lol @ jgnat
re this
It may be interesting to note that even though Britain and Ireland are geographically smaller than the United States and Canada, we have many more accents.
hehe, well, nope! If I travel 2 hrs SW in my province, to Bridgewater, I can't even understand the local dialect. Was talking to my friend in BC the other nite, who is from B'water, and he was remarking on that - when we see the fishermen from there on the news, we can't make them out at all! Then there's cape breton, 3 hrs in the other direction, totally different accent. Where my folks come from, about 2 hours drive away, is yet another accent. (I can hear 5 different ones in my head, just thinking about it, from Nova Scotia alone.)
Further east, you have Newfoundland, which not only has an accent, but is a whole other language,,, and actually, till the 50s when it joined Canada, was its own Dominion!
From the Avalon Peninsula ,,,
Stay where you're at till I come where you're to ... (well, you get that one)
I'm perished ! (too cold or hungry)
There's Buddy walking down the street (no, it's not a name, just everyone is called 'buddy', but pronounced boody)
Yes, b'y! (right on)
They pronounce Boy as B'y,,, and drop their h's ,,, add h to words that start with a vowel ...
eg. I just saw 'elen (helen) with a honion (an onion) in 'er 'and (her hand).
If you are from another part of Newfoundland (say Cornerbrook, for example), they don't drop h's ..
Folks in Ontario speak differently from here, and hardly anyone east of Montreal says 'eh' ....
We always know if someone is from Ontario or points west,, instantly recognizable, and I'm sure they have their own regional differences as well.
And the US,,, try spending a couple of days in Maine, then drive down to Boston LOL! (make sure you visit Hahvahd Yahd) Now, go for a visit to NYC,,, you will find that the different boroughs each have their unique accents, and their next-door neighbours in Jersey are easy to pick out of a Brooklyn or Queens crowd ... Next , travel to Louisiana (or should I say Looooo-zee-ana) or Georgia,,, heheh, Texas will offer another different take on regional accents ...
Hey, we are all the same, in the many varieties of our differences .... that, I think, is the reality ..