Does the PNW have an accent?

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  • čas přidán 25. 08. 2024
  • TikTok accent expert Paula Vanlandingham explains if the Pacific Northwest has an accent.
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Komentáře • 223

  • @ObscuredByTime
    @ObscuredByTime Před rokem +55

    I'm from Seattle, but I lived in Hot Springs, AR for about 10 years. I was working at the Hilton as a waiter, and one particular customer had the thickest "Southern Belle" accent I'd ever heard. I didn't say anything about it, but she DID say something about the way I sounded. She said I had a "News Anchor" accent, lol. That really just about nailed it, imo. In the PNW, we all sound like news anchors, haha.

  • @tonygumbrell22
    @tonygumbrell22 Před 28 dny +9

    I have lived in Western Washington since 1967 and never heard "Warshington" anywhere here. Also, I pronounce "cot" and caught" somewhat differently.

    • @rylian21
      @rylian21 Před 28 dny +2

      I think it mostly comes from people who move here from the midwest, especially Irish descendants. My great-grandmother and grandfather both did this, but that linguistic tradition ended with my father.

    • @pinkonesie
      @pinkonesie Před 6 dny +2

      In Western Washington since 1977. "Cot" and "caught" are different for me, as well. I've heard "Warshington" but not from anyone under seventy.

  • @crystalevans9795
    @crystalevans9795 Před 5 měsíci +21

    That Warshington drives me wild! There is no R.

  • @rizlawow
    @rizlawow Před 2 lety +59

    I always just assumed we didn't have an accent because all tv journalists mimic the "pnw accent."

  • @skywriter2023
    @skywriter2023 Před rokem +56

    5th Generation Washingtonian. I worked at United Airlines Reservation Center in downtown Seattle in the 90s. People from around the country would call in for reservations and many people would ask if I was in Canada because they thought I sounded Canadian. I even had one guy from Florida who asked how the heck did his call end up in Canada when he was trying to call the Florida office.

    • @gaywizard2000
      @gaywizard2000 Před rokem +10

      Lol, I'm Canadian and think we sound the same, basically. Western Canada.

    • @SpoobSnack
      @SpoobSnack Před rokem +3

      I have an Australian friend who said I sounded more Canadian than American" to him lol

    • @eliteteamkiller319
      @eliteteamkiller319 Před rokem +2

      Go east and they sound closer to Canadians to me. Minnesota etc.

    • @gaywizard2000
      @gaywizard2000 Před rokem +1

      @@eliteteamkiller319 that's a whole different accent and the great lakes area is a world of bonkers accents unto itself!

    • @PatrikLowe
      @PatrikLowe Před 2 měsíci

      @@gaywizard2000 I agree. I'm a West Coast Canadian, and I think the description of the Pacific Northwest accent definitely sounds like the way I speak!

  • @KarleeJ
    @KarleeJ Před rokem +87

    Hardly anyone here in Washington state say”Warsh”. If so, it is always an old person lol

    • @eliteteamkiller319
      @eliteteamkiller319 Před rokem +6

      I hear that in the midwest and south.

    • @KeizerHedorah
      @KeizerHedorah Před rokem +5

      never heard anyone say it like that anywhere

    • @fuckdefed
      @fuckdefed Před rokem +1

      @@KeizerHedorahLook up Loretta Lynn singing ‘Coalminer’s Daughter’ and you’ll hear her say ‘warshboard’.

    • @shanenanigans27
      @shanenanigans27 Před rokem +2

      Yep! I live here and I say wash but my grandma says Warsh and is the only one I know who says it like that. And she's from Nevada...

    • @MurielDeppman
      @MurielDeppman Před 11 měsíci

      or some tennessee hillbilly

  • @jacquelynnjones1372
    @jacquelynnjones1372 Před rokem +25

    I am from Kansas and I live in Spokane WA, the east side of Washington. I heard a lot of saying that are very canadian to me. The way they pronounce “bag” is BEG. and they also say “you betcha” and have sayings that as a midwest person are funny to me. I love listening to people talk here!

    • @tarap.m2376
      @tarap.m2376 Před rokem +3

      I’m from Spokane too! I feel like a lot of people in eastern Washington do speak similarly to Canadians :)
      You are totally right about the “bag” and BEG LOL 😂

    • @carolinehicks5417
      @carolinehicks5417 Před 5 měsíci

      Yes all of WA State does the "eh" sound almost for, a, e, and i.

    • @jodylancaster8706
      @jodylancaster8706 Před 17 dny +1

      From Seattle. Have always said bag.

  • @colemanstarr5404
    @colemanstarr5404 Před rokem +49

    I like the way she switches into the accent she is describing. I've heard the "warsh, Warsington" thing used by people from Appalachia, including my mother. These are folks whose ancestors came mostly from Britain (more English and Scottish, including Ulster Scots)- before US independence, so my thought is that it reflects the rhotic English "pirate" accent of the time. I've heard that the that "proper" London English accent lost the R in the late 18th-early 19th century and that spread to the Anglophile planter class in the US Southeast as an affectation.

