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Blind people must save a lot on electricity.
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Contemporary Kitchen DC Metro An example of a small, modern kitchen with a slate floor and stainless steel appliances, an undermount sink, shaker cabinets, white cabinets, quartz countertops, and white or ceramic backsplash.
I relate to this on a very deep level. My grandmother is a west virginian hillbilly and I'm originally from ohio. My exes from the west coast were so confused when I used the words pop and spicket, and lost their mind when I said 'Lord love a duck!' When my hair came out looking like drunk Leia buns.
Iāve been getting a lot of requests for Keith with a southern accent (which I LIVE for)! Since I live in the southern us and have a pretty strong accent, I thought Iād give a few tips to anyone who wants to write people with a southern accent, especially someone like Keith who may not always have one.
- generally I have a proper voice, and try to keep the slang out of my words, much like Keith would had he been written with some kind of accent
- my accent really comes out when Iām angry, tired, comfortable around the people Iām talking to, or just donāt care anymore
- most accents are generally similar, but different parts of the south tend to have deeper or more pronounced accents (i.e. Iām from Tennessee, and Tennessee and Texas have IDENTICAL slang words and accents. Usually people ask if Iām from one of the two states when Iām out of town.)
- the south in America is Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia, North and South Carolina, Kentucky, Texas, Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, and the very upper half of Florida that borders Georgia. Otherwise Louisiana and Florida arenāt included because they have very different versions of southern culture hat arenāt stereotypical.
- If you use slang, donāt over do it. Southern slang is actually kind of complicated and doesnāt really come naturally to anyone who doesnāt use it on a daily basis.
- not everyone with an accent uses slang. People from the south almost always have an accent to people who arenāt from here, even if they canāt hear it themselves.
- We tend to clip words that end in -ing (i.e. āFightinā, Runninā, Walkinā)
- Some common slang used is obviously the classic āyāallā, but also āyunsā (another form of you all. ex: what are yuns doinā over there?)
- improper grammar is a classic too. I love English and can write and speak perfectly, but sometimes I find myself saying things like āthat donāt even make no senseā
- Metaphors, Hyperboles, and personifications are massive parts of southern speaking
- āItās hotter nā the pits of hell in hereā
- aināt is used more often than yāall
- āthat aināt even correctā āwell aināt she just sweetā
- we still use modern slang and sometimes it sounds really weird throwing slang words like āfinnaā in with our accents lmao
- bless your heart isnāt a compliment and if someone from the south says that to you, they probably think youāre an idiot
- people with southern accents arenāt idiots and having an accent doesnāt make them one!
If you have any more questions, feel free to ask me!
Worse part about it is Iām Irish and live in Ireland
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