn or from deep south, Texas, Appalachia and a few other regions which are known for more distinct voices.
@MrCassett
11 ай бұрын
But then it would've been easier?
@StaciBlu
11 ай бұрын
Or an actual Atlanta accent.
@Foomando
11 ай бұрын
@@StaciBlu bruh that would’ve been a dead give away lmfaoo😂
@cheyswags
11 ай бұрын
I feel like they needed an Ohio person from southeastern Ohio, which is the Appalachia part, like people used to think I was not from Ohio because of my accent.
@baileejo7663
11 ай бұрын
@@StaciBlu I still knew the moment she talked she was from Atlanta Ga.
My favorite part was when she responded to "We're famous for a string of beaches." by asking "Are you from New Mexico?"
@pep590
11 ай бұрын
yes, that made no sense.
@melaniehubbert
11 ай бұрын
🤣🤣
@DA-wg5cz
11 ай бұрын
literally best Beaches are close to Mexico, but yeah thats like wtf.
@derekj7352
11 ай бұрын
My favorite part was when she was like “ should I play with her”?. And the other girl was like “ Don’t play with meeee” 😁🤣
@lucio.martinez
11 ай бұрын
String of beaches? What's that? I'm from Florida.
for the non-americans here, most of you dont get that America is huge. Third largest country by size behind Russia and Canada. The country spans 7 time zones. There are waaaaaaaay more accents than Texas, California, Boston and New York. Plus, you also got to watch how each person dresses and body movements. You can tell alot by the people here by alot of other things outside accents too. America is very very hyper-regional and we have different slang, ways of dress, customs for each region--more than most think. We are not the shows and fast food exports you see overseas.
@shannonmn8923
10 ай бұрын
YES! Very well said, I live in Columbus, Ohio (middle of the state, big city), and the way Shalon moved her hands and body is just like how young women my age/her age move here! 8:00 It's pretty formal, I think bc there's still that layer of rural-sort of strictness (?) but it's feet forward, hands held in front of your body, and covering your mouth when you laugh! Seriously all of us do it, especially in situations like this where we meet someone new, no matter how extroverted we are!
@radioactive_baby0706
10 ай бұрын
@shannonmn8923 I live in Northeast Ohio, and I agree. Living in a part of Ohio that's close to Pennsylvania, I sometimes hear a slight difference just by driving 30 mins across the border
@realcritical-kr2dd
10 ай бұрын
We Californians are friend ❤️
@dirrdevil
9 ай бұрын
We were more hyper-regional, but there is a loss of regional identity in America as everything is corporatized. I think regional accents will last longest out of somethings. And then America is forcing and projecting its culture across the world, and those nations are losing their identity.
@MYMY__-yz5uk
5 ай бұрын
@@shannonmn8923I’m from like southern Ohio an hr away from Cincinnati and an Hour away from Dayton and I kinda find it very fascinating that the girl actually didn’t act like any of the young ladies around here but I could tell she was from Ohio by her accent. it might be were I’m from idk I come from a small village and stuff so it might be that 😭
I’m American. My advice to people trying to hear accent differences is to listen to vowel shifts. There is a series on KZread by a dialect coach called the North American accent tour. Very informative.
@Carlos-xz5cz
Жыл бұрын
When she said North Carolina and the two possible pronunciations, I couldn't tell the difference. Sounds the same to a non-native I guess.
@anndeecosita3586
Жыл бұрын
@@Carlos-xz5cz Even to a native if they aren’t as perceptive or train their ear. I hear the difference in the two pronunciations. I mentioned in another post that in some parts of the South, people will drag their I’s. What that means is they hold on to the sound a little longer than other regions. It’s hard to explain by writing it phonetically. Fun Fact- North Carolina is the most accent diverse state in the USA. One group known as the High Tiders are frequently confused for being British. They pronounce I’s like two syllables so tide sounds like toid ❤
This is a bit unfair. All of them live in Korea now, so they've become accustomed to speaking to non-English speakers, so their cadence is not what they are accustomed to in their native states.
@realmadridworld1688
11 ай бұрын
This video had me tripping... I was like "either they got a whole crew of Koreaboos on set, or something is up" lmaoooo bc "fighting!" and the white girl from Ohio saying "annyeonghaseyo" LMAOOOO!
