Accent Tag with Rebecca Morgan | Canada vs. USA | Surprising differences!

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  • čas přidán 30. 09. 2018
  • This video was so fun to film/ edit but my favorite parts are @ 7:15 and 12:37.
    Check out our video on Rebecca's Channel! - tinyurl.com/yc8kcb8p
    I was in Toronto for IMATs and met up with the lovely Rebecca Morgan! We decided to do some videos together and I chose the Accent Tag. We wanted to compare her Canadian (Ontario) accent with my U.S. (Pittsburgh) accent to see if we have different pronunciations and vocabulary. I learned so much and had such a great time. We hope you enjoy the video and please go check out Rebecca's Channel to see the Beauty This or That Video we filmed together. Tell her I said hello!
    Rebecca's YT Channel: bit.ly/2xP9k1i
    Rebecca's Blog: morerebe.com/
    Rebecca's Instagram: bit.ly/2NbAjcr
    This tag is all in good fun and we're in no way putting down other accents/ dialects.
    The brick background on my thumbnail is a photo by Adrian Curiel on Unsplash
    List of words for the accent tag:
    aunt
    roof
    route
    theater
    iron
    salmon
    caramel
    fire
    water
    New Orleans
    pecan
    both
    again
    probably
    Alabama
    lawyer
    coupon
    mayonnaise
    pajamas
    caught/cot
    naturally
    aluminum
    bag
    sorry
    house
    been
    pasta
    avenue
    Tuesday
    Florida
    forest
    milk
    supermarket produce
    adult
    either
    against
    borrow
    syrup
    writer/rider
    List of questions for word differences:
    What is it called when you throw toilet paper on a house?
    What’s the night before Halloween called?
    What do you call a carbonated drink?
    What do you call gym shoes?
    What do you call your grandparents
    What do you call the wheeled contraption you hold groceries in the supermarket?
    What is the thing you change the TV channels with?
    What do you call a knitted winter hat?
    Finish the sentence: I have to pee so bad. Where’s your _____?
    What does your sink water come out of?
    What pulverizes food waste under your sink?
    What date tells you your food is expired?
    What’s the place you buy alcohol called?
    What do you call the bag in which you bring your books to school?
    What’s the last letter of the alphabet?
    What do you call the pencils you use to color with?
    What’s a string of people waiting for something called?
    What do you use to wipe your mouth at dinner?
    What do you blow your nose with?
    What do you say when you need to walk through a crowd of people?
    What grade did you graduate middle school?
    Get in Touch!
    Email: Tashaterens@gmail.com
    Instagram: _too_much_tash
  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 437

  • @TM-js1hh
    @TM-js1hh Před 4 lety +242

    You're not a true Canadian unless you've walked into an inanimate object and said "Sorry" to it by reflex.

    • @carlat79
      @carlat79 Před 4 lety +2

      T M 😆😆😆😆😭😭😭

    • @tylerclark7699
      @tylerclark7699 Před 4 lety +2

      Eh

    • @alamn100
      @alamn100 Před 4 lety +1

      so true. lol

    • @G60J60F80
      @G60J60F80 Před 4 lety +9

      I'm American (Oregonian) and do that haha. I also so ow when I hit something even if it didn't hurt me. It's like I'm saying "ow" for the thing lol

    • @semperfi818
      @semperfi818 Před 4 lety +2

      @@G60J60F80 I find myself behaving similarly -- and I'm a native of NYC, mind you. So much for the caricature of the brusque, rude Noo Yawker...😉

  • @kayflip2233
    @kayflip2233 Před rokem +5

    I love how Tash is suspicious about every difference they have, almost like Rebecca grew up next door to her but she is just now discovering that she is a spy. 😂

  • @hopesneddon7426
    @hopesneddon7426 Před 5 lety +25

    As an Australian watching this, we have such different ways to pronounce things. Really funny to watch. 😂

  • @RebeccaMorgan
    @RebeccaMorgan Před 5 lety +67

    Omg I laughed so hard 😂 this was so funny! Thanks again for filming with me! I can’t believe how much we were laughing through this entire video! So funny 🤣

    • @jayb8369
      @jayb8369 Před 5 lety +1

      I was visiting Manitoba this past summer (from North Dakota) and I remember having a conversation with a local business owner in Altona. She pronounced the word against as "a-gay-nst" and it threw me for a loop! Aside from that, US and Canadian English are mutually intelligible..."eh?" LOL!!

    • @alexandreouimet6322
      @alexandreouimet6322 Před 5 lety

      I don't know why, but it sounds like you know French, the way you pronounce when you're looking for an alternative way to say a word makes me think that.

    • @l.a.french3063
      @l.a.french3063 Před 4 lety

      Hey Rebecca. Actually, we do have middle school in Canada. Elementary school is up to grade 5, and middle school is grades 6-8. I went to The Elms Middle School in Toronto. Cheers.

  • @steverogers7247
    @steverogers7247 Před 4 lety +42

    "Law-yur" What accent is that?!
    -Texas has entered the chat.

