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Heeey There! I've got a question for y'all...

de ZOV, 2009-februaro-06

Mesaĝoj: 89

Lingvo: English

ZOV (Montri la profilon) 2009-februaro-06 21:05:17

What language really irks you when you hear someone speak it?

For me it's German. It's too "hard" sounding for me.

.... sal.gif

jchthys (Montri la profilon) 2009-februaro-06 21:29:35

Japanese.

Senlando (Montri la profilon) 2009-februaro-06 22:17:50

Tagalog; i really don't know why but it just annoys me. (I think it has to do more with the fact that Filipinos love to crocodile in it when ever they get the chance, which is really hypocritical of me since i do the same with my languages.)

Beijing Mandarin, or Northern Mandarin (?), i love Mandarin, and don't hate the language just that one accent, it really annoys me how they add an "er" to every single syllable! For some reason i associate this accent with ultra-nationalism and snobbishness (as this type of Mandarin was often associated with the "proper" or "upperclass" way of speaking). But i recognize this is just my own personal bias having a lot to do with politics probably. Just like how some Americans might think certain types of British is snobbish.

Theres a few English ascents that bother me but i wont go into them right now since I've probably insulted enough people for the day.

and please take my apologies in advance, i recognize my biases based on my own ignorance. - even so your feedback very welcomed! ridulo.gif

eikored85 (Montri la profilon) 2009-februaro-07 01:11:08

ZOV:What language really irks you when you hear someone speak it?

For me it's German. It's too "hard" sounding for me.

.... sal.gif
If you dislike German, you probably dislike Dutch even more =P. They use the velar fricative quite often. On Dutch radio announcer once said "Dutch is not a language. It is a disease of the throat".

I find Cantonese really annoying to listen to, probably because I have ears for Mandarin, and I don't like the way Cantonese syllables end in plosives, which give it a "choppy" feel.

ebeckhusen (Montri la profilon) 2009-februaro-07 01:17:28

For me there really isn't one particular language, it's more the various accents here in the US. I really can't stand listening to a strong Maine or Massachusetts accent. I'm okay with most of the New York ones, since I was raised there, though "Brooklynese" still gets on my nerves. Mostly I think for me it's a matter of how far an accent strays from the original.

ceigered (Montri la profilon) 2009-februaro-07 08:39:02

ZOV:What language really irks you when you hear someone speak it?

For me it's German. It's too "hard" sounding for me.

.... sal.gif
Some American English* or New South Welsh accentsdialects that don't use intonation or draw out vowels. (NSW being a state of Australia). Spoken Australian English with a fake American accent (seems to be the 'hip' thing for some groups). Other than that, I love the sound of just about any other language or dialect, even the 'harsh' ones like German (which is soft in my opinion), Dutch, Japanese, Mandarin (even the 'er' sounds, I feel like a pirate!), Scots etc.

*Please don't be offended if you speak American English/New South Welsh English, but I can't stand drawn out 'æ's (cat) or some diphthongs (e.g. for Americans, 'eI' vs 'æI') or flat intonation that some speakers have.lango.gif This is more probably because of my own South Australian English (we say 'bath' with the 'a' in 'father'), and also because I can't tell many American accents apart (well, I can tell a Canadian accent 50% of the time at least).

eikored85 (Montri la profilon) 2009-februaro-07 09:36:05

Sorry Ceigered, I hope I'm not offending your variety of English, but...

When I was watching the movie "Wolf Creek" (it's a very bad horror movie, don't bother with it), which takes place in the Australian outback, the accent of the evil villain was so thick that I could not understand it with my American-tuned ears. I had to turn on the subtitles just to understand him!

As for annoying sounding English dialects...I have to say the American southern accent really bothers me...it's often the accent used to caricature Americans (Bush uses this accent).

EL_NEBULOSO (Montri la profilon) 2009-februaro-07 09:49:32

Hi,

I guess German, Dutch (I guess, also some other germanic languages) and Japanese sound "hard" and not so "nice" like e.g. romanic languages, but this also gives them a special "clarity". The same is true for Oxford English and also Japanese.

These languages are easier to understand than many others (my personal opinion).

Anyway, I like the romanic and germanic languages...

Gerald

andogigi (Montri la profilon) 2009-februaro-07 10:32:31

I'll throw in my vote for Finnish and Hungarian. Aside from being incredibly difficult to learn, they both put the stress on the first syllable of each word.

ceigered (Montri la profilon) 2009-februaro-07 11:15:07

eikored85:When I was watching the movie "Wolf Creek" (it's a very bad horror movie, don't bother with it), which takes place in the Australian outback, the accent of the evil villain was so thick that I could not understand it with my American-tuned ears. I had to turn on the subtitles just to understand him!
Ha ha, that's classic, yeah we Australians slaughter the English language, it shouldn't be called 'English' anymore - US English is more faithful than our rendition (despite the criticism the UK gives the US). I also had the same experience but with Scottish television. okulumo.gif Anyway, good thing about US + English television is that they effectively bring all the would-be unintelligible dialects of English together.

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