@kayflip2233
11 ай бұрын
They don't need to move to Korea for that. You can have neutral "American newscaster" sounding accents in all 50 states. Not everyone in every state has a heavy regional giveaway accent.
@Andy-tk7fh
11 ай бұрын
bro why did you know they live in Korea now?
@rue.eudoxie
11 ай бұрын
@@realmadridworld1688 frrrr I’m only one minute in and I said out loud: why she speak like she talking to a korean
@jonathanmong4927
8 ай бұрын
@@Andy-tk7fh channel's based in korea
This girl said “trees are popular” in my state. Hahahaha. Also I love that she said her mother was very strict in how they spoke in the house! I think we expect people (esp people of color) in different places to have certain accents and that just isn’t always the case. My dad (African American) raised me the same way. Eventually people do the whole “you sound white” and “you speak so eloquently”, but I love that she’s pushing against that stereotype by just being herself. She’s so cool.
@alex-iana8366
10 ай бұрын
I’m from Georgia and it’s true Trees are very popular here lol.
@beepbeepeddie8010
10 ай бұрын
nah shes right though
@adriennecode
Ай бұрын
@@alex-iana8366Seconded hahahahaha. Fun fact. Atlanta has a lesser known nickname: "The City of Trees".
For us non-Americans we needed a Boston or a Southern accent as they are so heavily referenced in pop culture because of their distinctiveness so we could understand what the hype is all about.
@gofishglobal7919
11 ай бұрын
@@justinrosenthal4000 Boston has about 6 distinct accents. But, I only know the Southy (Matt Damon) and the Boston Brahmin (the Kennedys). I agree with what you said.
@gofishglobal7919
11 ай бұрын
Yes. If you were to study the differences between the southern accents, you would discover that there are so many southern accents.
@sushilovermf
11 ай бұрын
frr they all sound the same to me 😭
@664theneighbor5
11 ай бұрын
Well guess what this video is for Americans so no one cares about what you want
@TheGreatOne-gw7xh
11 ай бұрын
Southern accents sound ignorant. 😂
Shannon : We are famous for the string of beaches. Hunter: Are you from New Mexico? ☠️😂
@LorenceKawaki
11 ай бұрын
guess where i a fro?
@Kombatkittie
10 ай бұрын
That killed me. Lol
they all sound the same .
@Ivan-fm4eh
Жыл бұрын
The Ian guy doesn't even sound American any more. He must have lived in Korea for a very long time.
@samalzid1560
Жыл бұрын
@@Ivan-fm4eh at the beginning he sounded abit british to me but when he started talking more and more his American accent was clearer .
@anndeecosita3586
Жыл бұрын
Really? I can hear a difference.
@davidg6803
Жыл бұрын
I'm American and same. The most distinguishing accents in the US are Southern/Texas and certain East Coast cities... But even people from those places often don't have a strong accent depending on where or how they were brought up. I know there's ways to tell based on pronunciation shifts of specific words and other hints.
@GerMFnU1848Sax
Жыл бұрын
Visit the US.
The most US / American video i've seen on the channel 😊
@z_ed
Жыл бұрын
For sure 😅
@cupidok2768
Жыл бұрын
Why not big tomate
Actually, for me, a person from a non english speaker country, it’s so difficult to hear the difference between the accents. The good part it’s I can understand all!
@dubmait
Жыл бұрын
I find it difficult to hear. None of their accents are particularly strong.
@cnf1677
Жыл бұрын
it ain't only about the english, dude. British or Australian wouldn't have distinguished them either
@MW_Asura
Жыл бұрын
I'm fluent in English and even I can't hear the difference in their accents lol it's completely negligible
@MagsonDare
Жыл бұрын
For what it's worth, as far as this native speaker can tell, Shannon has a very light accent that only is "hearable" on certain words, and the rest of them don't have a detectable accent at all.
@EarlLeeByrd
11 ай бұрын
I'm guessing that because everyone here teaches English overseas/travels a lot that their accents have normalized tremendously compared to people who never leave the state in which they were born. Even having traveled both coasts a lot for work these are not what I think of when I remember accents from the locations I'd been too.