    • @TooMuchTash
      @TooMuchTash  Před 4 lety +6

      Haha I completely forgot about the Texan accent when we were filming this!

    • @BrittCastsFireballs
      @BrittCastsFireballs Před 4 lety +1

      I pronounce it like this and I have never lived outside of the Southeastern US (my parents are also from the Southeast). I don’t understand how it can be pronounced any other way. “LOIY-yer” just sounds so laughable to me. However, I’m not sure it’s even regional because almost everyone I meet, regardless of accent/dialect, tends to use the latter pronunciation.

    • @SackTheBaggins
      @SackTheBaggins Před 4 lety

      I'm from Arizona and say it as law-yur. I have lots of family in Oklahoma who pronounce it as law-yur as well.

    • @seaotter4439
      @seaotter4439 Před 3 lety +1

      Loy-ur here

  • @liubovchernysheva187
    @liubovchernysheva187 Před 5 lety +26

    I laughed my ass off at "water closet" 😂 And yeah, some of the words that you both said "who would say that?" are popular in the UK :)

  • @downthebeautyhole
    @downthebeautyhole Před 2 lety +3

    Oh my...I don't know how I haven't seen this before! You guys are great 😃 I love your chemistry and laughs!! As a non native English speaking person I always feel I'll be judged of how I pronounce things, but then again I think that even natives pronounce words in so many different ways and everything seems to be correct, right? Simply love it!!

  • @ambergerhelper7852
    @ambergerhelper7852 Před 5 lety +29

    The other pronunciation of “lawyer” is a southern thing. ☺️

  • @peachwedding
    @peachwedding Před 5 lety +3

    Yes!! I was hoping for this collab!! So great to see you two together!

  • @Calimosh
    @Calimosh Před 4 lety +25

    They both sound the same to me (I'm a clueless Brit!)

    • @iamgribs
      @iamgribs Před 4 lety +4

      Some regions , we don't sound very different from Americans at all.

    • @kentix417
      @kentix417 Před 4 lety +6

      Anybody outside of the U.S. or Canada would have a difficult time telling these two apart, and many inside would, too. From an American perspective, the Canadian speaker doesn't have a distinctively Canadian accent that's easily distinguishable from an American one. She just has some key words she says differently that are telltale Canadian giveaways - like sore-ee instead of sah-ree.

    • @kentix417
      @kentix417 Před 4 lety +2

      I think you need to re-read what I wrote. I believe you misread it.

    • @williamolsen8464
      @williamolsen8464 Před 4 lety

      @Bestoink Dooley Annexed? Bitch please. Last time you idiots thought that was a good idea we kicked your fat asses out of our country and burnt your capital to the ground. Sit tf down clown

    • @jhansenhlebica6080
      @jhansenhlebica6080 Před 3 lety

      Funny to think of anybody talking about historical/political activity of the country in which they live as though it’s some kind of personal accomplishment.

  • @sadee1287
    @sadee1287 Před 4 lety +6

    Milk in bags is mostly in just Ontario now. It WAS in Alberta back in the 80s, but it's long gone -- now we have milk in plastic jugs or cartons, and the occasional bottle.

    • @thegirlwholikesfood3185
      @thegirlwholikesfood3185 Před 4 lety

      SA DEE : we have it in Quebec too, where I live it's a common thing. Although, we do have plastic and cartoon containers

  • @RickAmsbury
    @RickAmsbury Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you ladies, I really appreciate the video! I'm an actor, (starting late in life), and I was just told by a show runner in LA that I need to work on my American accent. This helped a lot. Cheers

  • @hydrotroll2
    @hydrotroll2 Před 4 lety +39

    why is bagged milk so confusing for Americans
    being a Canadian i don''t get it

    • @unbindingfloyd
      @unbindingfloyd Před 4 lety +2

      I went to Canada. Never saw any milked bags. I asked around. Everyone told me only Canadians in Ontario used it.

    • @solidaudioTV
      @solidaudioTV Před 4 lety +3

      If you've never seen or used it, bagged milk just doesn't seem right. I mean, you don't typically see bottled water, soda pop, or other beverages in bags, so why milk? Just doesn't seem very user friendly. You can't pour or drink reliably from a bag - at least in my experience.

    • @hydrotroll2
      @hydrotroll2 Před 4 lety +1

      I'm from Quebec and we use bagged milk all the time.
      And you can drink from the bag although that's gross

    • @Paul-ls1ob
      @Paul-ls1ob Před 4 lety

      Way less garbage that way

    • @Paul-ls1ob
      @Paul-ls1ob Před 4 lety +1

      James Bowden stupid cause they use bags? Are you a wanna be American? That’s sad. You realize the world is trying to do away with plastic right?

