Asian-Americans Have a HIDDEN Accent!

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  • čas přidán 29. 04. 2024
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Komentáře • 363

  • @anthonyhoang5902
    @anthonyhoang5902 Před 28 dny +25

    Andrew Yang will be on TED Talk soon. I will close my eyes and listen for his accent.

  • @covidisascam4556
    @covidisascam4556 Před 28 dny +85

    I can easily identyfy Black Americans on the phone. They have the same voice tone.

    • @noble604
      @noble604 Před 28 dny +10

      Doubt it. I think you’d be surprised how many people don’t “sound” “Błack” on the phone but are since “sounding Błack” is a very narrow stereotype.

    • @leigh7507
      @leigh7507 Před 28 dny +2

      Its learned though as far as I know - for Brits, you can tell if Richard Ayode is and different than a Benedict Cumberbatch

    • @devilrider39000000
      @devilrider39000000 Před 27 dny +3

      Nah, that's cap, African Americans have 2 voices they switch between

    • @corysmith4361
      @corysmith4361 Před 27 dny +2

      ​@@noble604 Exactly 😂😂😂

    • @corysmith4361
      @corysmith4361 Před 27 dny +1

      ​@@devilrider39000000 Yessirrrrrrrr, I have my interview voice and I have my voice that i use when I am with my boys.

  • @gobyfish1399
    @gobyfish1399 Před 27 dny +17

    Fung bro said it best at the end - its the soft boy STEM accent, that comes from Sol Cal, and that is the "Asian American" accent we all talk about. It's not all Asians who talk like that, just like not all other racial groups have the same accent. It's just the accent most people associate with AA's.

    • @derekkase7884
      @derekkase7884 Před 11 dny +1

      What is STEM ?😮

    • @gobyfish1399
      @gobyfish1399 Před 10 dny +1

      @@derekkase7884 Science, Technology, Engineering, Math, all the subjects that Asians are supposed to be good in, or have to be. Basically, Asian parents saying " Don't you dare to be an actor/musician/model or anything considered cool in the West.

    • @derekkase7884
      @derekkase7884 Před 10 dny

      @@gobyfish1399 dsmn that's tough ..and funny lol

  • @lucisventusnoctis
    @lucisventusnoctis Před 28 dny +11

    Lol we do, it's just inflection related - there's alot more to language than consonants and vowels. I'm a musician so will talk about speech in those terms - you have unique timbre which could be genetic/vocal cords, you have speed / rhythm, you have pitch, finally you have vocabulary and grammar (small nuances). The latter could be picked up from parents and/or shared inflections from your parent's language. The true comparison experiment would have to be done with Asians that were adopted into white/hispanic/black families and communities

    • @noble604
      @noble604 Před 28 dny

      That’s true. It seems the genetic component might be most important, though.
      Speaking of music, what famous Asìan American singers are out there, really... ever? It doesn’t seem that the natural voice itself lends itself to creating strong singers. It seems to be much more than the environment a person is raised in (imo)

    • @snowshock8958
      @snowshock8958 Před 28 dny

      @@noble604 Simu Liu?

  • @alwanexus
    @alwanexus Před 27 dny +6

    Being in Cali and Asian, I think it's just the Californian accent and then on top of that sounding a bit more thoughtful, that's how I'd describe the typical Cali Asian American accent. At least that's how it was in my day, I don't talk to any mid 30s and younger Asians.

  • @ryanchan6710
    @ryanchan6710 Před 28 dny +54

    Most of what is discussed here is called TIMBRE. And yes, many Asians have a specific built-in timbre because our vocal chords are grown a certain way because we have certain set of genes that do so. In the same way, various instruments can play the same note, but have varying timbres. The human voice is no exception.

    • @Obscurai
      @Obscurai Před 28 dny +10

      Exactly! This is the same mechanism (and yes it is a mechanism) that can be used to determine other "racial" voices. For example, you can easily distinguish a black person speaking from others because their nasal structure is slightly different. This is regardless of accent or even the phonemes used to form the spoken words.

    • @WillHsuMusic
      @WillHsuMusic Před 28 dny +4

      Basically what I was going to say.

    • @HiddenThoracle
      @HiddenThoracle Před 27 dny +2

      What the heck are you talking about? It’s not genes. Inflections and timbre are learned behavior - studies show that men who grew up closer to their moms have higher voices , and those closer to their dads have deeper voices.
      Also if you’re implying that black men have deeper voices because of genes, actually it is mostly social pressure to sound “tough”

    • @heironic8547
      @heironic8547 Před 23 dny +2

      timbre is not learned. Timbre is the sound of voice you were born with based on your vocal cords. You can change tone (more lazy speaking, more nasally, robotic, etc) or pitch (have a lower voice etc) but not timbre.
      Think of it like this: girls have a different timbre than boys. Yes their voices are higher in tone, but generally they can't match the timbre of a male voice just by lowering it. You can always tell it's a female voice based on timbre. Same is true for the opposite for boys ofc trying to raise their voice. If you REALLY train though it's possible for some people, but you don't learn timbre from environment. Otherwise a male raised only by him mom will have a voice indistinguishable from a female's, which is never true.
      Just like gender, I believe race has different timbres of voices although not as dramatic as gender. White and black male voices are usually have more bass to them, asians can have mid high range smoother timbre.
      btw I study both music and linguistics

    • @HiddenThoracle
      @HiddenThoracle Před 23 dny

      @@Obscuraino it’s not genes and that kid who’s saying Asians have different throats because of genes is nuts. Vocal inflections are learned then adopted. awkwafina (Asian) sounds black because most of her friends were from Brooklyn. Even the Fung Bros (Asian) sound black. I guess they got black throat genes then? Lmao. And this artist, male, sounds just like a female: czcams.com/video/evJ6gX1lp2o/video.htmlsi=cMKXBmxTlpKlKhHr

  • @Th3MostWond3rfulTim3OfTh3Y3ar

    It’s just like how we can tell if a black guy is speaking most of the time!

