November 27, 2006

silhouette3.JPG From the desk of Jane Galt:

Quel surprise

What American accent do you have?
Your Result: The Northeast

Judging by how you talk you are probably from north Jersey, New York City, Connecticut or Rhode Island. Chances are, if you are from New York City (and not those other places) people would probably be able to tell if they actually heard you speak.

Philadelphia
The Inland North
The Midland
Boston
The South
The West
North Central
What American accent do you have?
Take More Quizzes
Posted by Jane Galt at November 27, 2006 8:15 PM | TrackBack | Technorati inbound links"); ?>
Comments

Tried it. They were only off by about a thousand miles.

Posted by: cirby on November 27, 2006 8:25 PM

I've taken that, with the same result, and am just astonished by how few vowels all you people in the rest of the country seem to get along with. All of the queried vowel sounds sound different to me.

Posted by: LizardBreath on November 27, 2006 9:02 PM

Well it pegged me as being from the Northeast although I was born and have lived below the Mason-Dixon all of my life.

Of course it may be that the high school that I attended required 2 years of speech class. Anyone remember those? Damn that was a long time ago!

Posted by: Tolbert on November 27, 2006 9:07 PM

Tolbert,

That's odd. It placed me as having a Southern accent, although I live in New York and grew up in Philadelphia (although I did go to college in VA)

Posted by: Bill Dalasio on November 27, 2006 9:59 PM

The West? I sometimes confuse people as to whether I have a Massachusetts accent or a Maine accent, but nobody's ever told me I sound like I come from the West.

Posted by: Symmetry on November 27, 2006 10:44 PM

Symmetry:

I fudged on Mary/merry/marry. I think Mary/marry are the same and merry is different. That wasn't an option, so I said all three are different and I got Boston, which is absurd. Then I said they are all the same and got the West, with "The Midland" as a runner up. I'll assume that this (British?) quiz designer meant the Midwest, which means I propably speak perfect General American.

Posted by: AT on November 27, 2006 11:02 PM

It got me dead on as 'Inland North' [Split 0-18yrs between Chicago and Minnesota]. I thought everything had a different sound with the exception of the three Marys, which all sound identical to me.

Posted by: Lou on November 27, 2006 11:57 PM

Philadelphia accent here. They are right about most people not being able to identify it and saying "You talk kind of funny" :)

Posted by: Sebastian on November 28, 2006 12:21 AM

I was a Philadelphia accent, even though I'm from New Orleans. People often ask me if I'm from Boston, and I've gotten England a couple times (a couple friends asked me if I'd gone to prep school there), but never Philadelphia (actually, the friend who asked me about England is from Philadelphia; take that for what it's worth). My mother claims that it's just a port city accent: clipped, fast, and not terribly place-distinctive.

Posted by: Jadagul on November 28, 2006 12:41 AM

Yes! Midland all the way!

I can be an announcer, without sounding ridiculous!

AND I PRONOUNCE FINAL R'S! (Why didn't it ask about those?)

One time I had trouble communicating with people who pronounced "Dale" as "Dell".

Posted by: Person on November 28, 2006 12:43 AM

I got "the west", which is correct. English is confusing enough without all you Eastern types adding special vowel inflections that ain't necessary to get the point across.

I noticed a missing question, though: Does "wash" rhyme with "marsh"?...

Posted by: anony-mouse on November 28, 2006 1:25 AM

"Your accent is the lowest common denominator of American speech."

Posted by: godoggo on November 28, 2006 3:37 AM

It says "Boston" but I've never lived in Lincolnshire. What? It means the American Boston? Absurd.

Posted by: dearieme on November 28, 2006 6:38 AM

Inland North here. Grew up in suburban Detroit. As kids, my brothers and I said "soda" instead of "pop" due to our Canadian father. (For more info on Soda vs Pop, including a cool map, see http://www.popvssoda.com/..)