  • @jcjccmz
    @jcjccmz Před 5 lety +2

    This is so cute! I've never heard of Rebecca's channel, so I am thrilled you did a collab and introduced us to her! I am subscribing to her, thanks to you! Btw, my mom is Korean, and she also pronounces the "L" in salmon! 💞

  • @Bizzee_Bee
    @Bizzee_Bee Před 5 lety +44

    Hey Tash! First, I loved this video! I was dying when you guys were laughing about the whole "been" thing. Second, I'm from England and here's a bunch of stuff I say differently.
    We say tube like "chube", been like "bean", a shopping cart is called a "trolley". A "buggy" or "pram" would describe the wheeled contraption that you push babies around in. Gym shoes are called "trainers", we'd call a faucet a "tap", a line that people wait in would be a "queue". I've also never been to a house that has a food disposal, it's not very common here. Last letter of the alphabet is "zed" :P I would call a coloured pencil a coloured pencil and a crayon is like a waxy pencil that typically kids use.
    Now a completely random one... my family is a bit weird and we call the thing that changes TV channels a "twizzer". I didn't even realise it wasn't normal until I went round to a friends house and asked for the twizzer and they looked at me like "Ummmm... what?" XD so yeah, that's pretty much it.
    I love both of your channels and I look forward to more videos!

  • @jessfrezz4764
    @jessfrezz4764 Před 5 lety +7

    Loved this! I laughed a lot at “been” too! I say “pop” & I’m from Michigan...I’ve also been told by people that they think I’m Canadian! Haha!
    Some Michigan things: A liquor store is a “party store”, the night before Halloween is called Devil’s Night and a sliding glass door is a “doorwall” 😁

  • @sarinaanttila1673
    @sarinaanttila1673 Před 3 lety +2

    I’m Canadian, from Ontario and I went to a middle school. My elementary school was JK-grade 6. Middle school was 7-8, and ha was 9-12. So it depends what school you go to.

  • @vegronica9006
    @vegronica9006 Před 5 lety +8

    Now want to see these two argue over how to say the sentence, "Natasha has been eating pasta in her pajamas."

  • @ranaa5231
    @ranaa5231 Před 5 lety +5

    Tash’s laugh is so contagious I couldn’t stop laughing 😂

  • @anniefitzsimmons4003
    @anniefitzsimmons4003 Před 5 lety +4

    In Ontario We put our milk in bags or (sleeves) 3 sleeves to a bag, because it helps with the jug situation in the recycle. Bags are easier to dispose of :) Also keeps the cost down..

  • @elektrameligrigoris3897
    @elektrameligrigoris3897 Před 5 lety +28

    I’m from Quebec
    Canada
    And we have elementary school kindergarten to Grade 6
    And high school grade 7 to 11

    • @valeriamontesr.8896
      @valeriamontesr.8896 Před 5 lety +2

      Elektra Meligrigoris i live in Quebec too

    • @carterwickens6311
      @carterwickens6311 Před 4 lety +5

      Wtf, I’m from Ontario we have elementary from kindergarten to grade 8 and high school 9-12

    • @colsonweiser5648
      @colsonweiser5648 Před 4 lety +1

      In the US we have elementary school kindergarten to 4th grade. Middle school from 5th to 7th and high school 8th to 12th

    • @nolan3868
      @nolan3868 Před 4 lety +3

      I'm from Vancouver and elementary school is from k-7 and high school is 8-12

    • @SmartWentCrazy
      @SmartWentCrazy Před 4 lety +3

      I'm in the US also... kindergarten to 6th grade = elementary, 7th-8th = middle school, 9th-12th = high school.

  • @elisebrisson
    @elisebrisson Před 5 lety +1

    This was too funny to watch! You guys looked like you had so much fun. I think the difference in accent isn't that strong because here in Canada we get so much American media 27/7, so we can't help but get used to their accents and sometimes say things like our neighbours to the south. But in the states, they don't get that much Canadian stuff so they are less familiar with it. I lived abroad for a while and I always explained to people that Canadian culture is half way between American and Canadian! 🇨🇦

  • @agingophelia9812
    @agingophelia9812 Před 5 lety +3

    The irradiated milk in a bag, I remember from when my sister lived in Hamilton. It's shelf stable till opened. Very convenient.

  • @livefreediepretty
    @livefreediepretty Před 5 lety +30

    Aluminium when Tash is like who would say it like that and I'm here going I say it like that, I've only ever heard it said like that ( I'm from Australia)

    • @Risharnec
      @Risharnec Před 5 lety

      Me too! Im from New Zealand and was thinking its weird how americans say it

    • @reezlaw
      @reezlaw Před 5 lety +1

      It's aluminium everywhere except for, you guessed it, Canada and USA

    • @kognnykurama6998
      @kognnykurama6998 Před 4 lety

      It's aluminium and not aluminum. It's a Greek word (αλουμίνιο) ah-loo-mee-nee-oh. Just watching you guys laughing about how funny the (UK) English-language and it's accents is all I got to say the English people use lots of Greek words and phrases and their on point.You North Americans have 'butchered' the English language and you even make fun of other accents like UK-Australian-South African-New Zealander etc.You couldn't even copy the word Aluminium right lol. Aluminum my arse 🤣

    • @eyecomeinpeace2707
      @eyecomeinpeace2707 Před 4 lety

      @@kognnykurama6998 lol!!!! It's okay, we do not take offence. But we in Canada still uses British spelling by adding the "u" in colour, favour etc. And then we substitute the "s" for a "z" in words like fertilize, sensitize, realize etc. like Americans. Weird I know. Cheers!!!