    • @lordfrostdraken
      @lordfrostdraken Před rokem +2

      Im from Alaska, we got the flattest accent, the most neutral.

    • @edwardmiessner6502
      @edwardmiessner6502 Před 8 měsíci +1

      ​@@lordfrostdraken Except in Wassilla where everyone sounds like they're from Minnesota. Before I learned that, I had thought that Sarah Palin was faking one, lol

    • @lordfrostdraken
      @lordfrostdraken Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@edwardmiessner6502 yeah fair enough heh. Alaska is a big state after all, so the accent fluctuates even across the state itself

  • @Miyori999
    @Miyori999 Před 11 měsíci +29

    Also from seattle and I've thought a lot about how we don't have the ogh or augh sounds in our dialect unless we're encountering a new word. Words like "borrow" and "sorry" use an A sound rather than an O. Thought, Shot and Caught are perfect rhymes here. I never thought about the "storytelling" way we form our sentences though, and it 100% makes sense now that I just sat here talking to myself for a sec. However, Seattle even sounds a touch different from, say, Portand OR because of our proximity to Canada, I use "Canadian" vowels in very rare instances, eh?

    • @brianbiga4649
      @brianbiga4649 Před 2 měsíci +1

      well i'm from nebraska and i would pronounce borrow and sorry the same way. so it doesn't seem specific to washington in your example. I think people get really hung up on trying to be offended by someone who claims they have no accent. like clearly, in the grand scheme of things, there's a standard, more widely-adopted way of speaking in america, that's why if you even read textbooks about english they will only point out something extreme like new york or the south.

  • @rayz671
    @rayz671 Před rokem +9

    Raised in Guam, moved to seattle in 97. I didn't notice a PNW accent. It people confused with how to pronounce certain cities and words correcrly lol. They said I have an accent because i didnt sound like them and that people from Guam sound like they're singing when we speak english. It's how we flow and enunciate

  • @chrisrueth3204
    @chrisrueth3204 Před 10 měsíci +7

    This was awesome. Idaho native here. My favorite one is "crick" not "creek"

    • @brianbiga4649
      @brianbiga4649 Před 2 měsíci

      i feel like that's not an accent though that's more like...someone picked up a bad habit of pronouncing that word lol. so do they also say "slip" instead of "sleep"? no. lol

    • @chrisrueth3204
      @chrisrueth3204 Před 2 měsíci

      @@brianbiga4649 you people from the city wouldn't understand colloquial dialect.

  • @myk_islive6471
    @myk_islive6471 Před rokem +11

    Oregon pronounced “orihgin”. Mountain pronounce like “moun’n”. Salmon pronounced “sammin” or “samm’n”. There’s definitely a few distinctions that I’ve noticed living here. Washington pronounced “warshingtin” or “washingtin”

    • @myk_islive6471
      @myk_islive6471 Před rokem

      Also already sometimes pronounced “ardy” or “aridy”

    • @orangeflaws8088
      @orangeflaws8088 Před rokem +5

      Where have you been? Never heard one person pronounce those words like that in the PNW and I’ve lived hear my whole life and am good at picking up accents

    • @myk_islive6471
      @myk_islive6471 Před rokem +1

      @@orangeflaws8088 interesting. I didn’t feel like going into depth to make the annunciation clear… I just hoped someone would get what I mean. I hear these pronunciations a lot. Some of it is fast, or lazy annunciation no doubt, but if it’s widespread I think that’s considered an accent. I think some of it is generational too “warshington” especially. I’ve lived in the Midwest a while, which helps me hear the differences. I’d have to be talking to you to describe what I’m hearing.

    • @orangeflaws8088
      @orangeflaws8088 Před rokem

      @@myk_islive6471 yeah it’s probably an older Washington thing. I live in Oregon and the older people I’ve met don’t do that. But there are studies that show Oregon has the least intelligible amount of an accent (ie no accent in comparison to everywhere else) so it would make sense why I haven’t noticed that much if at all

    • @adieljonsson864
      @adieljonsson864 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@orangeflaws8088do you say Oregon like “ore a gone” or something then? Because Orihgin is exactly like how every other PNWer would say it…

  • @ronfelix6507
    @ronfelix6507 Před rokem +14

    Another one, and it wasn't until a friend from Main noticed it but northern Washington, I'm talking getting away from the hodgepodge of Seattle, and into the town where you have a couple of generation Washingtonians like mine, we have weird e's. Until a few years ago, I found out that it's not normal to say leg, layg, or egg, ayg. I've lived in Portland since I was 6 but my family carried that accent down here, and whenever we are back up in basically Canada land, all together, it comes way out

    • @patrickhaug1157
      @patrickhaug1157 Před rokem

      You from Bellingham?.

