• @eran_morad
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    301 month ago

    Maybe I’m misunderstanding. I grew up in NYC, and “father” absolutely does rhyme with “bother”. Just listen to Run DMC: “they even bother my poor father cause he’s down with me.”

    • @[email protected]
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      81 month ago

      Looks like the difference is between the rounded and unrounded back open vowels /ɑ/ and /ɒ/. This site has an IPA chart where you can hear the differences. The father-bother merger hasn’t happened in my (NE) accent, but I didn’t know that pretty much everywhere else merged the two. Interesting that cot-caught merged for NE but not father-bother.

    • @HomerianSymphony
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      1 month ago

      Younger New Yorkers do have the father-bother merger, but older New Yorkers don’t.

      Also, Run DMC probably speak African-American English, which, as this map says, is generally independent of other dialects and not included on this map.

      • @eran_morad
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        41 month ago

        This just doesn’t jibe with my experience, and I still have family there.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 month ago

          The Run DMC lyric actually sounds like the (previously unmerged) father vowel /ɑ/ went toward the bother vowel /ɒ/ than the other way around. I might even put it as /ɔ/ or /o/ when listening to the sounds on the IPA chart.

          Whereas if you listen to the pronunciations on Merriam Webster father and bother it actually lists them both as /ä/, which is apparently a near-back vowel instead of back. I don’t know which one NY does though.

      • @blazeknave
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        21 month ago

        I’m 41. Mary, Merry, marry, are completely different words.

    • @blazeknave
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      11 month ago

      Flatbush area checking in. Yuh Fahthuh’s cawlin. Don’t bohther me

      • @eran_morad
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        11 month ago

        Shout Grand Concourse, ya heard?

    • @[email protected]
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      91 month ago

      Kinda makes sense, though. You can fly from the west coast of the US to South Africa in under 24 hours. Areas that used to take weeks, months, and even years to get to are now under 24 hours and largely less than $5,000 to travel to.

      We are gonna get some wild pandemics since anyone can criss-cross the globe so fast.

  • Rentlar
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    111 month ago

    This is a lot for me to take in, and even with some of the audio excerpts, explanations and charts I still don’t get it.

  • Rob Bos
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    91 month ago

    I don’t understand how they put Vancouver and Toronto in the same accent group. Quite distinct.

    • @hushable
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      1 month ago

      “but I don’t have an accent” he said with a generalised American accent

  • @[email protected]
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    61 month ago

    It reminds me a lot of ourdialects.uk which does similar but for the UK and split across a few different maps. I’d love a website where it guesses where you (or someone else) are from based on some sort of quiz.

  • @camr_on
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    61 month ago

    This is an awesome map

  • @Yokozuna
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    61 month ago

    Man, the breakdown of NOLA is crazy accurate.

  • @[email protected]
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    61 month ago

    Interesting how Washington, DC used to be within the Southern accent territory, but this has died out to mostly older speakers.

    The anecdote that really hits this home for me is that in 2006 they updated the voice on the metro which said “Doors closing, please stand clear of the doors.” The old voice had a southern accent but the new voice did not.

  • shnizmuffin
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    61 month ago

    Where I’m from, “Mary,” “Marry,” and “Merry” are not pronounced the same.

    Mary rhymes with airy. Marry rhymes with Barry. Merry rhymes with ferry.

  • @jenny_ball
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    41 month ago

    fascinating. you can almost see why Boston has the crazy accent.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 month ago

      Nice to see the province of Alberta having a French majority area despite the hostility to francophone culture.

  • @morphballganon
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    21 month ago

    So west Texas and east Tennessee sound the same?