    • @DiamondFlame45
      @DiamondFlame45 Před 28 dny +9

      It’s that base in their voice!

    • @annunakian8054
      @annunakian8054 Před 27 dny +2

      I can tell 99% of the time without seeing the face. I'll even google the name or ad if I didn't see it & sure enough. One of the few I've gotten wrong is Carlos Watson. Always thought he was a big southern white man or mixed-race man until I finally saw his face after hearing him on radio all the time. Also not hard to tell an Asian voice except for the occasional Asian that sounds Caucasian af.

    • @hellyeah7331
      @hellyeah7331 Před 25 dny

      Yup. African Americans in general have a distinct cadence and accent. I’m African so people usually expect me to sound like African Americans, but when my accent slips out, it’s more like the “I’m from Liberia” guy 😂

    • @Andreyco-ho1ms
      @Andreyco-ho1ms Před 25 dny

      deeper voices

  • @rosiey172
    @rosiey172 Před 28 dny +71

    A blind man guessed that I was Asian. He said there is more of a nasal tone.

    • @sub-fivessurvival
      @sub-fivessurvival Před 28 dny +7

      Not only are we conventionally unattractive in the West, but we also sound like shit.

    • @Vanderbeep
      @Vanderbeep Před 27 dny +17

      @@sub-fivessurvival Speak for yourself lmao

    • @sub-fivessurvival
      @sub-fivessurvival Před 27 dny +3

      @@Vanderbeep I'm not afraid to put myself out here. I want everyone to know people like us exist.

    • @ahhwe-any7434
      @ahhwe-any7434 Před 27 dny

      If I had to guess, in general, bc Asians have less testosterone, & even the dudes can look pretty, when were not excited, it's prob monotone & dullish. Like just almost too chill. I think ppls natural voices is when ur by yourself, not around others. When ur around other ppl, u hafta find some vibe. Ppl on their own however, that's gotta be your natural thing.

    • @snowshock8958
      @snowshock8958 Před 27 dny

      @@ahhwe-any7434 check the voice of the lesser testosterone asian dude ProZD.
      And come back to me after…

  • @lindencarlos4222
    @lindencarlos4222 Před 28 dny +15

    This is not true. I spoke to Asian Americans from the Bay area and they sound Black to me. I spoke to Asian Americans from Texas, and they sound like white southerners to me. It depends on what part of the country you are from. I imagine if I spoke to either of you two (David and Andrew FUNG BRO's) on the phone I would think you was a Hispanic American who was really into Hip Hop, Sneaker/Basket Ball culture, or Possible a brother who's into anime. Lol. (Joking) So to make it plain and simple Maybe some Asians Americans sound like how the Tik-Tok mentioned. But definitely not all. People are people and can sound like anything.

    • @draetone5602
      @draetone5602 Před 25 dny +1

      The funny thing about this California and bay area is barely Black. there are more Black people in Dallas area than Greater LA and The bay area combined. Because of the West Coast gansta rap people think the West coast is way blacker then it is, Mean while people think of just white southerners and when thinking of the south but actually it's by far the blackest part of the country. So one Asian is far more likely to have AAVE accent in the South than the West coast.
      But I agree about regional thing,

  • @Constellasian
    @Constellasian Před 28 dny +30

    This isn't always true. Sure there are the stereotypical "Asian accents", but Asians born and raised in Western countries like the US can sound just like any other American. I have yet to meet anyone who knew I'm Asian according to my voice alone. In fact, people always assumed I'm White if they've only heard my voice.

    • @luckarl
      @luckarl Před 28 dny +10

      I doubt it. Many of my friends were adopted as a baby by white family but they still have a special tone that you can distinguish as Asian. NOTHING WRONG WITH IT. YOU ALL are different skin tone and black hair and brown eyes…why do you want to be white or black. Be proud! This is the problem with Asian-Americans; just want to fit in instead of branding your own.

    • @snowshock8958
      @snowshock8958 Před 28 dny +4

      @@luckarl just like how you can distinguish Black people. And lets not forget with the White voice, high pitch people.

    • @martinvanburen4578
      @martinvanburen4578 Před 28 dny

      I think even if they are born in the a Western country, they sound different. It is soft and very mannered.....sounds a little gay and bi*tchy

    • @LeahDyson-kq4bd
      @LeahDyson-kq4bd Před 27 dny

      Most asian guys i knew were the whitest guys in school but there was always the random one talking like Eminem that was funny

    • @sakurakou2009
      @sakurakou2009 Před 20 dny

      Maybe cuz you are asian you don't hear yourself but when others who not used to your accent hear it they will be able to tell youe ethnicity just from your accent

  • @user-vv1cg3ly8h
    @user-vv1cg3ly8h Před 25 dny +2

    I agree because growing up, I went to schools that had up to 5 Asian people in them, so I never got to spend a lot of time with Asian American people outside of Church. It wasn’t until I went to college that I could spend a lot of time with Asian Americans. I noticed that my accent changed after a few months of spending time with Asian Americans. So now I’m conscious of my accent and it’s cool being able to switch between them.

  • @Prinren
    @Prinren Před 27 dny +4

    I've been thinking this for a while too. I am not American but consume a lot of Asian-American content and I could pick up on it. Interesting to know this has been a topic for very long. "They're going off the upper middle-class California Asians." That! Yeah it really depends. Even within East and Southeast Asia there are different accents. Like I can tell when a Korean is speaking Tagalog. People can tell I did not grow up in Manila when I speak Tagalog. They're such subtle differences, but it is there sometimes.