    • @sweetnothingsasmr1
      @sweetnothingsasmr1 Před rokem

      Like bag?? Yessss!!

    • @elvette
      @elvette Před měsícem

      Yes, I came from the east coast and lived in Portland from '90-96. Some differences I noticed:
      ori-gin or ory-gun for Oregon,
      leg, layg, egg, ayg or byg bag
      and also gut for got and furgut for forgot

  • @prisfb
    @prisfb Před rokem +8

    Very interesting topic! I’m not American, came to the US when I was 24. But people would always thought I was born here or grew up here because I don’t have an accent. I’ve lived in MI for over 18 years now. I think I’ve picked up more of southern Michigan accent.

  • @robsmith715
    @robsmith715 Před 2 lety +4

    I met my 3 male first cousins and two of my young first cousins once removed (daughters of one of my first cousins) for the first time in about 2005 in KY when I was 50. (I am OR born and raised but have lived in a total 6 different states including WA where I was then living. The majority of my life spent in OR and WA.) When I met them in KY in 2005 at my aunt and uncle's home one of my first cousins asked me what I liked best during my road trip through KY. I quickly replied that I LOVED their lovely KY accents. I then looked at my silent young first cousins once removed and asked them if I had an accent. They both vigorously nodded and exclaimed "OH YEAH!!!" That was the first time I realized that I did indeed have a PNW accent.

  • @dadthefather1961
    @dadthefather1961 Před rokem +5

    Im from st.Louis I’ve been in WA since I was 8 im almost 22. My whole time being here my family from Missouri would tell me I’d sound like a white man. My father asked me one day to “Speak like one of them”.

  • @snuffyballparks6501
    @snuffyballparks6501 Před rokem +10

    Born in western WA in 1949. Lived in Wa all my life. Never said Washington with an R sound. What is really odd about WA is our place names.
    Asotin
    Cathlamet
    Chehalis
    Chelan
    Mukilteo
    Spokane (I lived here for a time... I call it SpoCan't.)
    Hoquiam
    Puyallup
    Stillicum
    Stehekin
    Seqium
    and tons of others.

    • @OMirantedoValeNaoTem170Metros
      @OMirantedoValeNaoTem170Metros Před rokem

      I think Wahkiakum County is pretty funny for some reason

    • @dakotawoofer6660
      @dakotawoofer6660 Před rokem +5

      as to why our place names are so weird is because the vast majority of them are named after native american tribes in the area, take it for example the spokane tribe just north of spokane

    • @zacharysmithingell5460
      @zacharysmithingell5460 Před rokem +1

      Yeah, Sequim and Puyallup will catch out non-locals, for sure.

    • @MurielDeppman
      @MurielDeppman Před 11 měsíci

      dont forget Pysht , which almost sound dirty

    • @classicrockonly
      @classicrockonly Před 5 měsíci

      Chelan, Steheiken…2 of my favorite places

  • @barrettseattle1846
    @barrettseattle1846 Před 13 dny

    I like that she was immediately proven wrong

  • @Hunnalouu
    @Hunnalouu Před rokem +5

    unless you’re a fossil no one says “Warsh” however got me on “caught” ggs

  • @Baked_Potato_Soup
    @Baked_Potato_Soup Před 6 měsíci +2

    Also People in Washington I've noted say Acrosst with a 't' at the end instead of Across.

    • @brianbiga4649
      @brianbiga4649 Před 2 měsíci

      i feel like that's not an accent lol. random words like this don't constitute an accent. if it were an accent then they would also say "boss" as "bosst" and "toss" as "tosst".

    • @Matty002
      @Matty002 Před 5 dny +1

      ​@@brianbiga4649accent literally means how you pronounce words. saying across with a t is pronouncing it differently. thats accent. if a bunch of people in a city start pronouncing 1 word a certain way, their accent shows in a word now. it doesnt have to affect all the words that are similar.
      i bet if you heard someone talking normally and then say 'fah-rest' for forrest you dont expect them to say 'starry' for story, right?

  • @eemoogee160
    @eemoogee160 Před 2 lety +3

    The thing I notice most is "root" being pronounced "reut", with a flat "oo" sound.

  • @EndorphikaMorphika
    @EndorphikaMorphika Před 10 měsíci +2

    My dad and lots of people I know still pronounce it Warshington. My g-g-grandma came from Ireland, so that makes sense.