Posted by: RMc on November 28, 2006 7:33 AM

It said I had a 100% 'Northeastern' accent (?Boston? ?Maine?) -- but I have a British accent on an Indian underlay with Australian overtones..

Posted by: Sudha Shenoy on November 28, 2006 7:55 AM

AT: Same here. Mary = marry != merry. It pegged me as "inland", which is close. (Rural Michigan, which is very different from Detroit...)

anony-mous: wash rhymes with warsh in my family, but this may vary too much even within one location to be a useful identifier.

The question about "about" also puzzled me - unless the quizmaker included Canada under "American" accents. Is there anywhere in the USA that "about" is pronounced "ah-boot"?

Posted by: markm on November 28, 2006 7:58 AM

Well, having been brought up in the south of England and still living here my 'American' accent is supposedly north-eastern.

I have to query how some of the words they suggested can EVER sound the same!

Posted by: LIZ on November 28, 2006 8:22 AM

I grew up in Arkansas, and lived there, in Tennessee, and in North Carolina until I was 27. And this quiz says I have a Northeastern accent? Fah.

Admittedly, my Southern is nowhere near as strong as it used to be. But I get asked several times a year here in CT about where I grew up, because they can tell it wasn't here. And this area has almost no accent at all compared to a good thick NJ/NY/Long Island one. Against any of those, I sound like I'm from another planet entirely.

Posted by: Derek Lowe on November 28, 2006 9:12 AM

It pegged me, quite correctly, for Boston, although I think my accent is extremely subtle and I definitely pronounce final Rs. But Mary, merry, and marry most definitely all sound distinct:

Mary= mayr ee
marry= rhymes with "Harry"
merry= mehr ee (I mean, c'mon people, "e" and "a" are two different letters).

Posted by: Jasper on November 28, 2006 9:28 AM

I got pegged as Midland which is probably pretty close. I grew up in Kentucky, spent 4 years in Chicago, 3 years in Atlanta, and the last 12 in Connecticut.

Posted by: Yancey Ward on November 28, 2006 9:32 AM

With due respect,it's "Quelle surprise."

Posted by: Rondi on November 28, 2006 9:58 AM

I was born and raised in Texas, went to college in Texas and California, and live and work in the U.S. Northeast, and it pegged me as Inland North. Rather odd.

Posted by: CrudeBoy on November 28, 2006 10:26 AM

I was totally pegged at Midland.

In the Army, most thought I had an accent, but they couldn't figure out from where.

RMc--

Around Cincinnati, it is 'pop'. If you ask for a soda, you will get a drink with ice cream in it. The biggest dialect oddity that I am aware of is that we ask "Please?" if we didn't understand what you said and would like for you to repeat it.

I personally don't know of anywhere else in the country where that is common.

Posted by: Reagan Fan on November 28, 2006 10:38 AM

"midland north" which is funny -- i never was anywhere near wisconsin growing up, but when i came up here for school from virginia, everyone asked me if i was from canada. now that's how you hurt a southern boy's feelings.

Posted by: will on November 28, 2006 10:54 AM

I got Midland North, despite the fact that I've never been anywhere near there except to change planes. I grew up near Boston, and some people think I have a Boston accent although I disagree.

Posted by: Rex Little on November 28, 2006 11:21 AM

100% right on, Philadelphia accent. "Different" was the answer to nearly all words in the quiz.
So what are the right pronunciations?

Posted by: creech on November 28, 2006 11:30 AM

Who says "bag" as "bague"? Or "vague" as "vag"?

Posted by: Stuart Buck on November 28, 2006 11:33 AM

A ridiculous test. It pegged me as "Inland North," which basically means the Great Lakes region.
I grew up and attended school in Connecticut, never living anywhere else until moving to Long Island nine years ago. My sole contact with the Inland North consists of a handful of brief visits to Chicago and Ohio.