  • @user-qo9zr2us6f
    @user-qo9zr2us6f Před 28 dny +22

    it's just a west coast upper middle class accent

  • @MO-rl9gl
    @MO-rl9gl Před 28 dny +24

    It would be very strange if Asian Americans did not have a unique accent. Everyone does!

    • @luckarl
      @luckarl Před 28 dny +1

      Bingo! Be Proud! Be who you are. Stop copying other people’s accents. They got theirs.

    • @OrangeCounty92
      @OrangeCounty92 Před 27 dny +2

      They said we sound gay..lmao.

    • @DreamRealityMix
      @DreamRealityMix Před 23 dny +1

      @@luckarl you dont seem to understand.. parents no speaky english. had to learn from enviroment. so enviroment is accent. That is not copying.. You're confusing accents from overseas asians learning english. thats a whole different thing like nigerians learning english.

    • @anniemeridian270
      @anniemeridian270 Před 7 dny

      That is very true indeed, and it shouldn’t be anything to be ashamed of. Not that easy to identify for me though

  • @jacque8236
    @jacque8236 Před 28 dny +6

    There is a similar cadence of upper middle class East Asians, who've grown up in the suburbs but there's too many factors involved to label this the "official asian-american accent". Being Filipino, most asians near me (mostly southeast asians) sound like Dante Basco or Pierre xo. Everyone is different tho.
    Most asian-american voices sound very easy on the ears.

  • @chrislw9053
    @chrislw9053 Před 28 dny +6

    American born male here, my parents spoke Cantonese to me as a kid and i spoke Cantonese exclusively until about 4 years old and then only spoke English after that. I still speak some Cantonese once in a while (a few times a year) but am not fluent by any stretch. That said they are still a few English words that I struggle to clearly annunciate/pronounce clearly. That's probably an accent? Words like Saturday come out like Sataday or appropriate comes out like apprapriate. Even words like sing, the "ng" nasal ending sometimes gets cut off a bit. Thoughts?

    • @chrislw9053
      @chrislw9053 Před 28 dny

      Also the plural words with s at the end aren't pronounced as strongly as white folk

    • @chrislw9053
      @chrislw9053 Před 28 dny

      "for example", the L at the end word isn't pronounced strongly by Asian americans

    • @lyhthegreat
      @lyhthegreat Před 27 dny

      as long as people understands you it's ok, there's no one accent that everyone needs to conform to..

    • @lineage13
      @lineage13 Před 27 dny

      Cantonese American, English is my second language. Strangely enoughy when my wife or family members hear me over the phone, they usually say I sound like a white guy 😂. Asian Americans are so diverse not really possibly stereotype us all.

  • @tovopro
    @tovopro Před 28 dny +6

    I've been told this by a two different girls I've dated in the past, both were White. I moved to the US when I was 3 yrs old BTW, so I consider English being my primary language. They mentioned to me that I have a distinct American-English accent that they can't put their finger on, but it's there. For the longest time, I thought they were being crazy and had some strange Asian infatuation, and were just trying to pick out any infatuated perspective nuances. Come to realize as I get older, I'm starting to believe this and that growing up how my parents spoke English as their second and also having knowledge of a second language definitely plays into how I speak English as my primary. I might not be mixed, but my vernacular phonetic is. LOL

  • @charlestan7903
    @charlestan7903 Před 28 dny +16

    I would like to test these guys wearing blindfolds…

  • @gokutvraw2236
    @gokutvraw2236 Před 28 dny +9

    I just think it is who you hang around

  • @Melki
    @Melki Před 28 dny +4

    On Accent pay attention to these factors:
    1. Your life experiences are real and reality has mass
    2. Communities have ways of expressing those mass
    3. Communication is multiple ways, 2 ways at least. You'd match your counterparts' ways of understanding the weight, you match, you don't represent you match. At least if you care about effective and efficient communication the most in your exchange.
    4. Politicians communicate politics through their emphasis and its all f'd up. These are the things people should shun out, not the other ones.

  • @garydare2238
    @garydare2238 Před 28 dny +4

    You are the sum of your experiences ... and environment. I can buy the idea of media influence on AA's, I'm in Montreal and Paris so in the former case, I can figure out who was born/raised in Quebec from the way they speak French. Another interesting data point: a lot of children of immigrants mostly do English language TV and radio (English Canadian or US, you can get Vermont stations on cable and sometimes over the air, and Vermont Public Radio bills itself as Montreal's NPR!) and many speak very good or even perfect English! A good friend in Portland, Oregon (South Asian but Canada born) from Montreal blew me away that he didn't go to McGill but to U de Montreal - after schooling in the French system!

  • @gallaxian
    @gallaxian Před 27 dny +2

    Answering this question is definitely complicated by the fact that about a third of Asians residing in the U.S.are not native English speakers and therefore likely speak with an accent and another (unknown) share are second generation and learned English , in part, from non-native English speakers (their parents).

  • @neostar63
    @neostar63 Před 28 dny +3

    I’ve always noticed it. My theory was always around speech development in younger years with a second East Asian language in the household.
    Nothing to fuss over, if anything it’s a unique quality to celebrate.

  • @pjt8919
    @pjt8919 Před 27 dny +6

    The asian accents they’re describing are definitely Asians from a white neighborhood. Definitely East Asians too. Cus the Cambodians and Filipinos I know don’t sound like this.

    • @RonBintscatsco-fy2bc
      @RonBintscatsco-fy2bc Před 23 dny

      The video literally has a Filipino & a Filipina who sound like this. Other famous Filipinos who sound like this are Gilbert & Khalyla from TigerBelly, Ryan/Dominic from Quest Crew, and NBA coach Erik Spoelstra. It was actually shocking for me to move to the bay area and hear all these Filipinos mimicking black people & claiming to be Pacific Islander (which are ppl's whose origins are Polynesia, Micronesia, and Melanesia (i.e. nowhere near the Philipines).