  • @Deb_B
    @Deb_B Před 3 lety +3

    I'm half Canadian, half American. This video made my entire day!!!!!!! ❤️

  • @RebeccaMorgan
    @RebeccaMorgan Před 5 lety +9

    ALSO I’ve noticed myself saying “bin” lately so idk I think in the moment I just assumed I say “been” 😂 I think i just use them interchangeably actually! So, hi, I’m sloppy Rebecca too!

  • @sadee1287
    @sadee1287 Před 4 lety +10

    Technically "route" (root) and "route" (rowwte) mean different things depending on how they are pronounced. "Root" is like "this is the route I take to go to work," whereas "rowwte" is like "I had a paper route when I was young." Now this could have changed since I last looked it up (I'm middle aged) but that's what it said in my Canadian dictionary years ago.

    • @eyecomeinpeace2707
      @eyecomeinpeace2707 Před 4 lety +4

      Bang on!!!! I use those two words in the same way too. So does my wife. In Ontario by the way.

    • @kentix417
      @kentix417 Před 4 lety +1

      In the U.S. that distinction doesn't exist. Both can be used either way.

    • @JHW44
      @JHW44 Před rokem

      As a person from southern Alberta you still have a paper route lol 😂

  • @lockedlikedigits
    @lockedlikedigits Před 5 lety +1

    Loving you guys laughing hysterically at the way you each say been 😂

  • @shootingstarzoe
    @shootingstarzoe Před 5 lety +1

    My two faves youtuber ! TOGETHER nooooooo way ! I'm so happy !

  • @mrooker5367
    @mrooker5367 Před 4 lety +4

    We read individual words differently but when we use them in a sentence the can sound a bit different. "Been" is a good one.
    Most Canadians say "bin" but sometimes you'll hear "bean" pronunciation. Older generation tends to use the later

  • @AlejandraLisette
    @AlejandraLisette Před 5 lety +9

    Do you know how hard it was to not laugh loudly because of a baby sleeping. I was dying quietly in my seat. Love both of your channels
    Alex

  • @kayflip2233
    @kayflip2233 Před rokem +2

    "Queue" is British. Waiting "on line" is an NYC regional saying. Also "washroom" isn't exclusively Canadian, it is commonly used in Chicago as well.

  • @jmartin9059
    @jmartin9059 Před 4 lety +2

    *Shopping with a "Buggy" is also done in Lower Alabama. Since Grandma comes from an English family, I do draw water from the Spigot. In my family, The Spigot is usually outside and the Faucet is in a building. Spigot is probably a Middle English word, from the Latin "Spicum" or "Spica". "Spica" was both Latin and Old English*

  • @lernadean1238
    @lernadean1238 Před 4 lety +13

    Im canadian and tbh some of my pronunciation is like americans, but also neverr have i said beeeennn😂 i pronouce it like bin lool

  • @SarahRoseBeauty
    @SarahRoseBeauty Před 5 lety +3

    Aww how fun!! I was cracking up at “been” 😂 Also “buggy” for shopping cart is super common in the south (I refuse to say it though lol). Another weird southern thing: “jimmie clip” instead of paper clip!

    • @scarlettethefieryphoenix925
      @scarlettethefieryphoenix925 Před 5 lety +2

      I've heard "jim" clip. I guess because we use the word "jimmy" for rigging something. Lol like "jimmy it up."

  • @wahsetinsonperdesi
    @wahsetinsonperdesi Před 5 lety +1

    This was such a fun video to watch! I enjoy both of your channels a lot. Whoever says they miss the old youtube they should watch you both.

  • @NonaSmith_mysocalledlife1977

    This was really cute, Tash! I loved hearing you laughing & having such a good time. TFS! ~ Nona

  • @dcmslife3772
    @dcmslife3772 Před 4 lety +1

    This is ADORABLE!!!!! You two are so cute together. In Boston, we call a liquor store a liquor store or a "packy" which is short for "package store"...

  • @elladuchesne2682
    @elladuchesne2682 Před 5 lety +12

    I’m French Canadian but I did speak English all my life, but it’s so weird that some of my words are different from what I hear on these tags.
    Ps. I go to a French Catholic school in Ontario and we do have middle school grade 7 and 8

    • @JK-zz4ip
      @JK-zz4ip Před 2 lety +1

      Out west that's called junior high, and its grade 7-9

  • @Britt11777
    @Britt11777 Před 4 lety +3

    So the Canadian accent changes by region. Like one of the more distinct accents in Canada in the Newfoundlander accent of the 'Newfie" accent. There is also a 'prairies' accent which you might hear in Manitoba and Saskatchewan that has a unique Canadian twang to it. The best example I can come up with is the song "out for a rip" by the group called shark tank. There is also the french Canadian accent of course which you find in Quebec and parts of Ontario. (Canadian's who's mother tongue is Quebecois speaking English wish a unique french Canadian accent) Mike Myers wrote a book called "Canada" for the 150th anniversary of our counties confederation. Its really well written btw. But it has a chapter explaining the Canadian accent and he has some great insights into the differences between the Canadian and american accents since he grew up in Saskatchewan but has lived most of his adult life in the us. I'm sure there are more but those are the ones I can think of off the top of my head.