Her questions were good. To be honest none of these people have heavy regional accents. They could be from anywhere in the US. Yes you can have native born and raised people in all 50 states with perfectly neutral newscaster American accents believe it or not.
"My UNtie" definitely exposed the Atlanta girl. Before that, I was genuinely clueless. Her accent is so neutral to me. When she said film, I thought LA, but ATL makes sense.
@johnd5931
11 ай бұрын
Untie your shoes?
@NicksElixir
11 ай бұрын
@@johnd5931 the way she pronounced "auntie"... I just spelled it phonetically, the way she said it. Very Atlanta pronunciation.
@tamerapratt1383
10 ай бұрын
They say NY is Broadway, LA is movies and ATL is TV... But idk about the LA one
@aprodutube
Ай бұрын
I’m not so sure. All blacks in the south pronounce Auntie like that…from NC to MS.
Loved the energy of the Atlanta girl
@viktor821
Жыл бұрын
100% annoying
@BecomingChelciChuu
Жыл бұрын
Thanks! 🫰🏽 I agree, so much energy! Like, why is she so happy?! She's so annoying....😂
@jsphat81
11 ай бұрын
Cat lady for sure.
@BecomingChelciChuu
11 ай бұрын
@@jsphat81 😼
@tamerapratt1383
10 ай бұрын
Agreed, however she definitely doesn't have an Atlanta accent like not even a little bit
Since Shannon appeared i wanted see her with Shalon , their names sound similar , also their hair 👱🏻♀️ 😁
She should have asked the last girl what does she call a carbonated beverage. That is a good way to tell some regions
@dirrdevil
9 ай бұрын
That's a really good one.
Shannon: we are famous for the string of beaches. Hunter: ok, are, you, from, New Mexico?
I love these!! Not just different people from various countries, but different regions and accents!!
she's actually a beast at guessing their states lol
Hunter is sooooo good at this!
@goofygrandlouis6296
11 ай бұрын
true
Cowboy hats are not stereotypical in NC. It isn't Texas! For me, Shannon definitely sounded like she's from North Carolina, but it's also a state with many different accents. The combination of basketball, barbeque, and string of beaches sealed the deal for me.
@alukuhito
11 ай бұрын
Yeah, but just the fact that some people wear them at all could give the lady an idea. There are other places where those are seen as complete jokes.
@rawwbnoles4787
11 ай бұрын
Right!? Cowboy hats aren't really a thing in most southern states unless you live or work on a farm.
@aldofromsf
11 ай бұрын
I submit cowboy hats are not all that common in NC.
@jlpack62
11 ай бұрын
@@alukuhito My point is that they are not stereotypical of the state. If you were to ask people in which states people wear them, they wouldn't say NC. They'd likely say Texas first, and then likely Wyoming, Montana, Oklahoma, and other states where ranching is a way of life. That doesn't exist in NC.
@jaylindr3723
11 ай бұрын
Lmao I was just saying this to myself. Cowboy hats are a Texas things. In North Carolina it’s about basketball, BBQ, moonshine, NASCAR and fishing
This channel is so addictive. Like I can’t wait for your new videos. I learn so much and have fun at the same time.
Ah yes, my favorite states: New York, California, North Carolina, Ohio, and… Atlanta. 😂
@blakewalsh879
Жыл бұрын
😂😂😂 I’m glad somebody else noticed that
@marydavis5234
Жыл бұрын
Atlanta is a US city not a US state.
@blakewalsh879
Жыл бұрын
@@marydavis5234 right!!!? It’s like people thinking Chicago or Vegas are states.
@BecomingChelciChuu
Жыл бұрын
😂🎉 Atlanta, officially, is a US State now😂😂
@tungstenmouse
11 ай бұрын
@@marydavis5234 Atlanta is a state of being lol
That New Yorker was good! Did very well! I’m biased but I would’ve loved Christina from near Boston in this video too!
When the Californian let go and started speaking normally, I was like "oh he's fs from CA" the way he talked, adding "like", and was like "yeah yeah" but resisted the urge to say "yeah no yeah" are all mannerisms of someone from California. Also he was pretty chill in speaking. This was fun!
