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Thread: Now That was a Bit of a Laugh

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    Oh, da Yoopers in Michigan are wanna-be Canadians.
    Ever notice that in all the old WW2 films the Germans spoke with an English accent?

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    Vlad the Impaler LX_Emergency's Avatar
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    Although I understand that you'd say there is no "american" accent.....

    I'd have to disagree with you. There are certain ways that certain sounds in the English language are pronounced that are done virtually universally the same way by all Americans. I understand that there are differences between the different areas but there are similarities as well.

    It is no different in Dutch, or in British English or (I suspect) in Australian English.

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    Warrior Saint EMC45's Avatar
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    When I moved to GA from NW NJ I would go out and order food or get cigaettes etc and people would just stare at me. My wife (GA born) had to tell me to slow down when I spoke. There is definite differences amongst us Americans.

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    In the NYC area, there are over-the-air stations that broadcast in a variety of languages, from French to Chinese to Korean to Indian to whatever.
    One of the most interesting things I ever saw was a western comic (unknown if he was US or European) telling jokes in Chinese in a variety of Chinese dialects. You could hear the difference in the pronunciation without understanding the language. The Chinese audience was loving it.

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    Senior Member blabbermouth Theseus's Avatar
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    It's funny. I'm from the SE part if Ohio(Appalachia) and have always told people who ask about the accent that SE Ohio is basically Kentucky Lite.

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    Thread derailment specialist. Wullie's Avatar
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    While the so called "farm folks" may have had red necks, the term also goes back to the beginnings of the unions in the coal country of Appalachia.
    The United Mine Workers of America (UMW) and rival miners' unions appropriated both the term redneck and its literal manifestation, the red bandana, in order to build multiracial unions of white, black, and immigrant miners in the strike-ridden coalfields of northern and central Appalachia between 1912 and 1936. The origin of redneck to mean "a union man" or "a striker" remains uncertain, but according to linguist David W. Maurer, the former definition of the word probably dates at least to the 1910s, if not earlier. The use of redneck to designate "a union member" was especially popular during the 1920s and 1930s in the coal-producing regions of southern West Virginia, eastern Kentucky, and western Pennsylvania, where the word came to be specifically applied to a miner who belonged to a union.
    The term can be found throughout McAllister Coleman and Stephen Raushenbush's 1936 socialist proletarian novel, Red Neck, which recounts the story of a charismatic union leader named Dave Houston and an unsuccessful strike by his fellow union miners in the fictional coalfield town of Laurel, Pennsylvania. The word's varied usage can be seen in the following two examples from the book. "I'm not much to be proud of," Houston admits to his admiring girlfriend Madge in one scene. "I'm just a red necked miner like the rest." In another scene, a police captain curses Houston as a "God-damned red neck" during a fruitless jailhouse interrogation, before savagely beating him with a sawed-off chair-leg.
    The earliest printed uses of the word red-neck in a coal-mining context date from the 1912-1913 Paint and Cabin Creeks strike in southern West Virginia and from the 1913-1914 Trinidad District strike in southern Colorado. It is not known where the term originated. It originated as a negative epithet. Apparently, coal operators, company guards, non-union miners, and strikebreakers were among the first to use the term "redneck" in a labor context when they derided union miners with the slur. According to industrial folklorist George Korson, non-union miners derisively called strikers "rednecks" in the Appalachian coalfields. The best explanation of redneck to mean "union man" is that the word refers to the red handkerchiefs that striking union coal miners in both southern West Virginia and southern Colorado often wore around their necks or arms as a part of their informal uniform.[15]
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redneck

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