  • @murielfarmer3900
    @murielfarmer3900 Před 4 lety +3

    I am also from near Toronto!! I grew up calling the remote control a "flipper" to flip through the channels

  • @sujac664
    @sujac664 Před rokem +1

    This was great! I was looking for Canadian accent help for theatre, and came across you.... very funny, and helpful.... I feel I have the 'general' US accent down ( regional variances are HARD!) but Canadian has some subtle differences I don't want to miss.
    Sort of like British/ Sth African/NewZealand and Aussie... many similarities, but some differences that are important.
    Tash, I've NEVER heard mauve pronounced the way you do, but it makes sense 🙂
    'Been' has never been so funny 🤣🤣🤣😂😂

  • @anndeecosita3586
    @anndeecosita3586 Před 4 lety +3

    None of words are silly because I have heard them pronounced differently by different groups. Since moving near New Orleans for example I hear water as waw-daw. Also many people in the Southern US say buggy instead of shopping cart.

  • @malcolmlugg9843
    @malcolmlugg9843 Před 5 lety +2

    Also: aluminium, zed, trainers (running shoes) shopping trolley, queue, pop

  • @alexandreouimet6322
    @alexandreouimet6322 Před 5 lety +1

    I live in Quebec and my native language is French, so for me bean/been it's the same thing, almost :)
    Aluminum: accepted spelling for North America
    Aluminium: accepted spelling just about everywhere else
    Thank you for this video, pronunciation is the most difficult thing for a French person and hearing you say words like "caught" and "lawyer" helps me a lot, the first time I tried to say flame "thrower" I almost split my tongue in two !
    As a bonus, you made me laugh, thank you!

    • @TooMuchTash
      @TooMuchTash  Před 5 lety +1

      Haha thanks for watching! I had taken French for ~7 years and still couldn't get some words right!

  • @samanthatheminimalist
    @samanthatheminimalist Před 5 lety +1

    We call it pop in Minnesota too!

  • @erinn1234
    @erinn1234 Před 5 lety +2

    The thing with "caught" is that some people say it where you can hear the separate vowels and some people merge the vowels so that it sounds the exact same as "cot". It is similar to how some people say Don and dawn differently and some people say them the same way.

    • @erinn1234
      @erinn1234 Před 5 lety +2

      Also I say bag with the "ay" sound too. And tag, sag, lag, rag, drag, magazine, etc. I say egg like ayg and beg and leg with the "ay" sound too. :P

  • @drfye
    @drfye Před 4 lety +4

    🤣 The real test is hearing a person speak when they don't think about it because that's when their accent really comes out.

  • @johncodee9175
    @johncodee9175 Před 4 lety +5

    On the subject of carts at 17:38, we call them "trolleys" not "carts" in England. 😁😉

  • @Ashira_N_A
    @Ashira_N_A Před 4 lety +3

    There definitely are Canadians who say again as agane/agayne. I've traveled all the way from Vancouver, BC to Toronto and it exists. I've heard it on TV shows made in Canada that air here in the USA.

  • @chanel113
    @chanel113 Před 3 lety +2

    Also milk in a bag is only eastern Canada, I’ve never seen a bag of it in 30 years in bc

  • @eder_dias9362
    @eder_dias9362 Před 4 lety +5

    You ladies are adorable ❤️❤️ Big Love from Brasil 🇧🇷....

  • @whattovisitinromania5044
    @whattovisitinromania5044 Před 4 lety +1

    Beautiful video, funny and informative 😍👌💕

  • @juanmanuelmoramontes3883
    @juanmanuelmoramontes3883 Před 4 lety +1

    Well, I just know that "runners" are also called like that in Australia, in the UK a liquour store would be called "off-licence", "queue" is also British and I've heard that in British English is more standard to pronounce "been" like "bean" than "bin" and a cart in the UK is "trolley".

  • @ki11j0y2
    @ki11j0y2 Před 4 lety +9

    Me wid the Georgia version of the American accent 😂

  • @ExploreBC79
    @ExploreBC79 Před 2 lety

    Great job 👍
    Support from Canada 🇨🇦💐

  • @joshuamclean4588
    @joshuamclean4588 Před 4 lety +1

    A few things as I’ve looked into his stuff in the past. For example on one, “writer” vs “rider” is seeing if the person has whats known as “Canadian Raising,” but is not exclusive to Canada. It is also in parts of the use (particularly parts of the northeast) and especially in pittsburgh I think. Writer is a slightly raised vowel sound verses rider. Its becoming progressively more common in America. So it can vary not only by region but also age.