@EonServoXA
10 ай бұрын
People all over the US talk like that though. I live in Pennsylvania and people talk the same way. There isn't really a distinct "California" accent as most people just talk like anyone else in the US
@Thatwasianboii
10 ай бұрын
@@EonServoXA You have to be from California to hear the difference. I'm sure it sounds familiar, but if you're not from the area, you won't hear it.
@Hotgirlbff
10 ай бұрын
@@EonServoXAthere’s definitely a difference. the California accent has spread due to TV but if you’re native to California, you can hear it.
1:34 "I got it from my cat" + the movement she does 😭💀 Love her!
@BecomingChelciChuu
Жыл бұрын
I can't help it~~😂🐱
More Chelsea please!! She’s so funny.
@baccamau80
Жыл бұрын
Her name is Chelsea 's soccer team:))
@cupidok2768
Жыл бұрын
She has a atlanta accent?
@BecomingChelciChuu
Жыл бұрын
Yay🎉It was fun!! Haha I do have an accent with certain words, but not normally due to my profession(s)~
Chelsea is really like stereotypical 'American" Or what we in Europe think how ALL Americans act at least lol
@ponyxaviors4491
Жыл бұрын
As an American, I thought she seemed sort of... hyper 😅
@Meekavintage
Жыл бұрын
She was putting on an act being a bit of a caricature... Cuz she's an actor seems sweet tho
@BecomingChelciChuu
Жыл бұрын
It's trueee, I was a bit more extra than usual😂 Thank You for watching!🎉
@anndeecosita3586
Жыл бұрын
I’m guessing your stereotypes are based on movies. As an American, she came across to me as “acting” and playing it up a bit in an attempt to through Hunter off. I can tell she is fun. 😂
Fun times were had~☆ Thank you for the invite~~ ❤🎉🫰🏽
This was tough because the American accent has become so homogenized because of TV and the internet. But, America still has plenty of people with strong regional accents.
Ian sounds SO much like actor Sam Witwer, it's uncanny. But he's also got that 'rollercoaster-ish' Californian thing going with his words, haha. Definitely Californian.
Chelsea is the CUTEST!!!! she's just a burst of sunshine!
Certain things are called by different names in different states or have strong differences in their pronunciation like sneakers, soda, and hoagie sandwiches or pecans and crayons. These can be huge giveaways for regions.
@tonialston1968
10 ай бұрын
Truth! I'm basically from the southern tip of NJ, and I tend to pronounce crayon as crown
Just one correction for the thumb image: Atlanta is the CAPITAL of Georgia(US southern state) all the other images are US states😬
@thesharinganknight9859
10 ай бұрын
Atlanta‘s accent is different from the typical Georgia accent. But then again North Georgia had that harsher feel more r heavy accent. than the typical tidewater southern with South Georgia has. Atlanta has a very mixed accent (if you’re from there when she said AUNTIE that’s a dead giveaway. And I’m from the outer metro OTP) and grew up here so I instantly noticed when she gave the cues. It also she hid he accent well.)
I'm an American and I wouldn't able to pinpoint their accents to a specific state. Region would fair better! 😮
@kathleen8627
Жыл бұрын
agree
@cupidok2768
Жыл бұрын
I need ian in my life. Does he have social media
@BecomingChelciChuu
Жыл бұрын
Same! Im glad it was Hunter and not me😂
@anndeecosita3586
Жыл бұрын
@@cupidok2768 😂😂 shoot your shot.
@cupidok2768
Жыл бұрын
@@anndeecosita3586 not english
I absolutely loved Chelsea and hunter connection ❤
What was this "I see you big apple" thing. Hilarious 🤣
@BecomingChelciChuu
Жыл бұрын
Acknowledging each other's greatness😂🎉
@zorororonoa3626
25 күн бұрын
New York is known as "the big apple"
Chelsea is just soooo nice😂
LOL I know Shallen!!!! We modeled together, walking the runway (Hayman days)! Both from Ohio and my accent is WAY different than her’s. Mines more of a country sound. Now living in Atlanta and people here hear it all the time.