    • @pjt8919
      @pjt8919 Před 23 dny

      @@RonBintscatsco-fy2bcwho’s Filipino in this video that sound straight up white? Seems like u just moved to the US if you think some of the ppl u mentioned sound like a straight up white guy. Cus that’s basically the Asian accent the black guy in the video was describing. And I’m not necessarily talking about an urban sounding accent but there’s a “filipinoness” about it. You would know this sound if ur from a predominant Filipino neighborhood. I definitely hear the “Filipinoness” in Khalyla and Ryan’s voice. Even my Cambodian homies got a distinct accent but it’s not a button up white guy sound.

  • @nihant8322
    @nihant8322 Před 28 dny +22

    its not the accent , it is the tonality and color of the voice. Black voice can be differentiated easily from white voices

    • @Drownedinblood
      @Drownedinblood Před 28 dny +3

      They got taught to talk that way though..

    • @Obscurai
      @Obscurai Před 28 dny +8

      Exactly, I can distinguish a black speaker regardless of country or language. This is because the components of the speech are slightly different in the vocal tract (pitch) and nasal cavity (resonance, timbre) and oral cavity. The same is true for other racial groups. This does not mean that these characteristics are exclusive to a racial, but that they are more prominent in specific racial groups. Hence why there is a distinct sound to Asian voices.

    • @nihant8322
      @nihant8322 Před 28 dny +2

      @@Drownedinblood na genetics is the Main determinant of the variations in different races

    • @Drownedinblood
      @Drownedinblood Před 28 dny +2

      @@nihant8322 So how you explain the Black people who don't talk like they are from the hood?

    • @Drownedinblood
      @Drownedinblood Před 28 dny +1

      @@Obscurai Ok David Duke.

  • @jadedseoul76
    @jadedseoul76 Před 28 dny +11

    The comedian, Henry Cho, has the best Asian American accent! My country accent is not as thick as his.

  • @GreaterSinistral
    @GreaterSinistral Před 21 dnem +2

    They definitely have one. One very distinctive aspect of it is that they pronounce every single "t" very crisply, including the ones that most other native English speakers leave silent. The impression I get is that Asian Americans typically speak English the way a perfectionist would speak it if they'd learned it from a book. It's very clean and lacking in any localized cultural identifiers, besides sometimes having a California tone.
    Also, this applies mainly to Chinese and Koreans. I've noticed that Japanese, Vietnamese, Filipinos, and others are much more likely to speak English exactly like a White person.

  • @glasshalffull1992
    @glasshalffull1992 Před 27 dny +3

    I really think it depends on the environment you grow up in and personality you have. Nothing to do with being Asian. These people who say we all sound like we’re giving a TED talk means they just got to meet more Asians or based on stereotypes fr lol

  • @hx7161
    @hx7161 Před 27 dny +2

    It’s true. My husband is white and he told me that my entire family/cousins/friends including myself all have an accent. 😆😆😆 I hear it too sometimes with certain people. I think it’s because some English sounds are not in the native language so when they try to say it in English there is a slight accent. I’m Hmong and we do not have any R sounds or words so I always have a hard time with hard R words like “war” and “girl.” 😆😆😆😆

  • @91dgross
    @91dgross Před 28 dny +7

    I think the way Andrew and David talk as Asian guys sounds “normal” American. Like if I was talking on the phone to Andrew I would think he’s just a white guy. David’s voice is a little more cultured though. David kinda sounds like a smart black guy (who could also pass for a white guy) but with clean English but his English also sounds casual and not over done like some other Asian Americans might sound lol
    other than that though I do notice I can tell if I’m talking to an Asian American. The super proper perfect English is a dead give away. And also some words they pronounce just sound different when compared to regular white American accents

    • @user-ft9tf5tw6l
      @user-ft9tf5tw6l Před 27 dny +1

      Andrew & David are from Washington State and there isn't much of a regional accent compared to the rest of the US. David however puts on a more urban slangy tone compared to Andrew. I do notice in the word "year" some Asians will say it as "ear".

    • @OrangeCounty92
      @OrangeCounty92 Před 27 dny

      They really do..lmao.

  • @chriswizo9891
    @chriswizo9891 Před 27 dny +6

    Maybe the East Asian dudes sound like that but the South-East Asians in Sac, Stockton and the Bay do not sound like that 😂

    • @GG-zb2fv
      @GG-zb2fv Před 26 dny

      Ya yall sound more ghetto lol smh

    • @netnomad47
      @netnomad47 Před 24 dny

      I've heard Asians in the Bay sound like that 😂but it's the nerdy chinese ones.

  • @asianmovement
    @asianmovement Před 28 dny +4

    yea we do

  • @jaimeflor4181
    @jaimeflor4181 Před 28 dny +4

    As for higher pitch voices, that might be something. I sing in a choir and most of the male Asian’s, including myself, are tenors and not bass’s or baritones.

    • @snowshock8958
      @snowshock8958 Před 28 dny +2

      Explain Korean or Japanese deep voice singer and seiyuu??

  • @BushidoBrownSama
    @BushidoBrownSama Před 27 dny +3

    I never knew monotone voice recipe attempter guy was Asian but algorithmicly it makes sense cause youtube started giving me that content after i started watching other Asian youtubers food shorts

  • @chinitopinoy1726
    @chinitopinoy1726 Před 27 dny +5

    As a Filipino American, I def. don't have this accent. lol

    • @kimeli
      @kimeli Před 22 dny

      let me guess you sound black?