    • @TooMuchTash
      @TooMuchTash  Před 4 lety

      That's interesting, thanks for sharing, Joshua! :)

    • @joshuamclean4588
      @joshuamclean4588 Před 4 lety +1

      Too Much Tash where I think the “pencil crayon” comes from is on our packages, such as crayola, they have to write english and french. So in small letters they have “couloured” then in big letters they have “pencils” then underneath they have the french “crayons” then in little letters “de couleur.” So when you look at the packages they say “pencil crayons” in large letters, and kids just look at the large letters. So it got ingrained in our heads ever since we’ve had to have everything bilingual. Also tuque is Canadian beanie is american. Some may have some american influence but it’s touque. I spelled it two different ways and both are correct, just to confuse you.
      If you wanna be fancy a “napkin” is a “serviette…” and “napkin” in those cases is something else… but thats what my great grandma, who’s still around, still calls them all the time. So maybe it’s older but I picture it as fine dining. She uses it normally even for little paper napkins/serviettes.

  • @alexandra109
    @alexandra109 Před 5 lety +1

    Love this tag!!

  • @user-cn5ry2kw8h
    @user-cn5ry2kw8h Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks a lot, your video helped me with my "phonetic project about Canadian&American English "🥰

  • @RR-zj6dk
    @RR-zj6dk Před 4 lety +4

    For me who I am not an English speaker, I find that Canadians pronounce more vocally.

  • @tigrish611
    @tigrish611 Před 2 lety +1

    You have to come to the South - we pronounce things so differently. Shopping cart is a buggy. All sodas, no matter what brand, are cokes. And many words do have that Southern drawl to them. And so many accents/pronunciations vary by state. So funny to watch this.

  • @larisavimaki4870
    @larisavimaki4870 Před 4 lety +2

    Also when you said ”i think thats british” ive never heard anyone say that😂😂

  • @xgamerx360x
    @xgamerx360x Před 5 lety +1

    I'm from southern Maine but I sound quite Canadian, especially in words with the letters "ar" together, I also kinda say "oatside" instead of "owtside" when I say "outside". I also say "bag" like Rebecca
    edit: the word "caught" is part of a sound change in American English, certain parts (mostly in New England and eastern Pennsylvania) of the U.S. stopped saying "caught" and "cot" differently, and have merged those two vowel sounds. I thought that may be interesting to some people.

    • @eyecomeinpeace2707
      @eyecomeinpeace2707 Před 4 lety

      I went to Boston a few years ago and I spoke to one woman at a club. She sounded very British to me, so I asked her what part of England she is from, she looked at me and laughed. She said she was born and raised in Boston. I felt a little embarrassed.

  • @nickmatas5447
    @nickmatas5447 Před 3 lety +3

    Buggy is a southern thing. Faucet inside, tap inside or outside, spigot outside.

    • @robfau
      @robfau Před 3 lety

      Hi, I'm from Florida, I say Faucet, tap, and spigot as well. But we typically say shopping cart, but I've also heard shopping wagon as well. I typically hear buggy from older people, or people from North fl or Alabama, which we border.

  • @andresgallegos6399
    @andresgallegos6399 Před 3 lety +1

    I really feel atracted to the America one. What a beauty¡.

  • @kalaylaaa9520
    @kalaylaaa9520 Před 5 lety +1

    Idk how I never knew you were from Pa! I live on the other side of the state but I love that Pa has its own language. ❤️

  • @SuperPumkinX99
    @SuperPumkinX99 Před 2 lety +1

    Theres so many differences between provinces, I have never seen bagged milk in my life, elementary school was K-6 Junior high was 7-9 and Highschool was 10-12, and many other little things

  • @ryans413
    @ryans413 Před 2 lety

    In part of Canada I live we have elementary junior high and high school so elementary be 1-6 junior high be 7-8 and high school 9-12 but now high school only in most schools 10-12 and junior high is now 7-9

  • @goobertsnoobert9015
    @goobertsnoobert9015 Před 5 lety +1

    I mean caught being up there makes sense since my friend from boston says cot and caught differently

  • @eyecomeinpeace2707
    @eyecomeinpeace2707 Před 4 lety +1

    Awwww....we can never get Too Much Tash. You're a real sweetie.

  • @jcjccmz
    @jcjccmz Před 5 lety +15

    "standing on line" is absolutely a new york city thing. Even after over a decade of living in nyc, I insist on saying "in line" instead of "on."

    • @lornalewis6656
      @lornalewis6656 Před 3 lety

      Well I am Canadian and I only heard people saying in line

  • @laylahosman6346
    @laylahosman6346 Před 4 lety +8

    In South Africa we say “caught” like core-t

    • @joecoupon8299
      @joecoupon8299 Před 4 lety +2

      Please confirm (or deny), do you hear Afrikaners say "right cheer" for "right here" but more of a combined "rye-cheer."?

    • @laylahosman6346
      @laylahosman6346 Před 4 lety +3

      Joe Coupon omg hahahhaha, that’s so funny. yes we do! i didn’t even realize that we did it until you made me aware of it 😂😂

    • @kentix417
      @kentix417 Před 4 lety

      Another way to say caught in North American English is like cot - rhymes with hot. No aw sound.

  • @Jessie-si6gm
    @Jessie-si6gm Před 3 lety +2

    When you kept laughing at been sounding like bean all I could think of is molly Weasley saying “where have you been?”