When the lady said “Film, Trees, & Traffic” I died. Film is everywhere in Atlanta now (I work right by Tyler Perry Studios), and Atlanta has a huge forest that the city is built through (in fact if you don’t have trees in your yard or around your building you’re considered weird or poor), and traffic…well Atlanta traffic is famous.
@tamerapratt1383
10 ай бұрын
You must not be from here
Shalon must be from Cincinnati. It's famous for its chili (Skyline & Gold Star are the two biggest chains).
That was fun, you did great.
More videos with Hunter and Chelsea please!
I love the energy ❤❤❤❤
Ohio accents are very different between the northwest and southeast of the state. One edges on upper Midwestern, and the other is pretty much Appalachian.
@tfh5575
9 ай бұрын
and columbus has a neutral midland accent
@wayIess
4 ай бұрын
Yeah, I've family between Toledo and Dayton and have really noticed accents from several of my aunts that are different from central Ohio.
Hunter is my English teacher😎😎
What makes Shannon out of this world attractive is that she seems genuinely kind. I mean, being a smoking hot model doesn't hurt either.
@Summon256
Жыл бұрын
It was always bugging me which famous person she reminds me of when i look at her, but then i realized it's Elizabeth Olsen, only her face is more gaunt and longer in general and more gaunt kess round...but her eyes look a lot like Olsen's!
@PROVOCATEURSK
11 ай бұрын
The ugly tattoos are ruining her looks.
Omg need more of these. Can‘t wait for the next videos all about the accents 😍
I like the New York accent.
@tomfields3682
11 ай бұрын
Which one?
I'm a Korean. I guess Shannon who appeared at the last interview would have lived in Korea for years. Because when she staged first, her attitude clarified it. And she compared the size of Ohio to that of Korea which may be familiar with her. Thanks for a interesting video! ❤❤
Wow, she did very good. I couldn't guess any of them on their accents, only on their behavior.
Being from Ohio, I think it is way too easy for people to guess our state. Like we are actually famous for a lot, especially sports and air travel. And you don't want to say Cedar Point. Ohio also has a pretty decent mixture of urban and rural life, like I grew up in southeastern Ohio and when I first moved to Columbus for college people thought I was from a different state because I have more of a twang to my accent, probably because I grew up close to West Virginia.
@deiongoldsmith515
10 ай бұрын
I'm from around where the girl is from and tbh I found that I have a light southern draw but its with certain words and I do say y'all a lot but I think it's just because cincy is so close to Kentucky southwest Ohio has a little bit of southern culture added in the mix. But I was able to to pickup on her being from ohio real easy
@charanreddy9865
10 ай бұрын
The moment she said Neil Armstrong it was easy
@calebgoforth9203
8 ай бұрын
I'm from NE, Ohio, and I have a similar perspective. Cleveland has its own accent, but many people up here moved from down south for the steel factories. We're also super close to PA, so we have a hint of that.
I’m American and trust me, in everyday, we can tell someone sounds different but hardly anyone can accurately guess the state. Illinois for example, in Chicago people sound different from people in the south of Illinois. Everyone outside of the Chicago area says gym shoes, others say tennis shoes like who tf plays tennis🤨🤨? I do but my point still stands 😆
USA is the country with most diversity in the world , I mean a lot of people from different countries of each continent , also the country with most immigrants , dude that's a lot 😳
@MW_Asura
Жыл бұрын
India would like a word
@bignoonzz
Жыл бұрын
@@MW_Asura it may be diverse but it doesn’t have immigrants from all around the world to the extent of America
@AmokBR
Жыл бұрын
@@MW_Asura Nah, India is diverse, but not like the US. In fact there are probably all kinds of Indians living in the US.
@MW_Asura
Жыл бұрын
Classic American exceptionalism. Keep it going
@EdwardRock1
Жыл бұрын
Nigga just because your country is flooded with mexicans doesn't mean it's the most diverse nation on Earth, please go outside, travel some more
I was convinced that the Californian was international! I thought he was tricking us!
I’m from America and I barely heard their accent lol except for North Carolina. I’m assuming the guy is from Cali but lived another country cause that is def not a Cali accent. And the girl from Georgia really didn’t have much of an accent but she said she talks like that for a job. So I didn’t really think this video did a good job show casing different American accents. Im sure they did what they could with the people they had.