  • @jjn6914
    @jjn6914 Před 21 dnem +1

    It's generally true among Asian-Americans who only hang out with each other, I find. I hear it for sure; what I observe (or hear) is that the phonetics they produce is associated to the primary or secondary language they grew up with or were surrounded by. So, I see Chinese-Americans speak English with "choppy" phonetics. Korean-Americans' accent sounds similar to the standard Korean dialect, where the phrase ending position rises, as to sound like an interrogative and not a statement. However, the East Asian adoptees raised in places virtually devoid of other Asian groups' speak indiscernibly to, say, white Americans. The fewer Asian friends an Asian-American has, the less of the "Asian" accent they tend to have.

  • @maxeenemoua1334
    @maxeenemoua1334 Před 27 dny +3

    Different kinds of asian americans have different accents though

    • @maxeenemoua1334
      @maxeenemoua1334 Před 27 dny

      You're not going to hear a southeast Asian American decent man sound like a "white gay man"

  • @cchu319
    @cchu319 Před 28 dny +59

    It’s not really an accent. It’s the annunciations of words.

    • @MagicXXMadness
      @MagicXXMadness Před 28 dny +29

      thats an accent….

    • @koi2932
      @koi2932 Před 28 dny +6

      Enunciation*

    • @martinvanburen4578
      @martinvanburen4578 Před 28 dny +4

      I noticed it from listening to Asians speaking English: it is high pitched, a little soft (gay) sounds like about right. It is something just little off. They also have like a very b*tchy way of talking sometimes, like they need to correct you.

    • @cupidok2768
      @cupidok2768 Před 28 dny +1

      Does andrew speak with high pitch accent? Does the other guy sound like he's rapping like black?

    • @WillHsuMusic
      @WillHsuMusic Před 28 dny +6

      It’s more about voice color, not accent. Genetics basically shape the way our vocal cords are, which affects the way our voices sound. It’s not about the way we enunciate things because we pronounce vowels and stuff basically the same, but the color is different. Like if you hear a violin a flute or a trumpet, you can tell. They play the same note, but the color is different.

  • @heironic8547
    @heironic8547 Před 23 dny +1

    "white gay men without flamboyance" honestly that's true but only for californian asians (where most of the asians in the US are). But that's just a californian accent. But even asians from other parts of the us regardless of which east or south east asian country they're from have a certain accent that's indescribable apart from the "white gay" voice.

  • @blinksstayfresh2524
    @blinksstayfresh2524 Před 28 dny +12

    Everyone of all colors have accents. I know a white guy who sounds Asian on the phone 😂

    • @lyhthegreat
      @lyhthegreat Před 27 dny +3

      exactly, im not surprised by that, even white people from different areas of America have different accents..

    • @ahhwe-any7434
      @ahhwe-any7434 Před 27 dny

      He must've grown up in a highly Asian populated community then... Like in Asia. Born & raised

    • @blinksstayfresh2524
      @blinksstayfresh2524 Před 27 dny

      @@ahhwe-any7434
      More like Canada 🤣

  • @cassiopeia309
    @cassiopeia309 Před 28 dny +6

    Korean Americans in college often talked as David said …they made statements that ended high as if what they were saying was a question. Perhaps that’s the Korean language has these endings or similar intonations?
    I am sure, however, that being in the cutthroat competitive corporate world changed how they spoke. If you want to move up the ladder on Wall Street or any corporate environment making statements that sound like questions for any male or female isn’t going to cut it.

    • @snowshock8958
      @snowshock8958 Před 28 dny +3

      Oddly enough Korean men have deeper voice when speaking their language.

    • @cassiopeia309
      @cassiopeia309 Před 28 dny

      @@snowshock8958 yes, I feel that is true! Strange

    • @snowshock8958
      @snowshock8958 Před 28 dny +1

      @@cassiopeia309 there is also typical deep voice like FELIX or T.O.P

    • @cassiopeia309
      @cassiopeia309 Před 27 dny

      @@snowshock8958 True. And V and Suga of BTS have deep voices. Lee Min Ho in the K drama Boys over flowers was extremely Alpha and masculine with a deep voice. Not effeminate at all. Same goes for bad boy Kim Woo-Bin’s character in the Heirs. Extremely masculine yet we can see the exterior belies the vulnerable situation he was in (his Dad treated him horribly).
      Perhaps Korean men in Korea speak with more gusto and confidence than some American born Asian men. Some are very confident however!

    • @snowshock8958
      @snowshock8958 Před 27 dny +1

      @@cassiopeia309 I believe it is their cultures too. From what I have seen Korean are 50/50 on flowers boys and masculine men. They have BTS but also Physical 100 on Netflix which is awesome.

  • @SonoNariFiorewithGrace
    @SonoNariFiorewithGrace Před 28 dny +2

    Was not expecting that clip of Joshua nor vernon here lolol I love their voices! 🕊️🤍🤍✨

  • @beatmyacorn4200
    @beatmyacorn4200 Před 26 dny +1

    This happens with second gen immigrants from of all ethnicities. Usually when ppl grow up with a second language that is commonly spoken to friends and family, there certain speaking patterns and tones that carry over to when they speak English. Technically the English is still fluent, as its not a full on accent and quite subtle. But still recognizable

  • @anneminette
    @anneminette Před 28 dny

    Never really thought of that.. Interesting topic!

  • @jeffreykhem7301
    @jeffreykhem7301 Před 28 dny +5

    its callled code switbhing the black community already made a movie about it

  • @ericp1139
    @ericp1139 Před 19 dny +1

    Asian Americans are scattered, so they don't have large cultural bases like other minorities do. AA's seem to latch onto whatever dominant culture they grew up with, whether that be rap music or news reporters.