  • @blurglide
    @blurglide Před měsícem +1

    I'm from WA and "Cot" and "Caught" are exactly the same. We also tend to drop our "T" a bit. "Winter" sounds a bit like "winner"

  • @doublenickel1000
    @doublenickel1000 Před 8 dny

    Yes! My wife is from Washington and she pronounces "caught" and "cot" the same. I'm from NE Ohio and I pronounce them very differently. She laughs at my (somewhat) northeastern pronunciation, whereupon I give her a tutorial: Bought, caught, taught, wrought, naught 😄

  • @obiependragon9660
    @obiependragon9660 Před rokem +4

    My ex lds friends are from Utah and I love comparing dialects, they say my WA accent is very level and in the corners and tip of my mouth. Which makes sense when I pronounce "Kalama" compared to when they say "kal-lah-mah"

  • @Snakebitey77
    @Snakebitey77 Před 2 lety +12

    Refreshing to watch a non political, fun and interesting video.

  • @coles.1524
    @coles.1524 Před 2 lety +16

    Born and raised in Washington (thankfully, not Seattle). Couple years ago, I went on vacation to the Florida keys. A lot of people assumed My family was Canadian just from how we pronounced certain things.

  • @kylenolen9546
    @kylenolen9546 Před rokem +2

    I want her to ready off some of the towns and road names we have to see if she knows how to say them

  • @jontheroadagain
    @jontheroadagain Před 2 lety +2

    Find yourself someone who looks at you like Liz looks at Paula

  • @thezebrafinch4650
    @thezebrafinch4650 Před rokem +2

    This is a really interesting topic…I do the same actually with the Arabian Peninsula Accents

  • @jonathanknopp363
    @jonathanknopp363 Před rokem +1

    That storytelling bit is so true. People here on the east coast where I moved to are so bland in their talking haha.

  • @Desarae960
    @Desarae960 Před měsícem

    this is the first video i found where people arent making stuff up about us and i actually kinda understand what she is talkin bout with our accents

  • @morganrobinson2436
    @morganrobinson2436 Před 2 lety +8

    I moved to Georgia a little over a year ago, and am from Spokane, Washington(which is very close to Canada.). I have had MANY people ask me where I’m from, if I’m from Canada, or where the heck I’m from😂😂. It could be as someone from the PNW living in the south, our accent is not as common.

    • @IndiaNumberOneCoubtry
      @IndiaNumberOneCoubtry Před rokem +2

      Yea im from everett. Whenever i go to northern idaho and spokane i notice more southern inspired accents. Not southern, but almost a mix. How are you liking georgia? Do you miss washington? I love it here but am thinking of moving to nashville to learn how to farm. God bless Morgan

  • @jvee2901
    @jvee2901 Před 2 lety +7

    Being from NY, people would make fun of me. Then living in the Bahaston area, they pahk the cah in hahvahd yahd. Lol

    • @brianbiga4649
      @brianbiga4649 Před 2 měsíci

      see this is an accent. this is why there are levels of strong accent versus a more flat one because certain accents are so strong it affects most everything that comes out of their mouth.

  • @marycampeau9378
    @marycampeau9378 Před 14 dny

    someone at disneyland thought i was canadian

  • @MurielDeppman
    @MurielDeppman Před 11 měsíci +2

    I am a wash native, and we have a lot of parents and grands from the south (dustbowl people came to work on the dam), even now you hear muddied mix of southernisms here. Especially in eastern wa. a lot of us drop the g in ing, its like "washin' machine, and goin'". Maybe a bit sloppy. we are used to it. My boss from india wanted me to teach his wife ( from morocco)to speak english..I told him I barely speak english as it is...I then did teach her some english, but it was hard, as I tried to teach her PROPER english so she don' soun lyke a dang ol' hillbilly. At that time I discovered, yeah, we do have an accent. well, ah gotta let yer go, ahm fixin to get ta bed.

  • @regularflurfy8174
    @regularflurfy8174 Před 10 měsíci

    Grew up in South Texas and just moved to Washington last year. Called my mom last week and she remarked that I didn’t sound like a Texan anymore

  • @highstepnightowl
    @highstepnightowl Před 19 dny

    Bag is pronounced Baygg or Beg. Egg is pronounced Aygg. I didn't notice the caught/cot but after thinking about it, that's pretty common here, too.

    • @doublenickel1000
      @doublenickel1000 Před 8 dny +1

      Thank you! Been married to my wife for 26 years, and now I know why I have to ask her to repeat the word "bag". It's just not a short a sound to me😄

  • @DameboySP
    @DameboySP Před 9 měsíci +1

    Personally, growing up in the pnw. Ive found others growing up here including myself tend to say "wool" instead of "well" depending on the context

    • @brianbiga4649
      @brianbiga4649 Před 2 měsíci

      i like all these fun unique words people say, but i also DON'T THINK THAT IS AN ACCENT!!! it's just a goofy one-off example. to me, a strong accent affects most things coming out of someone's mouth lol if it were an accent they would also say "bool" instead of "bell" or "tool" instead of "tell"...but they prob don't... right?

  • @a.p.602
    @a.p.602 Před 2 lety +1

    She nailed it.