@pep590
11 ай бұрын
I agree. I didn't at all. They all pretty much sounded like each other. And I've lived all over. Atlanta has so many northerners living there, there is no accent really.
@Civ33
11 ай бұрын
There's more to California than just LA and the Bay
I only love watching anything related to english😂
I LOVED THE FIRST GIRL N SHANNON THE MOST ❤🎉😮😊
Chelsea is my new favorite😂😂
@BecomingChelciChuu
Жыл бұрын
Yay~🫰🏽💜
Nice to see Ohio represented. I would like to hear more from Shalon.
I’m from Appalachia, and people here speak so differently than most southerners. It’s a beautiful accent.
Ohio is a very recognizable state. How does the Californian not even know where it is on the map?
@gardenmusicnotebook2748
4 ай бұрын
😂I am from California and I wouldn't be able to pick it out on a map either.
@UpsNdownZZZ
4 ай бұрын
@@gardenmusicnotebook2748 It's next to PA where I live.
@1986Lutrix
4 күн бұрын
Right! Learned that in elementary school lol 😆
6:31 How is New Mexico known for "its string of beaches"????😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@cswigert
11 ай бұрын
Or BBQ? The second she said beaches and BBQ I knew it was North Carolina. Her accent was very very faint but I caught South right away.
Chelsea is so cute I love her vibe. So positive.
NC!!!!! I finally feel that we are ALIVE!!! 🎉🎉🎉
When she said Neil Armstrong it was a dead giveaway. He's from Wapokoneta, Ohio. I worked there for a few months but I'm from Indiana.
@alyssamarie8395
9 ай бұрын
Ya I knew too but it was a give away too for me because it also isn't far from my city and I've seen it but NEVER been inside of the Neil Armstrong place
Wow Hunter is gorgeous, smart and is great at this. ❤❤❤ My accent is a hybrid because I grew up into two different regions. I also pronounce aunt as awnt. Actually I tend to say auntie most of the time. I have noticed now that I am in the Midwest I almost entirely hear aunt as ant. For me, I listen to how Americans pronounce their vowels especially a and o as an indicator. Or do they tend to drop g and re at the of words or t in the middle of words. Hunter is smart to ask how they pronounced certain words because it can be a major clue. Coyote, mayonnaise, pecan and almond are some other good clue words. You can also ask what to they call certain things. Word choices say a lot. What do you address your parents and their mother and father might be a good one too. Also even within a state, rural vs urban will make a difference.
@baccamau80
Жыл бұрын
She is :)New Yorkers also smart :)
@EddieReischl
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, she did really well (Is "really" a Wisconsin tell? I suppose a person should say "very"). It gets tougher when people are better educated. Americans tend to use a flatter accent around strangers, and then resort to the local speak around familiar people. We definitely say "ant" here, the other way sounds British RP to us.
@anndeecosita3586
Жыл бұрын
@@EddieReischl Since moving to the Midwest I have noticed a lot of people elongate their O’s more than I’m used to hearing. I even catch myself doing this sometimes now because accent are contagious.😂 It’s hard to explain in writing but I will try. Go sounds like goah and both like boath. German influence maybe? Some places it’s thicker than others. Then around Chicago and Cleveland I noticed a difference with the As. Both seen flatter and more drawn out but in different ways. I met a Youper from MI and thought he was an immigrant from some Scandinavian country not American. I have a few friends from places like Minnesota and Southern Louisiana who have worked to lessen their regional accents but it comes out in certain words or when then they are extremely excited or upset. I think what outsiders may not realize is your accent can affect how people treat you especially outside of your local area. I have a brilliant friend who owns an investment firm, but because he has a thick Southern drawl when he travels, people treat him like he’s an idiot. Some accents are considered lower class. I think that is the case in England as well. In the South there is a tendency to make one syllable words sound like two help is he yulp. I’s are elongated. Niiight Riight Fiiight. I also think shortened versions of speaking are becoming more popular. I’m going to yielded I’m gonna yielded Imma. I hear highly educated people saying Imma nowadays.