  • @pitherra
    @pitherra Před 27 dny +14

    I used to work in a call center. I'm Asian, and the client thought I sounded like Norwegian. 😂
    I didnt tell her I'm Asian. 😂

    • @lineage13
      @lineage13 Před 27 dny

      Same Cantonese American and people usually assume I'm a white guy over the phone. 😅

    • @FrozenPureRose
      @FrozenPureRose Před 26 dny

      Also Asian, I worked at a call center, was asked if I was Canadian, British, or from Switzerland...I don't understand why ppl thought I sounded European.

    • @nitaseely6830
      @nitaseely6830 Před 24 dny

      Same same

  • @djmenez10
    @djmenez10 Před 27 dny +2

    Probably residual effects of hearing our parents or older family members talk then learning and picking up little things here and there.

  • @az00001
    @az00001 Před 19 dny

    Even Fung Bros have accents! LMAO. Because they're multilingual. Great topic!

  • @schinism3247
    @schinism3247 Před 28 dny +1

    As an Asian American, I think it is definitely influenced by their parents and what languages they speak. I would say that my Asian American friends who had Vietnamese or Chinese-speaking parents didn't have too much of an American twang to their voices. It was usually either soft-spoken or too nasally. Some of my friends also ignored grammar patterns like "s" sounds or plurals, but usually, their fluency in English wasn't as good as mine despite being born in America. They probably just didn't immerse themselves in American culture and media as much as I did. Although I had Cambodian-speaking parents, I put more effort into immersing myself in American culture and made the effort to mimic American characters and force myself to improve my vernacular. I still don't think I can speak perfect standard American English or even AAVE probably because I still spoke a different language with my parents at home, so my "Asian" voice might slip out sometimes. I have to concentrate a little harder to sound standard, and probably I have to watch a lot of media in English and avoid watching stuff in other languages to keep it consistently standard. In conclusion, I think the more time Asian Americans spend with their families vs their friends, the more they end up sounding like their family members, and if you happen to be 2nd/3rd/4th generation Asian American, you probably don't have this Asian-sounding voice. For most 1st-generation Asian Americans like me, it's kind of a natural sound unless you put a lot of effort into avoiding speaking your parents' mother tongue, hanging out more with standard American English-speaking folks, and focusing a great deal on your vernacular.

  • @JimmyGunawanX
    @JimmyGunawanX Před 22 dny

    I think we DO have the accents but not just like “Asian English” accent, but there are infinite variations in Asian. It could just be the shape of our nose or lips, and it gives the sound.

  • @Wagner-uv6yp
    @Wagner-uv6yp Před 28 dny +19

    I can tell if a person speaking is an Asian-American male 80% of the time just by their voice alone. I think the reason is because there are some english words that cause you to speak with the intonation of your mother tongue that non asian language speaking people don't have, whether you are fluent in that language or not.

  • @Anonymouscpa2
    @Anonymouscpa2 Před 2 dny

    Personally I feel asian Americans born and raised in the US speak the most clear and most easily understandable English. I guess this is because many of them take ESL classes in elementary school and learn English from teachers that give you textbook-based instructions on generic pronunciation.

  • @Lazy_Shikamaru
    @Lazy_Shikamaru Před 25 dny +1

    This only applies to East Asians. As a Cambo, I don’t run into this.

  • @Razear
    @Razear Před 27 dny +1

    How we speak is a product of our upbringing and environment. Part of it is also subject to personal manipulation. We can modulate how we sound to some extent depending on who we're speaking to or to fit in within a particular context. For instance, we might speak to our friends differently compared to how we speak to our parents or our teachers. In terms of vocal pitch, it's true that Asians on average tend to have higher-pitched voices, largely due to their smaller frames. Black men are known to have more baritone voices because of higher testosterone. Having a deep voice is intimately tied to being perceived as hypermasculine.

  • @gomgeya
    @gomgeya Před 28 dny

    I think it depends on the person. I think personality and influences in music and the environment play a huge role in accents. Also, how fluent or not with their native language will have an effect.

  • @jaimeflor4181
    @jaimeflor4181 Před 28 dny

    I’m 2nd and 3rd generation, so I’m not sure if I have it. Plus, these people might be referencing certain specific East Asians. There’s definitely something there, but it’s not 100% applicable to all individuals. It really depends on generation, socialization, location and maybe genetics. Plus, all Hispanics speak Spanish and African Americans all speak English. That’s more homogeneous than Asian Americans that have different languages and dialects.

  • @hellyeah7331
    @hellyeah7331 Před 25 dny

    I’ve noticed the accent, it’s subtle but apparent. I think it develops as a result of being in social circles rather than carryover from their native languages, because the native languages are so different (Chinese, Tagalog, Vietnamese, Japanese), yet the accent is the same. I don’t know if that’s factual, but it’s just my observation 🤷🏾‍♀️✨ I know a white guy who grew up and hung out with mostly Asians, and he has this accent too.

  • @netnomad47
    @netnomad47 Před 24 dny

    Chinese Americans have accents, Mexican Americans have accents, Afro Americans have accents.
    Not all of them do, but alot of them do especially if english is their second language. Or they grew up around others with the same kind of accent.

  • @christopherchau8630
    @christopherchau8630 Před 26 dny

    It’s got to be both social environment + physical because the kids that graduate Stuyvesant & Bronx Science schools (to those that are familiar with NYC) sound exactly identical to the kids who graduate from Hong Kong’s international/private schools when speaking English. Maybe it’s more a function of education and not socio-economic class as many kids that attend NYC’s elite public schools come from families below the poverty line.

  • @theflyxx
    @theflyxx Před 26 dny +1

    (4:50) That Uncle Roger imitation was on point.

  • @user-oz8yu8ni4k
    @user-oz8yu8ni4k Před 2 dny

    I have lived in the U.S. for over 30 years, and I still have an accent. White people said I deliberately try sound posh by speaking RP. The fact is I am bidialectal. Sure, I can speak with a Midwestern accent but I just choose to speak with my own accent.