  • @melissajustice8338
    @melissajustice8338 Před 2 lety +2

    I wonder if she could tell by listening to me or anyone where they grew up.

  • @cwp2580
    @cwp2580 Před 10 měsíci

    In Vancouver, BC... Met a guy from Tacoma, Washington... he definitely had a twang

  • @gaywizard2000
    @gaywizard2000 Před rokem +4

    I grew up in Alberta and lived in Vancouver and have relatives in Oregon so have experienced the PNW. Overall I think we sound very similar, most accented Americans think I talk like CNN . I believe there are slight differences in the coastal areas a little like California but quite subtle. There are some areas where Canadians differ in pronunciation from Americans like, route, roof, asphalt or where words are a different use like bag/sack, bathroom/restroom. I love dialects but I think we're getting homogenized these days and losing some unique ones.

  • @jonmartinson6830
    @jonmartinson6830 Před 2 měsíci

    Born and raised in western Washington. Most people say my speech is an even mix of california, canadian, and midwestern accent. Culturally I would say I identify more with the midwest than anything.

  • @jrob2430
    @jrob2430 Před měsícem

    In order, I've lived in rural California, Idaho, and Oregon.
    In Idaho they could pick out the California influence because Idaho has a pinch of country and California really doesn't.
    When I talk about your state, I'll pronounce each letter in Washington. But if I'm talking fast it becomes WASH-indun

  • @malfunctioninggoon5292
    @malfunctioninggoon5292 Před 2 měsíci

    One thing, as a Mainer, that I found when living in Portland was that people said the gerund ending "-ing" as "-een."

    • @brianbiga4649
      @brianbiga4649 Před 2 měsíci

      so how should it be pronounced? lol. how do the Maine people say "running"? you pronounce/emphasize the g? they only people i've heard do that are foreigners lol.

    • @malfunctioninggoon5292
      @malfunctioninggoon5292 Před 2 měsíci

      @@brianbiga4649it’s not that it should be pronounced anyway necessarily- it’s divergent from the typical General American English pronunciation which is with an “ih” sound like in “if.” And trust me, people in Maine do NOT pronounce things in any sort of standardized way.

  • @1xayekim
    @1xayekim Před 2 měsíci

    My take has been that the city accents in Oregon and Washington (Seattle, Portland, Eugene, Vancouver) are closer to the Southern California accents of San Diego, Orange County, Bay Area with the exception of exaggerated pronunciation on most words and typically spoken faster with shorter enunciation. Its more of a cadence difference and length of the "note " of the spoken word.
    Example : (These examples are going to be misspelled to try to exaggerate enunciation and word length)
    Southern Californian- "I (enunciate three times as long as "I" so it would sound like "eeeay") feeeel li-ike getting Chineeese for dinner tuh-night"
    PNW - "I feel l'IKE getting Chinese for dinner tO-nIGHT" (the "ike" is harsher and more enunciated as well as the to- and the IGHT" part of night)
    Very similar sounds but PNW speakers are saying the words faster and using harsher and more obvious enunciations.

  • @yukki24
    @yukki24 Před 21 dnem

    now where is she from? She sounds SO MUCH like my aunt, who is a Seattle Native. I think its down to the voice itself though rather than the accent.

  • @ronirave
    @ronirave Před 2 lety +2

    That's funny sometimes I do slip the r in there warshington. Lol

  • @carolinehicks5417
    @carolinehicks5417 Před 5 měsíci

    When i was in the military, I was told that we in WA State soften our vowells. Especially e and i, it all sounds like "eh."

  • @leiflinder8854
    @leiflinder8854 Před 6 měsíci

    I am from Seattle. Well, the "Ave"... Not sure if that is really Seattle. There is a way of speaking on the Ave, dude... But here in New York City there are many many accents from folks in Queens and Brooklyn - but not just Brooklyn the many many neighborhoods of Brooklyn. I love the Italian, Bensonhurst accent. A lot. The thing about Seattle is if you are dyslexic it is hard to learn to spell. Is is Monopoly? Menopoly? Monapoly? We make all the vowels sound the same so the new speller just has to guess.

  • @redsignal3866
    @redsignal3866 Před rokem +1

    I say "I ont o" instead of "I don't know" and I'm from Bellevue.

  • @pigeonmilk8976
    @pigeonmilk8976 Před 8 měsíci

    I just assumed we talked ‘boring’ from what I’ve been told 😭

  • @hapyharyhard0n581
    @hapyharyhard0n581 Před rokem +2

    I grew up on a small island on the Columbia river near the coast. English wasnt even spoken here until the 1930s. Primarily Scandinavian. ....and there is no damn R in Washington. lol

    • @PersephoneDarling28
      @PersephoneDarling28 Před 7 měsíci

      it really depends where you live probably. Raised near Vancouver and that was common

    • @hapyharyhard0n581
      @hapyharyhard0n581 Před 7 měsíci

      @@PersephoneDarling28 not Vancouver. closer to Long Beach. doesnt matter, THERE IS NO R IN WASHINGTON. full stop.

