home6110 10 發表於 September 2, 2009 檢舉 Share 發表於 September 2, 2009 Actually, if your accent make you have a hard time talking to others, you should really concern about that. 鏈接文章 分享到其他網站
MikiRei 10 發表於 September 3, 2009 檢舉 Share 發表於 September 3, 2009 you should really concern about that.you should really BE concerned about that.Yeah...I guess so. I'm wondering. See, there's different English accents. There's American, Irish, Scottish, Australian, Kiwi, English and even WITHIN these major accents, there have other accents as well. For example, there's at least 3 different types of Australian accent. We have the sort of, formal Australian accent that you hear on Australian news which sounds almost English sometimes (not really - almost), then we have the average Australian accent and then we have the typical, broad, Australian accent that you hear Steve Irwin use *cringe*. Australian women with bogan accents sound so freakishly annoying and horrible I have to say. >_>Anyways, putting that aside, what I'm getting at is even amongst native speakers, certain people can't understand certain accents due to lack of exposure. For example, Americans sometimes say they can't understand Aussie or Canadian accent (lol). I remember watching Billy Elliot and I had to have the subtitles on 'cause I couldn't really understand the strong Scottish accent. Took me a while to get adjusted to it. Jamaican accent is mind boggling. I always think, "Is that even ENGLISH?" when I hear them speak. However, once you get used to it, you get used to it. Like, another thing I've experienced is most Australians can't really understand some of the quirks or mispronunciations many Chinese speakers make when speaking English. On the other hand, I have absolutely no problem because I'm so used to listening to Chinese accents. Hmmm....tricky tricky. Though I have to say, Swedish accent is perfectly easy to understand. Maybe the solution is, try and rectify as much until most people don't have trouble understanding and you should be fine. As for completely eliminating it, might not be possible. Even now, my friends find it extremely weird when I ponounce things in "fobbish" ways (as they call it) admist my normal Australian accent. Like, for example, I still say "Ultimo" as "OOtimo" as oppose to "ULtimo" due to my mum saying it the first way ever since I can remember. *shrug*Going off topic. I'll stop here.pronounceationproNUNcIAtionnatinal Speaker.native speaker 鏈接文章 分享到其他網站
Tictac 10 發表於 December 16, 2009 檢舉 Share 發表於 December 16, 2009 Hi there!In my opinion,once you say it out loud, it won't matter if it sounds awesome or awful.Language is just a tool for you to communicate with others.Besides, you should be confident of yourself.Say it out loud! Nothing's gonna bother :)Don't worry.The point is that you have to make others understand your expression or what you're trying to say :)Cheer! 鏈接文章 分享到其他網站
弟弟寬 10 發表於 January 21, 2010 檢舉 Share 發表於 January 21, 2010 the most important point is that others understands you.if they can not,you will have to improve youself.take me for example,at the beginning,the only one that can know what i am talking about is me= =""i then tried listening to radios and immitate thier accent(this really helps a lot)now though i still have something to improve.i can finally let others say'oh i understand you'when we are talking. 鏈接文章 分享到其他網站
凌冠 10 發表於 January 24, 2010 檢舉 Share 發表於 January 24, 2010 well, I don't think accent really matter(maybe I'm just consoling myself XD)share a story hereI once met a Japanese girl at an international conferencealmost nobody can understand her Englishbut I found it the most beautiful accent in the world ! 鏈接文章 分享到其他網站
shieiuping 10 發表於 January 26, 2010 作者 檢舉 Share 發表於 January 26, 2010 Maybe you have a rush with her. After a semester of english lesson of talking, I found it is more confident to speaking english that the foreign teacher can understand what I said. 鏈接文章 分享到其他網站
Zeberic 10 發表於 March 16, 2010 檢舉 Share 發表於 March 16, 2010 (已編輯) I thought this is not really very important. My classmate used the very heavy foreign accent to speak English frequently. This sounds to be very fearful! 此內容已被編輯, March 16, 2010 ,由 Zeberic 鏈接文章 分享到其他網站
l151881534 10 發表於 December 28, 2011 檢舉 Share 發表於 December 28, 2011 well.. as long it's understandable.. it should not be a problem..however if you speak almost or accentless <aka sound like native speakers>you earn respect ^^ 鏈接文章 分享到其他網站
MikiRei 10 發表於 January 10, 2012 檢舉 Share 發表於 January 10, 2012 well.. as long it's understandable.. it should not be a problem..Yes - seriously, that's really the bottom line. No one really cares (or should I say, no DECENT person really cares). At my work, we have Swedish, French, German, English, Canadians, Americans, Chinese and Indians. We can all speak English perfectly but we all have our own accent - but no one cares because we can all understand each other. Funny things do happen from time to time though. eg. My French colleague sometimes still say things in the French pronunciation and it sort of goes like this:Him: We're going to "The Province" (some restaurant) (but in French pronunciation).Me: ProVInce (in English)Him: Whatever. It was originally French. You stole our language.Me: Yeah, ok. Fair enough. 鏈接文章 分享到其他網站
翼遙澄 10 發表於 February 12, 2012 檢舉 Share 發表於 February 12, 2012 as long as people can understand you, accent isnt a big deal. when i first went to the US, my friends loved my accent. They though it was cute. however, several months passed, no one found out that i was a foreigner. 鏈接文章 分享到其他網站
jamieevren1210 10 發表於 July 14, 2012 檢舉 Share 發表於 July 14, 2012 I've never really had a problem with accent. My natural accent (the accent you hear me mumbling in if you wake me up at 3 AM) is General American, and by general I mean non-specific, for example I don't speak Bronx or Southern. But I pull off a British accent fairly well.Just saying.Back to the point, I think unless you are in a situation that requires you to impress somebody, accent really doesn't matter. But still it's always worth it to have a trick or two up your sleeve 鏈接文章 分享到其他網站
l151881534 10 發表於 September 22, 2012 檢舉 Share 發表於 September 22, 2012 lol general american.. wanna try some boaston accent lol.. 鏈接文章 分享到其他網站
jamieevren1210 10 發表於 September 24, 2012 檢舉 Share 發表於 September 24, 2012 The Boston accent is pretty difficult to master, imho 鏈接文章 分享到其他網站
l151881534 10 發表於 October 8, 2012 檢舉 Share 發表於 October 8, 2012 no shit it's hard, even i can't do it; only people that live in downtown has the best of it 鏈接文章 分享到其他網站
jamieevren1210 10 發表於 February 7, 2013 檢舉 Share 發表於 February 7, 2013 Now my problem is that I speak too much like a guy. Literally. Like a man. But obviously (is it?) I'm a girl. I just sort of possess TWO kinds of voices and it's weird as fuck.Pardon my language, I swear like a sailor. 鏈接文章 分享到其他網站
premio 0 發表於 April 26, 2016 檢舉 Share 發表於 April 26, 2016 pronunciation? yes. accent? not really... there are various accent in the world, such as so called "British accent" is actually just a kind of London ACCENTS. just like foreign chinese learners can hardly have the orthodox accent, it's ok to have your own accent. 鏈接文章 分享到其他網站
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