  • @KrystalAddiWatson
    @KrystalAddiWatson Před 5 lety +1

    Ohmygosh thank you! This was so funny 😆

  • @grizzlymtn12
    @grizzlymtn12 Před 2 lety +1

    People in the Southern U.S. call a shopping cart a buggy...just like the British, maybe? They also call sodas "Cokes" in the South.

  • @AlbertJasonAlburo
    @AlbertJasonAlburo Před 2 lety

    In my Vlogs I used to speak in American Accent but for me I am a filipino. I lived in the Philippines. But last 2011, I went to Canada before.

  • @MsCarterElise
    @MsCarterElise Před 5 lety +3

    At least in my experience, the only term for a shopping cart in the UK is a trolley. I had a weird experience in London where I was as a Tesco trying to explain that I didn’t know where the carts were and wanted to find them. The lady there had no idea what I was saying - even when I said buggy. 😅
    There’s a lot of weird terms in my family because one part is Mennonite from the Reading/Lancaster area of PA. My grandma says “Checkings account”, “Walmark” and describes coloring in a coloring book as “cranning” (as in “crayon”).

    • @MsCarterElise
      @MsCarterElise Před 5 lety +1

      Oh! Side note: my cousin was the leader of the Knit the Bridge project for the Andy Warhol bridge in Pittsburgh!

  • @becky3698
    @becky3698 Před 5 lety +3

    Southerners use the term buggy! It’s also more common to say PEE-cahn (that’s as phonetic as I can think to spell it). This video cracked me up.

  • @kerrid.979
    @kerrid.979 Před 5 lety +6

    I'm from Ohio, and we say "pop." We also say "shopping cart," or "cart." I remember when my friend from NC was talking about people abandoning their buggies in the aisle, and I pictured a bunch of baby strollers everywhere. Lol! (Not that we say "baby buggies," but that was more familiar to me than referring to a cart as a buggy.)

    • @jessfrezz4764
      @jessfrezz4764 Před 5 lety +1

      Kerri Doll haha that’s such a funny picture and I would think the same thing! I’m from MI, so very similar!

    • @jimmyeatzpizza1363
      @jimmyeatzpizza1363 Před 4 lety +1

      Kerri Doll I live in NC absolutely no one says buggie lmao

  • @Phantom-ez4zv
    @Phantom-ez4zv Před 5 lety +4

    You two have good chemistry

    • @TooMuchTash
      @TooMuchTash  Před 5 lety +1

      Thanks! Would you believe it's the first time we had met in person? haha

  • @bigmike3540
    @bigmike3540 Před 4 lety +1

    I have a garburator 👍🏻 love it

  • @samoberndorf9168
    @samoberndorf9168 Před 4 lety +1

    I went to school in Vancouver BC, and when i was in K (1998-99) it was still K-7. Sometime before grade 3 it was K-5, middle school was 6-8 and high school 9-12.

  • @evexlyn
    @evexlyn Před 5 lety +1

    Interesting! Born and raised in Toronto and I say most of my words like Rebecca, but not "been"

  • @bawhitham
    @bawhitham Před rokem +1

    Fun to watch. You seem like very good friends. Pop/Soda? I think there is a line that runs through PA, east of the imaginary line one says soda, west one would say pop. In the south it's all Coke, even when it isn't Coke, they still stay Coke. In line/online? Everywhere it's "in line" except in NY City and region it's "online." Some of the Canadian expressions have become more American over the years, probably due to TV and, especially, the Internet.

  • @savannahcole157
    @savannahcole157 Před 5 lety +4

    Buggy is definitely a southern USA term! I’m from Alabama 😁

  • @iamgribs
    @iamgribs Před 4 lety +1

    I am from eastern Ontario.
    I don't think we sound very different from the midwest for example.
    I think it depends what province you are from, or what state you are in. I'm sure if i were in TN people would notice my accent. I go through NY and NJ all the time and no one says anything.

  • @NatalieM123
    @NatalieM123 Před 5 lety +2

    It's also called pop (not soda) in Minnesota

  • @KrystalAddiWatson
    @KrystalAddiWatson Před 5 lety +3

    I say buggy and I’m from Louisiana!! Lol... and I had 50 people in my graduating class... and we wore uniforms. Public school too

  • @elliehumphris4074
    @elliehumphris4074 Před 5 lety +1

    Wine in a box in Australia is called Cask Wine or "Goon" as a slang term. Aussie's have some beauty slang.
    And carbonated drinks are soft drink... and the place to pee is the toilet (we are blunt here).
    Tap too in a sink.
    We have best before dates for non perishables and expiry dates for foods that can poison you (lol).
    Bottle shop for the alcohol shop or the bottle-oh.
    Zed... definitely Zed
    Backpack or school bag
    Napkin for linen, serviette for paper.
    We have primary school kinder to 6 and then high school for 7-12. Nearly every school has uniforms.
    Aussie's are a weird bunch.... other side of the world thing I guess.

