LL-L "Language varieties" 2004.01.16 (01) [E]

Lowlands-L lowlands-l at lowlands-l.net
Fri Jan 16 15:27:45 UTC 2004


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L O W L A N D S - L * 16.JAN.2004 (01) * ISSN 189-5582 * LCSN 96-4226
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A=Afrikaans Ap=Appalachian B=Brabantish D=Dutch E=English F=Frisian
L=Limburgish LS=Lowlands Saxon (Low German) N=Northumbrian
S=Scots Sh=Shetlandic V=(West)Flemish Z=Zeelandic (Zeêuws)
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From: Pyt Berg <pytbergy at yahoo.com>
Subject: LL-L "Language varieties" 2004.01.13 (01) [E]

It sounds to me like a suffolk dialect.  Similar to the bootiful sound in
the Mathews turkeys adevert.
Pyt.

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From: Gaidheal
Subject: Accents

Feasgar math, a Lowlanders;

I've come across a peculiar 'accent' recently. It is unremarkable in all
ways except for a few
minor 'grammatical errors' (which may in fact be accentual or dialectal),
and most remarkably, a
distinct way of pronouncing the vowel u.
I think that in most dialects of English it's common to insert a 'y' sound
before a u in some
positions: calculator pronounced calcyulator, formula pronounced formyula,
cube pronounced cyube, computer being pronounced compy! uter, etc. But this
'accent' ignores this completely: it's formala, calcuhlator, etc. I'm
wondering if this is an accent, a dialect, or simply an idiosyncracy. Can
anyone help?

Beannachdan,
Uilleam Òg mhic Sheumais

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