    • @PersephoneDarling28
      @PersephoneDarling28 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@hapyharyhard0n581 Bruh, chill out and go enjoy some Warshington Sammin

    • @hapyharyhard0n581
      @hapyharyhard0n581 Před 7 měsíci

      @@PersephoneDarling28 Salmon dumbass...

  • @hiker-uy1bi
    @hiker-uy1bi Před 19 dny

    I always thought the British immigrants mostly arrived in the colonies/US before the non-rhotic accent really developed in the UK.

  • @misteriknow2069
    @misteriknow2069 Před 3 měsíci

    People who say “I never heard anyone say Warshington” clearly never hung out in rural Washington. Especially by the Canadian border such as Bellingham, Blaine, anywhere north of Skagit. Ask anyone above age 40 and you’ll hear a slight Canadian esque Accent.

  • @thumbstruck
    @thumbstruck Před rokem

    Also, Scots-Irish settlement of the Upper Ohio Valley and the Appalachians made for rhotic speach west of those mountains. Whether and weather are the same - PNW doesn't differentiate. Older folks say the days of the week: Sundee, Mondee, etc. Because of the Scandinavians, we will say, "I'm going to the store, you want to go with?" - including "with". Older guys will say "cork" for "caulk" (cork boots for loggers). Add to this the some Chinook Jargon, "skookum" (big, powerful, fast), "chuk" (water) and more.

  • @turdfurgeson2032
    @turdfurgeson2032 Před 5 měsíci +1

    So speaking normally is an accent?

  • @sweetiebee8187
    @sweetiebee8187 Před 2 lety +7

    Has anyone noted the greater area slur? People in the smaller areas don't enunciate anything and slur everything together... it's a really hard to understand at first!!!

    • @classicrockonly
      @classicrockonly Před 5 měsíci +1

      Yep I was about to say, I notice people enunciate words more when I go out of Washington. I think I am especially bad and Really slur my words

  • @edwardmiessner6502
    @edwardmiessner6502 Před 8 měsíci

    Washington State may have a caught-cot merger but Eastern Massachusetts has a caught-cot reversal!

  • @LorenCrowPhD
    @LorenCrowPhD Před rokem

    Right at the beginning, the guy pronounced "whether" as if it was "weather."

  • @Scorch1028
    @Scorch1028 Před 7 měsíci

    Two notable examples of PNW natives with a Midwest accent are Ken Patera and Mike O’Hearn. The PNW must have had a sh*t load of Midwest native migration going back over a hundred years.

  • @zzgeorgezdane8559
    @zzgeorgezdane8559 Před 2 lety +35

    The homeless bums on Seattle/Tacoma streets have a bit of a whisky slur. Its quite unique and defined.

  • @Amm1ttai
    @Amm1ttai Před rokem

    My mom always says warsh. It drives me nuts.

  • @gabriellynch2764
    @gabriellynch2764 Před rokem +1

    So you're saying we do things correctly and everyone else is wrong?

  • @crystalevans9795
    @crystalevans9795 Před 5 měsíci +1

    We were taught to enunciate! Yes, we are story tellers.

    • @classicrockonly
      @classicrockonly Před 5 měsíci

      Oh I’m from the towns and we don’t enunciate, we slur lol

    • @classicrockonly
      @classicrockonly Před 5 měsíci

      Actually, second comment, this makes sense because I had a coworker from Seattle say that we enunciate words less than Seattle and thought we had an accent in our area of WA

  • @missprettypie
    @missprettypie Před 5 měsíci

    At least from the area I'm in, and it is a bit of a rural area, there's a bit of southern influence in the way the older generations speak. Maybe not entirely correct, but from how I see it. And some of them like to say things like Warshington. It's not really a constant for people of certain generations, my father and I have grown up in the same rural area and have lived in Washington our whole lives but speak like anyone else in the state. Maybe with a bit of that southern-ish or what I'm assuming is a rural sound (I say this because I've only ever heard people in rural areas have that kind of sound to their accent). And to clarify he's from the tail end of the Baby Boomers and I'm towards the beginning of Gen Z. Although for whatever reason apparently I pronounce theater kinda strangely, according to others. Thee-ay-der. I'd love to hear other people's thoughts!

  • @juliepeterson6639
    @juliepeterson6639 Před 2 lety +4

    Bag vs Baayge?

    • @jontheroadagain
      @jontheroadagain Před 2 lety +1

      I've heard locals say "bag" like "beg"

    • @Excalion88
      @Excalion88 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@jontheroadagain I have lived in the PNW my whole life and no one I know says it like that. People keep reiterating this, but I never hear it.