@alukuhito
11 ай бұрын
The one in red is super hot though.
She was really Hunter. Also poeple from New York seem really bright in some way
When she said “that ain’t it” 😂 the ny sass well heard.
Hello ,i want to practice English speaking with someone everyday for a short amount of time , I'm kind of in intermediate level so if you like the idea just tell me please 💙 my first language is Arabic if you are interested
This was fun
As some one from Cali, we tend to shorted our words a lot😭. I wouldn’t have guessed it but when he described it, then yea most def. Even with some words like the pizza, I’m the part where I’m from, we even be changing it up some like “pissa “
Love hunter ❤
To be fair for the guy even as someone from california myself I was flipping between California versus Midwest with the way he was talking.
@xopi2521
8 ай бұрын
Totally! To me he sounded Midwest and the Atl chick sounded Cali.
Shannon is amazing.
@ballin565
11 ай бұрын
She’s cornbread fed
U gotta do somebody from the Midwest... Dakotas, Minnesota, Wisconsin. Im from Wisconsin, and I will tell you that everybody that's not from the Midwest has an accent to me lol.
Finally someone from Ohio!
Y'all should do a show with all southern American accents. But make sure that everyone is a good representation of their city. P.S. new orleans is on that list.
Love that she guessed North Carolina right off the bat despite the Los Angeles shirt 😂.
1st pair was soooo fun
1:00 did she just do the Korean "fighting!" expression LMAOOOOO.
i love hearing hunter's accent.
Gotta get Minnesota in here!
I want to hear Shannon in full southern mode
@michaelhawk3861
Жыл бұрын
Yeah! Also 6:53 is that slang? And what did she say lol Edit: North Cackalacky maybe
@suvhur
Жыл бұрын
@@michaelhawk3861 yea she says North Cackalacky, as someone who has lived in South Carolina, ive heard it few times there as well, from my understanding its a nickname for the Carolinas made to poke fun at the deep southern ways of the 2 states, I guess the Carolinians kinda just liked it and just took it on as a little nickname for themselves
@earthcitty
11 ай бұрын
@michaelhawk3861 yes, that's our slang term for our state "North (Nort') Cackalacky". As a NC person it's a little difficult to go into a full piedmont NC accent anymore because it is dying. Shannon had more of a general "Southern" accent instead of one of the more regionally specific NC accents. Some of my coworkers from the more rural counties still have the Piedmont accent though.
"North Cackalacky" Love it! 😂👍
Both sides of my family have been in California for more than a century and we're native English speakers--and I always say "ant" (as the insect) and never say "awnt." Your California guy aeems to have a bit of a different accent overall actually.
@zacharystockton7087
11 ай бұрын
I thought he was from California until he said awnt. That really threw me off since I never heard it pronounced that way growing up there.
@77Catguy
11 ай бұрын
@@zacharystockton7087 Me neither--except by outsiders or those growing up in families of outsiders (that is, non-Californians).
Everytime I see Ohio, I can hear the "Down in Ohio.. swag like Ohio"
@JAlonsoBI4Ycomparaciones
Жыл бұрын
Same
@alyssamarie8395
9 ай бұрын
😂😂
I am from Chicago and didn't realize that I have a kind of nasally accent until someone pointed out the way I pronounced certain words and then I could hear it. (Especially a word like "CAN'T"!) My husband is from the middle of the state of Illinois and has a very neutral accent. But I DO NOT sound like those guys from SNL's "Da Bears" skit! And I say soda, not pop. I also say Chi-CAW-go, not Chi-CAH-go. And the Aunt pronunciation could confuse someone trying to guess if someone is from Illinois because I've noticed that white people here say "ANT", but black people say "AWN-TY". This video was fun to watch. Love the vibe of the young lady from Atlanta.
@JosephOccenoBFH
Жыл бұрын
"Elston" (avenue) in Chicago accent sounds like "Austin" said in a German accent. 😂 Lived in Chicago for 8 yrs.