  • @kirbycarter1674
    @kirbycarter1674 Před 2 lety +1

    Milk in a bag is an Ontario thing lol....in most of the provinces we have jugs or cartons

  • @larisavimaki4870
    @larisavimaki4870 Před 4 lety +2

    This was such an interesting video!! Also really funny😂😂
    Just something...can you put the camera a bit lower so that your face is in the middle more. Just to make it a bit easier to watch💛💛

    • @TooMuchTash
      @TooMuchTash  Před 4 lety +1

      Haha we angled it so you could see the croissant and espresso painting - at the time we really wanted it in there haha. But I will be sure to center it better next time!

  • @laurenbudge6481
    @laurenbudge6481 Před 3 lety +2

    I'm also from the Toronto area and I've been told by many other Canadians (from Calgary, Vancouver, Newfoundland) that I have a "Toronto" accent but I've never been able to pinpoint what characterizes it. When I hear Natasha speak she sounds normal but as soon as Rebecca starts talking I can immediately tell she's from Toronto. Gaah what is it??! Are the vowels more defined? The consonants?

    • @kayflip2233
      @kayflip2233 Před rokem

      I'm from New York and can hear the Canadian accent pretty clearly. It is characterized by long vowels, clipped and abrupt words and the Canadian raising.

  • @electriciantv5174
    @electriciantv5174 Před 5 lety +4

    Ok sorry but milk in bags isn’t a Canadian thing, it is an Ontario thing. I’m from Saskatchewan and I’ve never seen a bag of milk

    • @elektrameligrigoris3897
      @elektrameligrigoris3897 Před 5 lety +2

      You Can Too Electrical
      They have it in Quebec too

    • @electriciantv5174
      @electriciantv5174 Před 5 lety

      Oh maybe it’s a eastern Canada thing because from Manitoba to BC there’s no milk in bags

    • @megzhutch777
      @megzhutch777 Před 4 lety +1

      I was born and raised in Alberta, Canada and have never ever seen a grocery store carry bagged milk.

    • @shizenkv
      @shizenkv Před 3 lety

      here in nova scotia we have cartons, jugs and bags of milk!
      i turned out to be lactose intolerant so i dont drink milk anymore, but we for sure have it bagged here in ns : )

    • @tanyah9732
      @tanyah9732 Před 3 lety

      @@megzhutch777 when I was younger, Alberta had bags of milk. I remember if you cut the corner too much, it would be messy to pour.
      Maybe I'm older, I'm in my thirties.

  • @elliepointer8512
    @elliepointer8512 Před 3 lety +2

    It’s so funny watching this being from England, so many differences ahah, I call a “shopping cart” a trolley, and a bathroom/washroom just a toilet 🤣 think most British people can relate depending where abouts they’re from

  • @wjdietrich
    @wjdietrich Před 4 lety +1

    Great rapport between the two of you. We say been because it's spelt b-e-e-n not b-i-n but if said quickly ,maybe like bin. Sorry is like s-o-r-e-y not sarry? The milk comes in 3 litres (3 bags) in a larger bag -in central and eastern Canada-apparently not in western and stays fresher because you're opening/consuming smaller amounts and many brand now have the best by date printed on the individual bags also. Many people say napkin or serviette(french influence). Many ways we say things are because of the british influence,but also french and sometimes other cultures that have made up our history(native peoples,german etc.)

  • @peachwedding
    @peachwedding Před 5 lety +3

    I've noticed that those who are not from Toronto usually pronounce it with the "toe" at the end, whereas if you're from Toronto you pronounce it "Toronno" and don't even say the last "t". Haha. Just thought I'd let you know ;).. Oh and the saying "sorry" thing is absolutely true!

    • @xgamerx360x
      @xgamerx360x Před 5 lety

      I'm not from Toronto (or Canada), but I've always said "Toronno", I have a very Canadian accent for someone who doesn't even live there (I live in southern Maine).

    • @fionapolson5051
      @fionapolson5051 Před 5 lety

      I’m from the maritime and we say toronno

    • @eyecomeinpeace2707
      @eyecomeinpeace2707 Před 4 lety

      I'm from Toronno and I say sawry not sore-y. Must be the Italian influence. Idk

  • @maricrisr.
    @maricrisr. Před 5 lety +2

    You guys are so cute!

  • @KianaKamminga
    @KianaKamminga Před 5 lety +2

    Milk bags are only from ontario... im in manitoba... and i have the 2L & 4L cartons

  • @KnowledgeandWisdomhub
    @KnowledgeandWisdomhub Před rokem +1

    I feel, both of you might be English teachers that's why your words and pronunciations are very clear.

  • @brado2273
    @brado2273 Před 5 lety +2

    I’m from Newfoundland (eastern Canada) and I say a lot of things differently from the Canadian girl in the video from Toronto. I guess it depends on what area of the country you are from seeings as though it’s such a big country. Also I graduated with around 25 people. Can’t imagine having 400 people in my class

    • @TooMuchTash
      @TooMuchTash  Před 5 lety

      I know what you mean, I know people who only live a few hours from me who have distinct accents. It's interesting how such a small distance can make such a difference. And 25 people? I can't imagine that haha.