Undesirable Slang/Accents

TFC said:
Greiver said:
Just wondering if there are any Slang words anyone despises?

I live in Georgia, one of the most redneck places in USA. Although it really is not all that country southern talk you will hear on TV and the movies. Though inevitably you will hear it and instantly recognize it! However, I hate the slang word Ya'll! ..... annoying and "fixin" to do it. I really dislike the accent here the "country twang" so to speak. Thankfully I have almost no traces of it. Except when I use the word "got".

Whatever dude, I bet you sound like Paula Deen....

;)

Never!!!!! More normal if there is a normal than anything! lol I used to have a slight british accent because of TS/Vent time spent talking to alot of europeans!
 
Greiver said:
TFC said:
Whatever dude, I bet you sound like Paula Deen....

;)

Never!!!!! More normal if there is a normal than anything! lol I used to have a slight british accent because of TS/Vent time spent talking to alot of europeans!

sweaty gamer!




















































which game?
 
Lol at the comments on the Cumbrian accents.I also think the Manc accent is a little funny,but i like it.use the name Tony as an example,in Manc it would sound to us like TOENEH.Love the way you draw words out.
 
BlueMoon93 said:
My Mum is from West Yorkshire. Some of the slang her and her dad use is terrible, like another language. She says "clarts" i.e "it woh as soft as bleedin' clarts". Which apparently means mud, "it was as soft as sticky mud". Another one is "It's like a midden in here". Which apparently means that it is untidy. Her favourite that she says every day without fail is "I'm bloody nithered". Which means "I'm freezing". Me and my dad take the mick out of her all the time and today we heard her say "It woh like bastard briggate". We were wetting ourselves laughing and apparently Briggate Street is the main high street in Leeds so it means "It was very busy". My grandad says "sither" which means "look here" and "tha' noz" instead of "y'know". Very, very weird and hilarious for us people around them. We live in Cheshire which is very straight-laced if you know what I mean and most people don't really have a fixed accent but even though my mum has lost some of her accent, these slang terms leave everybody baffled lol.


i prefer listening to a good accent rather than some pompous twat, saying grarse instead of grass or barth instead of bath. if these fuckers want to talk like sloane rangers why don't they fuck off to Sloane sq.
 
At my school some of the chavs say, "brapp mate"

It means you got dissed, but the dicks who say it just get laughed at in the majority.

EDIT: (Im west Yorkshire too for the moment, hoping to get back to manc ASAP)
 
Lived in Dudley while at college and the local accent is abominable. Without exception they all sound like they have had a full frontal lobotomy and they also call everyone duck (even the blokes do it!) it got to the point where I was ready to kill the next person who called me duck.
 
I live in Leigh (but moved here), and some people here have a horrific accent.

It's more of a drone than an accent, in stead of saying "come over here" they actually say:

"cum urvvveeeerrr earrrrrr"

My girlfriend is from born and bred here, and speaks like this. Sometimes I want to punch her in her face when she speaks. Her accent is annoying too.
 
r.soleofsalford said:
BlueMoon93 said:
My Mum is from West Yorkshire. Some of the slang her and her dad use is terrible, like another language. She says "clarts" i.e "it woh as soft as bleedin' clarts". Which apparently means mud, "it was as soft as sticky mud". Another one is "It's like a midden in here". Which apparently means that it is untidy. Her favourite that she says every day without fail is "I'm bloody nithered". Which means "I'm freezing". Me and my dad take the mick out of her all the time and today we heard her say "It woh like bastard briggate". We were wetting ourselves laughing and apparently Briggate Street is the main high street in Leeds so it means "It was very busy". My grandad says "sither" which means "look here" and "tha' noz" instead of "y'know". Very, very weird and hilarious for us people around them. We live in Cheshire which is very straight-laced if you know what I mean and most people don't really have a fixed accent but even though my mum has lost some of her accent, these slang terms leave everybody baffled lol.


i prefer listening to a good accent rather than some pompous twat, saying grarse instead of grass or barth instead of bath. if these fuckers want to talk like sloane rangers why don't they fuck off to Sloane sq.

Tell me about it mate. Loads of kids like that have come to my 6th form from private schools and stuff, twats. Thing is, just cos the cnuts have the plum in the gob and come from the rich families the vast majority of teachers bend over backwards for em. It's really weird round here, it's a northern town but it's in reality like a daft southern one and isn't a football town at all. I've lived here since I was a kid and growing older you realise how bad it is really, can't wait to get out of the place and into the 'real-world' so to speak.
 
Greiver said:
Just wondering if there are any Slang words anyone despises?

I live in Georgia, one of the most redneck places in USA. Although it really is not all that country southern talk you will hear on TV and the movies. Though inevitably you will hear it and instantly recognize it! However, I hate the slang word Ya'll! ..... annoying and "fixin" to do it. I really dislike the accent here the "country twang" so to speak. Thankfully I have almost no traces of it. Except when I use the word "got".
Well at least you don't say 'gotten', very annoying and seems to be creeping across the pond.
 

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