• sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 days ago

    We (I) prefer ‘neutral’, but yes.

    Just don’t lump us in with Californians, or we (I) will just start talking to you in the valley girl / infuencer accent, derisively.

    Also don’t mind the royal we, its just normal for us to all be this immensely conceited.

    • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      2 days ago

      Ok, just checking as a fellow PNWesterner who feels like we sound bland or sure “neutral” if you wish while all other US accents sound pretty interesting and unique. I can’t think of a single thing genuinely unique to PNW accent, personally. I lived in the South for a while, so I’m very familiar with the wide variety of accents down there, and we just don’t have any real depth of variety of that sort I feel. Maybe I’m wrong, I haven’t hung out everywhere in the PNW.

      • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 day ago

        No, you’re right, we are essentially the… linguistic evolution end point of American English… the type O- blood of American accents, if you will.

        Basically everyone can understand us, but we will have trouble accepting meaning transfusions from non type O- speakers.

        As far as ‘unique’ things… well basically, my vote for most unique thing would be for the intonation patterns we use, or more accurately, basically the lack of them.

        We tend to just stress all words in a sentence very close to the same, monotone.

        We tend to have (at least what others call) falling intonation at the end of a sentence, that can make it so people don’t recognize questions… as questions.

        Because they’re often expecting a tonal shift at the end of a sentence, or some other tonal pattern, as a cue that indicates a question is being asked.

        Which is the opposite from a Californian, who do rising intonation on even non questions, which acts as the easiest giveaway that a transplant is in fact a transplant, beyond them having no clue how to pronounce most local place names, or referring to ‘I5’ as ‘the 5’.

          • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            1 day ago

            Yeah, been through and around the state a few times.

            The Redwoods are… just absolutely stunning, and thats coming from an Olympic / Hoh Rainforest stan.

            Pacific Coast Highway is incredible as well.

            San Fran’s gotta be the only city in the English speaking world that is more hilly than Seattle, fuck.

            I remember driving south on I5 and just… actually seeing endless strawberry fields, not long after I’d discovered the Beatles, lol.

            On another trip, I somehow ended up on Rodeo drive… not long after discovering Rage Against the Machine.

            … maybe you could say I’ve had a very Lynchian experience of California.

            • MinnesotaGoddam@lemmy.world
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              23 hours ago

              out of curiosity where were the strawberry fields on I5? i ask out of professional eating curiosity and hunger and I was planning on going to watsonville for their strawberry festival this year but the fields you mentioned might be closer to me and maybe i can go to theirs too. doesn’t woodland have a strawberry festival too? i might be able to con my wife into a third or fourth strawberry festival to fill up our rumtopf this year :3 but i want to find blackberry and raspberry festivals (without having to go to utah i know a great raspberry source in utah but i sure as fuck am not going to utah for raspberries for rumtopf. maybe they will ship.) for the rum buckets as well.

        • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          linguistic evolution end point of American English

          if the accents start at pacific northwest and end up adapting to whatever regionalised version they end up being, doesn’t that make you the evolutionary source of american english?

          • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            1 day ago

            No, its the opposite.

            PNW accent is basically what happens if a whole bunch of Americans with originally different accents from different regions all try to cross the great divide either by wagon or train, to find either farmland or a ticket to the Alaska gold rush…

            And then everybody who isn’t dead after the attempt more or less averages out their accents into a rough middleground.

            Some linguistic evolution has been going on since then, beyond that, but thats what I mean by end point; the PNW was the literal geographic last stop on the physical colonization of the contiguous US.

            Only thing that might be more ‘final’ than that would maybe I guess be Alaska, but I do not know much about an Alaskan accent.

        • cmbabul@slrpnk.net
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          2 days ago

          Yall have a lot of verbal ticks, so many PNWers end a large proportion of sentences with “ya know”

            • cmbabul@slrpnk.net
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              1 day ago

              Naw it’s something I’ve noticed from many native Washington’s ever since I’ve moved here, there is some bleed from the Midwest in my experience so maybe that’s where it comes from originally

          • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            1 day ago

            Yeah, I’m with trackball_fetish, that’s not really a PNW thing as much as it is a Midwest thing.

            Now, in many ways, the PNW accent is a kind of… less exciting version of the Midwest accent, watered down Midwest.

            The only time I can remember PNW people using ‘ya know’, its either because they just actually are from the Midwest, or they are intentionally trying to sound folksy.

            A good portion of the PNW was originally settled (cough colonized) by… basically originally Germans and Nordics who moved from the East Coast to approximately Minnesota, but then moved even further east to basically either Portland or Seattle.