    • @jontheroadagain
      @jontheroadagain Před 6 měsíci

      @@Excalion88 lucky you

    • @Excalion88
      @Excalion88 Před 6 měsíci

      @@jontheroadagain *derpa derp, lucky you derrrp* It was just an observation. No need to get all bent out of shape.

    • @jontheroadagain
      @jontheroadagain Před 6 měsíci

      Who's bent out of shape? I'm happy for you

  • @Ellemona
    @Ellemona Před rokem

    I live in MS now, but grew up near Sedro-Woolley area "see-dro wool-ee (smooth transition on woolley)". Ppl not from there tend to say "seh-dro". It's in Skagit "skah-jiit" county. I'd take trips to Bellingham "bell-leeng-ham".
    Supposedly I say "egg" funny to southerners. Its more like canadian egg? Soft ey instead of eh. Not prominent and obvious, but barely there.
    Ive literally never heard anyone but people from the NE area say "worsh". The cot/caught is true tho.

    • @MurielDeppman
      @MurielDeppman Před 11 měsíci

      Im from wa, but my sis and ma always sain "aig" and "steam arn" (for gettin the rinkels outta yer close), Ma and sis were from texas and came here in the 1930s, and they never liked our "snikes and bars", (snakes and bears)

  • @nolanstout23
    @nolanstout23 Před 4 měsíci

    I’ve never heard anyone ever say Warshington

  • @tommygamba170
    @tommygamba170 Před 2 lety

    You got to remember the original colonies were Spanish totally in Greeks Irish

  • @lorenzojantociii7394
    @lorenzojantociii7394 Před rokem

    On point 👍🤣👍🤣👍🤣

  • @fuckdefed
    @fuckdefed Před rokem

    ‘warsh’ comes directly from the West Country (South West England) not Ireland. I’ve never heard anyone in Britain or Ireland say ‘wursh’, nor have I heard anyone say ‘wash’ as ‘wawsh’ (I’m referring to a non-rhotic ‘worsh’ not ‘wahsh’) in England and I’m English.

    • @MurielDeppman
      @MurielDeppman Před 11 měsíci +2

      our towns are indian words, Spokane is not "spokayne," its Spo- can. Wenatchee is ", wen-at-chee" then there is Puallup, its not "pully-up", ...we were in Texas and a waitress asked my dad where we were from, he told her Grand Coulee (as in the DAM), she wanted to know if that was close to Spo-kane, dad (dry sense of humor) told her Grand Coulee was between "Spo-kane" and "pully-up" She did not get the joke, but the rest of us roared. We love our indian history and learn these funny names as kids. Remember the witchdoctor song? the Walla Walla thing came from our town of Walla walla" we got some real doozies out here, just look at a map of washington.

  • @esstipd-hp9gd
    @esstipd-hp9gd Před rokem

    Would love to hear take on my buddy giant bob

  • @ethanpruett250
    @ethanpruett250 Před rokem

    I’m from Texas and we don’t sound like that lol

  • @jasonsummit1885
    @jasonsummit1885 Před rokem

    I don't think I have an accent and have lived in Washington state my entire life.

    • @devinosland359
      @devinosland359 Před 11 měsíci +2

      There's really not much of one, it's weird, everyone thinks they don't have an accent then they learn that they do but up north west we really don't have an accent, everything is pretty plain

  • @terryelrod3027
    @terryelrod3027 Před 5 měsíci

    What is up with words like mountain,and people say mounin?

    • @stellarsjay1773
      @stellarsjay1773 Před 5 měsíci +1

      T is replaced by a glottal stop.

    • @brianbiga4649
      @brianbiga4649 Před 2 měsíci

      @@stellarsjay1773 right. no one says "mounin" it's more nuanced and specific like what you said.

  • @rad4579
    @rad4579 Před 15 dny

    Worshington

  • @NothinginMind503
    @NothinginMind503 Před rokem

    Everyone has an accent to someone else

  • @jimjoe9945
    @jimjoe9945 Před 2 lety

    Pragress for progress. Raidiator for Radiator. Bang gore for Bangor.

  • @MultiSpeedMetal
    @MultiSpeedMetal Před 10 měsíci

    Born and raised in Oregon (columbia county) and there is no unique accent here.

  • @MurielDeppman
    @MurielDeppman Před 11 měsíci

    forgot ta tell ya, met a jewish guy from new york who told me about his "bubbe" , took me a while to figure out he meant his granny, I thot he meant his baby chickens

  • @lokesh303101
    @lokesh303101 Před rokem

    Over Time and History and Population.

  • @jessewest2109
    @jessewest2109 Před měsícem

    7th generation. But I tend to copy cat who ever I'm speaking with. Prob a "need to fit in" tick

  • @thepushygardener
    @thepushygardener Před 29 dny

    Bayg for bag

  • @KeizerHedorah
    @KeizerHedorah Před rokem

    nobody on earth could know that you were from washington state just by how you talk, nobody not even another washingtonain.