Posted by: Peter on November 28, 2006 11:47 AM

Try this one Jane, You can I grew up in the same building and apparently it pegged me from being from Wisconsin.

Posted by: Kate on November 28, 2006 12:31 PM

Placed me exactly in "Midland"-even the correct section of my State. Yea! Says I can be an announcer!

Posted by: MikeinAppalachia on November 28, 2006 12:36 PM

Midland - no surprise, being from Utah and living in Oregon, both lands of the accent-less.

Accent? We don't have no stinkin' accent.

Posted by: Sigivald on November 28, 2006 1:08 PM

I was Inland North, which is where I grew up--just outside Syracuse. As I understand it, there is a belt of similar dialect & accent which runs from Western Mass/Conn westwards through Upstate New York, Ohio, and on to lower Wisconsin and lower Minnesota. Canadians, at least those in lower Ontario, also sound similar, but have phrases they use which are a bit different, eh?

Regionalisms crop up, to be sure, with words such as soda, pop, or soda pop. Oil and earl. Wash and warsh. Route and root. One of the more interesting variations in names is hoagie, sub, wedge, or grinder--you can see all of these within a fifty mile radius of NYC.

Markm, I thought they said a-boot in Texas.

Posted by: Rex on November 28, 2006 1:27 PM

I grew up near Boston, and some people think I have a Boston accent although I disagree.

Dahleeng, pahk the cah in the Hahvahd yahd...

Posted by: anony-mouse on November 28, 2006 1:28 PM

What is the deal with Mary, merry, and marry? Only the middle one is different and that wasn't a choice.

Tabbed me as being from Philly, but I don't think I've ever been there except to drive thru.

Posted by: stan on November 28, 2006 2:41 PM

straight out of midlands! boyyyyyyyeeeee!

Posted by: josh on November 28, 2006 2:56 PM

I got basically the same result as Jane. Grew up in Westchester until second grade and then Manhattan. Went to Northwestern for college, where I was amazed to see "pop" was standard usage for soda; I always thought it was a silly kiddie word, and I laughed when I saw my first supermarket sign advertising six-packs of pop. Lived in DC for two years after college, then a year and a half in Manhattan, a year in Trenton, six years in Brooklyn and the last three back in my native Westchester.

I think almost all of those word pairs or trios are pronounced differently. Jasper is exactly right about Mary/marry/merry, but I recall that the TV journalist Mary Alice Williams pronounced her name Marry, so I guess it happens.

One of my favorite New York regionalisms is "on line" instead of "in line," although I expect that may fade as being on the Internet becomes such a dominant meaning for online.

Posted by: John on November 28, 2006 3:01 PM

markm: People from northern Michigan (especially the U.P.) and northern Minnesota and Wisconsin will say "about" that way. Last time I talked to him, I was amused to hear my father, who grew up in Detroit but has lived in the Alpena area for the last 10-15 years, starting to unconsiously pronounce "aboot".

Posted by: Kim Scarborough on November 28, 2006 3:20 PM

Got pegged for Midland, though I'm a Deep Southerner. (South was a very close second.) My accent isn't very strong - it's identifiably Southern, but you'd never pick out what part of the South I'm from. I also tend to adopt more pure Midland speech whenever speaking to non-Southerners; when I do that, you'd really have to pay attention to pick up on my origins.

As for "about", maybe they're trying to get at the Tidewater accent of MD-VA-NC-SC, where people really do say "oat and aboat" for "out and about".

Posted by: Devilbunny on November 28, 2006 3:30 PM

As one who sees absolutely no difference in pronunciation between Mary, marry, and merry, could someone enlighten me as to what other people see as differences?

Posted by: Rex on November 28, 2006 3:45 PM
You may think you speak “Standard English straight out of the dictionary” but when you step away from the Great Lakes you get asked annoying questions like “Are you from Wisconsin?” or “Are you from Chicago?” Chances are you call carbonated drinks “pop.”