  • @ft9kop
    @ft9kop Před 24 dny

    This is Upper middle class asian american accent. The ones you hear in north jersey, and other affluent suburbs. the asian americans in the working class and lower class neighborhoods sound nothing like that. their's is like a mix of American and fob accent with a hint of the local accent

  • @Funkylover-sl7ew
    @Funkylover-sl7ew Před 27 dny +1

    fung bros r awesome

  • @linuxman7777
    @linuxman7777 Před 20 dny

    An insight here from an Italian American from Pittsburgh. We often get stereotyped in media for all speaking the same way, With a NYC-Jersey accent when in reality, we speak with all kinds of American Accents. Nobody I knew growing up sounded like the Sopranos, the spoke like everyone else from Pittsburgh.
    I even recall recently watching a Netflix film that took place in West Virginia with Italian Americans, and they gave them NYC accents.
    I see a similar thing happening with Asians and Gay People where they are both attached to A California Accent due do being heavily represented in media with such accents, while in reality Asians and Gay people have all kinds of American English Accents.

  • @scottchow043
    @scottchow043 Před 27 dny

    If we're talking about an ABC or really any Asian born in America, I think there is an accent. To me, it's based around tone and inflection. It tends to be heavier depending on how bilingual they are. My cousins who are very fluent in Cantonese have a noticeable accent compared to me, who can't really speak it but understand some of the language. I think social media plays a big part as well. A lot of people change the speed and pitch of their voice when posting. I would equate it to hitting a predetermined pose for photos, it's almost a reflex.

  • @manilamartin1001
    @manilamartin1001 Před 27 dny

    Love this topic. I am filipino/american and can tell when I speak to a filipino/american without seeing them. I usually can tell other asian/americans as well. I think it's cool. My voice is typical filipino male 57. When I was in my 20s as an artist, everyone assumed I was gay. I am not, but it comes with the territory. It has it's pluses and minuses.

  • @amehayami934
    @amehayami934 Před 28 dny +5

    I'm Japanese/Chinese from Hawaii
    We don't sound anything like that.
    Think this is just another case of
    Other races trying to stereo type us. I heard some black people speak the same way to.
    Think it more depends on where you live and what aera you live in.
    I was raised in the projects.
    And on top of that Hawaii just speaks differently.

  • @chimakalu41
    @chimakalu41 Před 27 dny

    5:38 Interesting i'm surprised this wasn't an episode topic years ago

  • @DeLaBoughetto
    @DeLaBoughetto Před 27 dny +1

    Asian languages are vastly different. Even with Chinese…Mandarin and Cantonese sound very different to me. There is no way that there could be “Asian” American accent. These examples sound more regional than anything. The only time I heard something that could be an Asian American accent is in LA K-Town. They could be 2nd, 3rd, etc generations in and still talk like Korean fobs with good grammar.

  • @Garfield_Minecraft
    @Garfield_Minecraft Před 19 dny +1

    0:30 LOL what?
    3:50 nope i really couldn't tell because i'm not racist

  • @TonyNokeo
    @TonyNokeo Před 20 dny

    SEA Working Class from Houston. Asians here don't sound "black" but they do sound more working class than an Asian from Cali. There's zero uptalk here.

  • @br1antt
    @br1antt Před 3 dny

    Just saying David and Andrew have extremely distinct Asian American accents. It’s a mixture of nasal enunciation with light aave, choose of vocab and not fully pronunciating words

  • @TyNguyen-qv5fo
    @TyNguyen-qv5fo Před 25 dny

    Final consonants. It’s a challenge for a lot of esl speakers, and Asian Americans often grow up around esl speakers in the form of family members, neighbors, or friends if they live close to their ethnic enclave.

  • @kimchiacid
    @kimchiacid Před 22 dny

    Where I'm from, immigrants have said it sounds like I'm mumbling, but to locals it sounds over articulate. I do however, have a very deep voice.

  • @sjacks3281
    @sjacks3281 Před 28 dny +2

    Can you tell if someone also speaks a language besides english? yes.
    But no, Asian Americans as a whole do not have a similar distinct accent. It doesn't even make sense because there are so many different languages.
    But, when he gave those two examples...wow. But were those two guys from the same ethnic group?
    Here's a question. If you are trying really hard to assimilate, and want to try to hide any hint of your ethnic language, will you speak english in a certain way?
    & Chinese people have a higher pitch? That doesn't make sense. When I listen to chinese, a lot of them have ridiculously deep voices. Same with Japanese

  • @supermonk3y07
    @supermonk3y07 Před 21 dnem

    Dude.. that the guy said Asian Americans sound like a gay guy without the extra flamboyance, is true. I havent noticed that until now. Is this maybe how Asians from 18-35 or 40 sound like?

  • @YIIIIIN
    @YIIIIIN Před 23 dny +1

    my black friend is mistaken for white on the phone. His name is Joseph, too. lol
    when he started on the job, everyone was surprised when he came in on the first day.

  • @shortycastella
    @shortycastella Před 27 dny

    If someone speaks a different language with their parents/family (which many Asians in the West do), then they'll have some kind of accent when they speak English. It comes out even a little. Everyone has an accent though. People don't think they have an accent until it's pointed out to them lol
    Even if English speakers go to Asian countries speaking the languages of an Asian country, they definitely have accents in those languages too.
    The way people speak in some communities will differ (like AAVE). Different words to refer to a thing, concepts, etc. As long as you make yourself understood on the other end, you'll be fine.

  • @LetThatStuffGo
    @LetThatStuffGo Před 28 dny

    0:31 - Haha! Oh, dear... 😂

  • @mitziikemoto5937
    @mitziikemoto5937 Před 24 dny

    Depends on what generation you are, some are 5th generation now in the USA among mainstreams.