  • @jedisentinel1499
    @jedisentinel1499 Před 6 měsíci

    No! There is no R in Washington. The Boomer or older generations pronounces it with an R, if at all. lol!

  • @TheEmDog10
    @TheEmDog10 Před rokem

    We roll our r’s more

  • @oldschool1993
    @oldschool1993 Před rokem +3

    Whining is not an accent.

  • @Emmanuelle2263
    @Emmanuelle2263 Před rokem +1

    Lé brûlée temps de faire une demande gratuite me suis pas un problème avec votre famille appétit du finesse Et toilettes et je suis pas j'espère du système d'exploitation

  • @badpiggies988
    @badpiggies988 Před rokem

    Whut keyendih queschin is tha’? Of corse we have n’ accint, I, meyintire grade schooł and Govurnr Inslee awł sound leyek this, so- wool, then we DO have one ov hour oun. Whut I’m typing in rye now is uh West Wahshingtyin accint; the Origyin and Norcyal diyulects ov Northwest Drawł sound moar leyk uh crawss bitween Cyaliforniyin n’ Texin, n’ I’m not sure what Ulaskyin and Iduhowun sound like.

  • @Gymtoshi
    @Gymtoshi Před 11 měsíci

    this doesn't sound accurate to me at all. Plus, she acts like the British were never here, like they only colonised the East Coast. The British gave us Washington State, hell, we even had a pig war over the islands because we weren't sure what side of the border they were on. None of this seemed accurate. I was born and raised here as well. Never heard anyone say caught that way, nor has anyone I've ever met said Warsh

    • @adieljonsson864
      @adieljonsson864 Před 11 měsíci

      Warsh has fallen out of favor but it’s definitely a thing. My grandparents have lived in Washington for as long as they have been Americans and a couple of them they say warsh.

    • @funnypanda10
      @funnypanda10 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Speak for yourself, plenty of washington natives speak exactly like this lol, I've lived here my whole life and everyone I've known including myself pronounces cot/caught the same and I've heard "warsh" a lot from my grandpa growing up. "Warsh" is not as popular amongst younger generations but it's definitely a thing. You have to remember, accents are also dependent on your family and the English you grew up around/who taught you/what you heard. If you grew up as a baby hearing "caught/cot" pronounced without the merger, obviously you're not going to pronounce them the same 😂
      Accents are usually pretty general but there's always going to be slight differences. I've been told I say a lot of things that sound really Canadian, some people from Washington don't get told that. It's dependent on the part of the state too. Accents are never a "you are from here so you speak exactly like this" thing. It's moreso "it's common for people from here to speak more like this". Just because it isn't accurate to you doesn't mean it isn't accurate at all.

  • @autobug2
    @autobug2 Před 2 lety +17

    Yes, the Pacific Northwest does have an accent! It's commonly referred to as whiningliberalitis!

  • @Hollywoodhouse74
    @Hollywoodhouse74 Před 2 lety

    Nope

  • @dfandrich85
    @dfandrich85 Před 2 lety

    Trying to hard

  • @zzgeorgezdane8559
    @zzgeorgezdane8559 Před 2 lety +3

    Theres an Asian accent starting to take over all cultures in PNW.

  • @jasont9947
    @jasont9947 Před 2 lety +3

    Aint no accent in the PNW

    • @Gray777333
      @Gray777333 Před rokem

      It's impossible for a group to not have an accent. Just because you picture the West coast form of speak as how English is supposed to be spoken doesn't mean it is the defacto. Even if it was it would be an accent. The lack of an "accent" is an accent itself. The debate should be that majority of the people on the West Coast don't have a thick accent. But even that gets thrown out the bus when you consider the fact that someone from Portland sounds different than Pendleton

  • @jxyyxans
    @jxyyxans Před 8 měsíci

    Bs

  • @tommygamba170
    @tommygamba170 Před 2 lety +2

    Some of us Latin and native population has always been here. Before racist imagination to our land.

  • @xavieroliver6594
    @xavieroliver6594 Před 2 lety

    No. Y’all don’t lol. I can’t believe this is debated.

    • @Gray777333
      @Gray777333 Před rokem +4

      It's impossible for a group to not have an accent. Just because you picture the West coast form of speak as how English is supposed to be spoken doesn't mean it is the defacto. Even if it was it would be an accent. The lack of an "accent" is an accent itself. The debate should be that majority of the people on the West Coast don't have a thick accent. But even that gets thrown out the bus when you consider the fact that someone from Portland sounds different than Pendleton

    • @cerys113
      @cerys113 Před 11 měsíci

      everyone has an accent? do you know how language works? 😭