            … maybe you could say ‘ya know’ is part of the rural/eastern PNW accent, as the sparser areas of the PNW today tend to be more affordable for a Midwesterner to move to, just by way of economics, relative cost of living.

            All that being said, I would be interested in other verbal tics you’ve observed PNWers to have.

            One tic I know I have is saying ‘like’ far too often when I’m basically exasperated, like, what am I even doing?

            But, because I’m not Californian, I intone ‘like’ with much less emphasis, in a monotone way.

            • cmbabul@slrpnk.net
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              1 day ago

              ‘Like’ is definitely over used out here but not the same as the Cali one, I can usually pick out Californians in Washington… partially because as a southerner they recognize another person who is aggressively talkative to strangers.

              I actually do agree with your take that PNW accent a restrained Midwest accent which actually tracks pretty well. And just to be clear I don’t mean “dontcha know” or “don’t ya know” that is Midwestern as hell, what I mean specifically is y’all tend to add “ya know” to the end a lot of sentences”. When I first pointed out to my best friend, who grew up out here, she sent me a text later that night saying, “Fuck you I hear it everywhere now, ya know”

              The other big one that comes to mind is “pre-funk” which is apparently just slang for pre-gaming but I’d never heard it in the south or northeast

              • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                1 day ago

                Huh.

                Ok… I think I have an explanation for ‘ya know’.

                Its a zoomer/alpha thing, not a millenial thing.

                PNW is kind of notoriously ‘way too online’ and we suck at / hate talking to people we don’t know already, in person.

                I think the ‘ya know’ thing that you are talking about, I think that was basically a tiktok thing for a while, basically a meme.

                So… that’s my guess there: its essentially a meme that worked its way into the vernacular of the ‘way too online’ zoomers/alphas of the PNW.

                ‘Pre-funk’… yeah I remember that starting to catch on, and being annoyed by it, lol, because it literally just is ‘pre-game’… I don’t use that phrase, but yeah, a lot PNW people do.

                Also, its funny: I’m in the Midwest now… and because I am actually capable of striking up a conversation with people I don’t already know, in person, yeah, people do seem to guess that I’m from Cali, more than they guess Seattle.

                So if you’re saying people assume 'talkative = Californian"… I guess that would mean that I actually have something resembling ‘normal’ social skills, at least in comparison to the PNW hikkikomori, hahaha!

                I was talking with some older dude recently, with an accent … I think he said Kentucky… but goddamn it, after we got to be a bit friendly, he started rambling off … I literally could not understand a word he was saying, for like 30 seconds of him talking.

                Accent was waaaay too thick for me to decipher.

                • cmbabul@slrpnk.net
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                  18 hours ago

                  Sorry I didn’t have time to completely respond to your whole comment earlier, got pinged and had to wrap it up.

                  I’ve literally had a conversation with a stranger at a bar in Cap Hill when I first moved here, and my accent makes me stick out like a sore thumb here so I get asked where I’m from all the time, after she asked and I told her where, she said “cool I’m from California and that’s why I’m speaking to you right now”. Which was hyperbolic but it does ring true coming from Atlanta to Seattle in that regard.

                  You my friend are an anomaly as far as my experience with the PNW if you can hang with a midwesterner in idle chit chat, they give us a run for our money in the south. Congratulations on the social skills lol!

                  You do gotta be careful with southern folks that ain’t from the big city, once we get comfortable we drop the fake accent and start speaking “proper”

                  • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                    18 hours ago

                    See that also tracks with why we hate Californians…

                    Cap Hill used to be affordable, and considerably more weird.

                    Yes, its weird, it used to be more weird.

                    Like uh, I remember one time about 15 years ago now (rent in Cap Hill was roughly 1/3 of what it is now), I saw an actual freak on a leash, like just full BDSM gear dude walking another BDSM dude down the street.

                    They were going to QFC, to get groceries, just normal stuff, most people were like ‘huh. sure. neat.’ and just went on as normal.

                    Then the California hipster trust fund babies moved in, followed by the techbros, raised the rent, the Seattle natives moved out, now Cap Hill is basically a tourist area, masquerading as ‘the most coolest Seattleist part of the city’.

                    Like, I’m in the midwest now in large part because of the real estate bubble caused by rich transplant gentrifiers.

                    But yeah, anyway, I did interperet the uh, full blast accent drop as a sign he was uh… comfortable talking to me, so i was genuienly happy, but also very confused, hahah!

                • cmbabul@slrpnk.net
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                  1 day ago

                  Hate to poke hole in your theory, but I don’t even know anyone Gen Z or alphas, these are all millennials and older