Okay, that is eerily accurate...

Posted by: Steven Andrew Miller on November 28, 2006 4:18 PM

I took the quiz via Matthew Yglesias' site and got the same results as he did, which is no surprise since he and I (and Ms. Galt) are from the same place. I suspect that this "test" is designed to identify folks from Greenwich to Philly and guesses about everything else.

Posted by: Roberto Rivera on November 28, 2006 4:49 PM

"As one who sees absolutely no difference in pronunciation between Mary, marry, and merry, could someone enlighten me as to what other people see as differences?"

Mary: mare-ree
marry: maa-ree
merry" mehr-ree

That's the theory, according to my ears, at least. I pronounce "Mary" and "merry" pretty much the same.

Posted by: Roberto Rivera on November 28, 2006 4:53 PM

It says I'm midland. Born in New Jersey, but moved to Oklahoma when 1 year old. Everyone says I talk way to fast.

My wife doesn't need the test - classic south oklahoma accent (we divide north and south along I-40.

Posted by: rmark on November 28, 2006 5:13 PM

Off by about 8000 miles. It claimed that I am from Philadelphia, but I am actually from Bangalore, India.

Posted by: JM on November 28, 2006 5:14 PM

Regarding Mary, merry and marry: I pronounce "Mary" and "merry" the same, rhyming with "Kerry" (as in John). I pronounce "marry" to rhyme with "Harry".

Posted by: Rex Little on November 28, 2006 6:03 PM

It said that I have a Philadelphia accent. I was only there once, on a Sunday afternoon. It was closed.

Posted by: Ernie G on November 28, 2006 6:33 PM

Way off for me. By the test, it pegged me as Inland North.

I grew up in California, as anyone can tell by the occasional use of the words mondo, tubular, and bitchin' in my spoken English. Then again, People from the Greater L.A. area can sound like they're from just about everywhere.

Except Boston. That accent is hard for an Angelino to pull off without speech training.

Posted by: Off Colfax on November 28, 2006 6:34 PM

As someone who has lived for 39 of my 41 years in Western Australia, I was interested to find that my accent is that of "the Inland North". I'm assuming from the context that this is fargo territory but other than that have no idea where this might be. Can someone enlighten me?

Posted by: cac on November 28, 2006 7:51 PM

cac -

"Inland North" as used in this test seems to refer to the Great Lakes area of the United States - Michigan; Wisconsin; northern Illinois, Indiana and Ohio; western New York State, and possibly to nearby parts of Canada.

One interesting distinction is in the way people pronounce the word "aunt": some rhyme it with "font" and others say "ant." As far as I can tell, there don't seem to be any regional divisions between the two pronunciations.

Posted by: Peter on November 28, 2006 10:31 PM

Pegged me as Boston - no surprise given I've lived in eastern MA all my life. However, when I travel outside the region people often express surprise that I don't sound like Ted Kennedy or Matt Damon (in The Departed (Deh-paht-ed).

As for "aunt", I have no insect relatives.

Here is another one I've noticed, not sure if it matches up with a region, although I have heard it most commonly from folks around the Baltimore area:

Days of the week, i.e.; Tuesday, does it end with 'day' or 'dee'?

Btw, if you are in the Boston area and need to pronounce these two city names, Peabody and Quincy, it is done thusly:

Peebehdee
Quinzee

Posted by: too many steves on November 29, 2006 6:53 AM

Guys, the quiz is not trying to tell you were you live or grew up. Understand? It's saying what regional accent your accent sounds most like. It's not "erring" when it says you talk like a Bostonian when you've always lived in Alabama. It's possible that you didn't pick up the accent of those around you, really.

I know that I for one, don't talk like most of the people living in my region (Texas).

Posted by: Person on November 29, 2006 10:43 AM

being from Utah and living in Oregon... We don't have no stinkin' accent.