  • @AI-ex5rw
    @AI-ex5rw Před 13 dny

    I notice that aswell asian american who are native speakers born in America do sound like gay white american men who are mid class and while aisan girls do have slower high pitched voices.

  • @chimakalu41
    @chimakalu41 Před 27 dny

    13:00 some interesting analysis by Andrew.

  • @madbug1965
    @madbug1965 Před 27 dny

    As an Asian American I used to have an African American neighbor who was very tall and buff. He used to do voice over work for commercials. I used to always tell him that I wish that I had a deep voice like him. It would make women melt. 😂

  • @netnomad47
    @netnomad47 Před 24 dny

    I have a little nephew who grew up with his mom Filipino and his dad Mexican. And initially had a hybrid accent because of his parents but after watching alot of tv, cartoons, and movies, and starting school he now sounds like a cartoon character 😂 almost like a mix of Charlie Brown and Diego from Dora. It turns out he loves watching both shows. Lol

  • @noname-nu6oo
    @noname-nu6oo Před 28 dny +1

    Everyone has one

  • @TorotheTIGER
    @TorotheTIGER Před 27 dny

    The thing that I don't like when people talk about "accents" is that people seem to think that having an accent is a bad thing. We all have an accent. The giveaway of someone knowing absolutely nothing about linguistics is when someone says "I don't have an accent". Also I want to say that the way the accent comes across to us is also somewhat a reflection of what we think of Asian Americans. Those who like Asian people generally will probably describe it positively. Those who see Asian-Americans as "strange" "other" "weak" "too perfect" will probably automatically associate it. People will hear what their brain wants them to hear.

  • @kenpachi465
    @kenpachi465 Před 27 dny +1

    No, Asian Americans sound like where they grow up. It's based on class and regional dialect. Listen to China Mac talk.

  • @Axadn
    @Axadn Před 25 dny

    I turned off the screen when the video started. I couldn't tell who was or was not Asian. As they said in the video, I think it just depends what environment you grow up in.

  • @Mika88Kenichi
    @Mika88Kenichi Před 26 dny

    Some people in the comments do not get that it's not just about the accent per se but how the vocal cords or the hardware built in your body according to your race. One can be born and raised only speaking English but is born from East Asian parents, but one can still have that voice that is much like how native Asian would sound if he has the same accent and enunciation as the native English speaker. If you search for videos for white people born and raised in China or Japan speaking Mandarin or Nihongo, you can still tell from their voice that they're not Asian even if they speak the language fluently.

  • @viejitoloco4133
    @viejitoloco4133 Před 25 dny

    YES

  • @Rosie017
    @Rosie017 Před 25 dny

    I've never had anyone tell me I sound Asian. Maybe a Filipino accent when I was a kid because I was more fluent in Tagalog. But not as an adult

  • @dennischen8887
    @dennischen8887 Před 27 dny

    I think it also applies to white or black people who were born in Asia. They speak Chinese, Japanese, Korean, of whatever Asian language they were born into with a particular accent I can spot right away.

  • @chimakalu41
    @chimakalu41 Před 27 dny

    14:21 hahahaha

  • @CaptainStupendous
    @CaptainStupendous Před 28 dny +2

    Bros, I was born in the USA and only know how to speak English. Once in a rare, rare while, even I have somewhat of a slight Filipino accent when I speak. I am 46 years old and I've never been able to shake it off completely. It's both fascinating and fucking weird at the same time.

    • @sjacks3281
      @sjacks3281 Před 28 dny

      Did your parents/guardians speak Filipino?

    • @Grit120
      @Grit120 Před 28 dny

      curious why you were not taught to speak in Filipino

    • @CaptainStupendous
      @CaptainStupendous Před 28 dny

      @@sjacks3281 My parents did speak Tagalog, but they only ever spoke English to me and with noticeable accents. Both sets of grandparents also spoke fluent English, but with even thicker accents.
      Now I'm reminded of my Chinese friends and how their Cantonese is pretty trash (can somewhat understand, but cannot speak), and they also speak only English, but with Cantonese accents. My speaking voice can pass for homegrown M'URICAN most of the time, but these guys? Never.
      Why can't any of us ever be 100% free of the accents? LOL.

    • @CaptainStupendous
      @CaptainStupendous Před 28 dny +2

      @@Grit120 They told me that they wanted me to "be American". I've never needed to speak Tagalog anyway. I don't know the language, I don't know the culture. I eat the food though, because it's bomb. 💣💣

    • @Grit120
      @Grit120 Před 28 dny

      @@CaptainStupendous sucks that your parents didn't teach you about the culture . coz with your comment, i feel there you're trying to identify and acknowledge parts of your being that is Filipino --its in your blood and can never deny it.

  • @comicscentral8585
    @comicscentral8585 Před 27 dny

    Asian accent is quite noticeable for first generation Asians that were born in the United states. It is true that most first generation from other countries have accents.

  • @comawhitejohnny
    @comawhitejohnny Před 23 dny +1

    I think it could be the equivalent to a chicano accent?

  • @sunny-frevr
    @sunny-frevr Před 28 dny

    Guess it's the same as a Black American accent. It's a type of expression. However, my niece is from the south, and you wouldn't know speaking over the phone whether she's Black American or Asian cause she can speak southern drawal.

  • @my_favourite_commenter
    @my_favourite_commenter Před 21 dnem

    It’s called WEALTH AND INTELLIGENT ACCENT! 💰🎓

  • @nightowl7261
    @nightowl7261 Před 20 dny

    Idk. But if I was blind folded and just hearded voices.
    I'm sure I can tell who is Juwann, Dylan, Jose, and Lee.