@CarstenMoreno
Жыл бұрын
I'm from the northwest suburbs of Chicago. A lot of people from the Chicagoland area have what is called the "northern cities vowel shift," which is also called the inland northern accent. It spans from Upstate New York (and northeast Pennsylvania) all the way to Minnesota. I say CHI-CAH-GO instead of CHI-CAW-GO. I sound just like most of my dad's side of the family. However, my mom is originally from Bloomington, Indiana and doesn't sound Chicagoan, but probably more neutral, I suppose. Some people have a twang south of Indianapolis, which makes sense cause you're closer to Kentucky, and they got a southerm twang for sure. The late actor Dennis Farina is from Chicago and had a thick, nasally Chicagoan accent for sure!
@JosephOccenoBFH
Жыл бұрын
Devon (duh-vhan') avenue in the North Side would be a boy's name (dev'n) in the rest of the US.
@anndeecosita3586
Жыл бұрын
Most black people in Illinois have Southern roots. I think the South and the Northeast have tended to hold on the British and Irish English style words and pronunciations more than other regions. In the Northeast I commonly hear white people saying aunt particularly if they are higher class. I have heard Americans say they thought yonder and reckon and fancy (verb) were “Southern words” when they are from British English and still heavily used there. Awnt is the RP pronunciation. I use and prefer this pronunciation. Countries like India which is a former UK colony also use aunt/auntie say it as awnt/awntie. Several Caribbean countries do too.
@mikehermen3036
Жыл бұрын
I was going to mention the northern cities vowel shift as well. The old Chicago accent is pretty rare nowadays. Lots of articles online discussing its demise.
Oh my, nice pants Shannon 😅❤
I liked that learning different accent and Dialect north amrica and north Ireland in British accent also, different germany accent and dialects Swissland, Belgium....
(New York, GEORGIA, California, North Carolina, Ohio)
Any other Californians here think that the guy didn’t sound like he’s from California?
@islanddolphin6878
11 ай бұрын
He sounds like he's from the bay area. Reminds me of my cousins who grew up in Berkeley. He reminds me of Jimmy Smits from NYPD Blue in how he speaks. I'm a CA native by the way and have lived half my life in Socal and half in the bay area.
It would be awesome to see people try to guess the Miami accent!
@jsprivateclasses
11 ай бұрын
I guess there's not a "standard" Miamian accent.
I knew it was Atlanta the second she said “Traffic”. Hahahaha
The Californian I could place in like 2 seconds. The Georgian was harder. North Carolina was pretty easy too. Ohio was tougher (until she mentioned some famous people).
@vespista1971
11 ай бұрын
I have a sister and friends in Atlanta, so I go there a lot, and in my opinion, that city has become so full of transplants in the past several decades that most people below, say, 40-50 that have grown up within the “perimeter” don’t even have a perceivable Southern accent anymore. You have to drive way out of their metro area to start really hearing that Georgia drawl. (You will still hear some Southern idioms and special words for things, though)
@amonbeck
11 ай бұрын
@@vespista1971 I’d have to disagree. There are plenty of people from Georgia and native Atlantans still in the city. It just depends on where you hang tbh. And Atlanta has its own couple of accents, and the country can come out with a good party. As soon as the lady started speaking I knew she was from here, plus the fact that she said film-trees-traffic. That’s deep knowledge, lol, that only people from Atlanta get. Her drawl was more of a melodic rhythm I hear all the time with Southern people who’ve trained their accents down. Her humor and how she moved with her whole body also is very Atlanta vibe. I knew exactly who were the Southerners by body language alone. Kind of wild,
@thesharinganknight9859
10 ай бұрын
@@vespista1971 That‘s a lie, I live in Covington and whenever I go somewhere else in Georgia that’s not in the Atlanta Metro they say that i sound like I sound like I’m from the city. And the more I talk I catch myself saying a lot of slang. But then again if you’re not from Georgia you’re not gonna have that southern accent at all.
@musama8771
10 ай бұрын
California guy could pass as Oregon and Seattle too.
i stayed in a hostel in hollywood california and there were people from chicago,maine, colorado, california and you could not tell the difference at all. we all sounded the same. a man was from new orleans AND YOU COULD TELL HE WAS FROM THE SOUTH😱
I loved this video
That girl has the most un-North Carolina accent I've heard. Shes a damn transplant to Raleigh. Source: Family has been in the state since the early 1700s.
Great vlog!