I'll agree with you about Oregon, but Utah is another story. "School" and "skull" practically rhyme, at least on the Wasatch Front, and so do "fail" and "fell." I saw a readerboard outside a convenience store in Springville once that said "Beer for sell". And I don't know how many times I've been informed from the pulpit that the next hymn will be "We'll Sing All Hell to Jesus' Name."

Posted by: Katherine on November 29, 2006 12:25 PM

About as ah-boot is also Tidewater (Virginia to the fall line).

Mine? South. Not that anyone whose ever heard me speak could miss it.

But there are so many accents in the South; their "South" is the Piedmont, not Tidewater (dropped r's, round vowels) or hill-country (chair and here rhyme).

Posted by: SamChevre on November 29, 2006 2:30 PM

A great idea -- good enough that I hope someone will have another go at it. As is, the quiz is just too short, with too much clustering of questions designed to identify a limited number of accents.

Years ago I met a woman (from Tulsa, for what it's worth) with an astonishingly sensitive ear for regional American accents. She could pin down where you were from with amazing accuracy -- even when there were mixed accents, as where someone grew up, say, in Florida, but had gone to college in North Carolina.

Posted by: David on November 29, 2006 8:53 PM

I cheated a little and pretended I'm from America - I'm from rural Kent, but my accent is pure BBC Received Pronunciation of the 1950s, since that is how my Dutch parents learned their English. Evidently, the contrasts in pronunciation in my English are the same as Jane's (whom I deeply regret not contacting during her time in London).

Posted by: Robert Dammers on November 30, 2006 7:29 AM

Nailed my Wisconsin/Illinois self. But it's not "pop" or "soda." It's pronounced "skatch."

Posted by: Mike W on November 30, 2006 1:51 PM

I was born and raised in Ohio, but have lived in the Boston, Massachusetts area for 20 years. I was pleased it called me as "Midland," with "Northeast" at the bottom of the list.

My high school history teacher said I had a distinct Trumbull County accent. But there was no category for that.

Posted by: Bob Hawkins on November 30, 2006 4:35 PM

Aunt is a good one. I've known the pronunciation to vary even within a family -- and not a far-flung one at that. To me the one that rhymes with font sounds funny.

And dammit, I say "wash," even though people have told me I say "warsh."

Sometimes I get caught in between accents. My poor dog would never get walked if first I had to determine whether to use a "leesh" or a "lesh."

Posted by: Nat on December 1, 2006 1:42 AM

Color me unimpressed. I've moved around a lot, so I'm not surprised that the answer was wrong. What puzzles me is why on Earth anyone in their right minds would think I'm from Philly.

Posted by: Dale (rhymes with veil) on December 1, 2006 11:27 AM

Another Australian - but interestingly I got the same result as Jane's - perhaps because my Australian is "received ABC" (if there is such a thing) - the equivalent of english "received BBC".

Posted by: Jennifer on December 1, 2006 7:44 PM

Peabody is pronounced peabahdee by the older generation from Boston.Medford is often pronounced Mefford.Gloucester is Glosta,as Worcester is Woosta.Revere is Revea.And so it goes. And Charlestown is pronounced CharLEStown by those of us of a certain age educated in its pronunciation by grandmothers.

Posted by: fxm on December 1, 2006 7:45 PM

I am from New York. Most of the words I can hear a perceptible difference, but couldn't tell whether I ought to say they sound the same. I tried both ways -- noting the differences and admitting that they sound about the same -- both times they had me being from somewhere I have never lived. They thought either California or the Mid West.

They also didn't allow for "both". There are a bunch of words that I say two different ways.

Posted by: liberty on December 2, 2006 4:45 PM

They were only off by about a thousand miles.

Quiz said Philly for me; I was born in the UP and raised in northern Indiana. So yes, quite a bit off.

Had the same issue with Mary/merry/marry as others did: merry sounds different from the other two.

Posted by: Slartibartfast on December 4, 2006 8:59 AM

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