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Posted

from the ground up: thanks for clarifying your thoughts on the accent

 

thing. I see what you are saying now.

 

I'm sorry to be pedantic, but a regional dialect is not the same as an

 

accent. A dialect refers to actual words and grammar used in a particular

 

region. An accent is how those words are spoken, the rhythm and

 

pronunciation used (I think). Two people may have the same accent, but

 

a different dialect.

how many people do you know born in an english speaking country where they are educated in english have an accent of their native country?

 

I remember seeing a documentary about immigration which featured a

 

girl who spoke in a very distinctive Scottish/Chinese hybrid accent. Two

 

words would sound Scottish, and the next two would sound Chinese. Until

 

I saw the documentary, I would not have thought this was even possible!

 

I don't know anyone who does this, but that does not mean it doesn't

 

exist. Who knows? I understand your skepticism, though.

that's the distinction we have here in uk.

 

Obviously it hasn't reached my neck of the woods yet!

 

Regards,

 

Bart the Lover

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Posted

well the scottish/chinese thing is kinda different.

 

you have to ignore the fact that the english spoken has a scottish accent on it as it's the native english.

 

what you're left with is person who was brought up speaking one language who had to learn another language.

 

see what i mean?

 

if you go back to what the guy said, he doesn't actually speak the language. therefore he wouldn't have actually used the thai language anyway, how would a language that he doesn't know affect his english?

post count is directly related to how much free time you have, not how intelligent you are.


"When you have to kill a man it costs nothing to be polite."

Posted

well, lots of different people in london.

 

hence lots of mother tongues. in some cases people have more than one mother tongue but their first spoken language is still english...

 

to be honest, i'm not entirely sure on the names/terms they use for this but you get the gist...

post count is directly related to how much free time you have, not how intelligent you are.


"When you have to kill a man it costs nothing to be polite."

Posted

somethig else just came to mind.

 

i guess he would pick up an accent if he father spoke english to him (with that accent) and that was the only english he was exposed to.

 

but the point still stands, he said his father spoke thai around him.

 

and any time in a local english speaking school would've gotten rid of it anyway.

post count is directly related to how much free time you have, not how intelligent you are.


"When you have to kill a man it costs nothing to be polite."

Posted
i don't think i have to ask everyone in the world.

 

i just have to ask every chinese person whether he's thai.

 

or ask every thai person if he is chinese.

 

your argument is rather weak.

 

by your rational, if i consistantly call you a pillock, then you are a pillock? probably a bad example but i think you get my meaning.

 

That's not what I said. You claimed that "noone" used the term Chinese to refer to the far east. I wager there's at least one person who does, and maybe he is that person. Either way, what makes you think he's making it up? I don't see your logic behind that. Other people on the board you've never met and you give them the benefit of the doubt and assume they aren't just making it up, why are you so fixated on the idea that this guy is making it all up?

 

EDIT: And no, only if I constantly referred to myself as "A pillock" would that make me "A pillock". I don't know what a pillock is, but "A pillock" would then be a proper name and would have no relation to something called a pillock. If I had a kid and named it "President," that wouldn't make it the President, but it would make it "President," as a proper name.

Paladin - A holy beat down in the name of God!

Posted

you're missing the point.

 

people from china are chinese.

 

people from thailand are thai.

 

it's as simple as that.

 

if you were of thai origins you WOULD not call yourself chinese.

 

likewise, if he had an accent, it WOULD not be chinese.

post count is directly related to how much free time you have, not how intelligent you are.


"When you have to kill a man it costs nothing to be polite."

Posted
you're missing the point.

 

people from china are chinese.

 

people from thailand are thai.

 

it's as simple as that.

 

if you were of thai origins you WOULD not call yourself chinese.

 

likewise, if he had an accent, it WOULD not be chinese.

 

Yes, but if you were talking to someone who might NOT have heard of thailand you might use chinese instead because they've probrably heard of China. Believe it or not, there are people who don't know what Thailand is, let alone that the word Thai relates to it. Most of the people from this board probrably know about Thailand but depending on where you live, there may be a lot of people who don't. For instance, my "Louisiana" accent has nothing to do with Louisiana, it's the people from Louisiana that have a similar accent because of my French background, yet Americans don't realize that. Similarly, his "Thai" accent may not be from China, but that won't stop people from saying he has a "Chinese" accent. I doubt I could tell the difference.

Paladin - A holy beat down in the name of God!

Posted

from the ground up:

 

My point with the Scottish/Chinese sounding girl was that evidently people

 

are idiosyncratic in their speech patterns. Generally, they will sound like

 

their peers, but not always.

 

You wrote:

what you're left with is person who was brought up speaking one language who had to learn another language.

 

If I remember correctly, the girl was born and brought up in Scotland. She

 

picked up the Chinese accent because her parents spoke English with a

 

Chinese accent.

i guess he would pick up an accent if he father spoke english to him (with that accent) and that was the only english he was exposed to.

 

Perhaps whitemanwithchineseaccent's father did speak English around

 

his. Maybe he is guessing where his accent came from. I don't suppose it

 

matters much to him.

and any time in a local english speaking school would've gotten rid of it anyway.

 

This is the core of our disagreement! I maintain that it is possible (though

 

not likely) for someone to speak much more like their parents. People are

 

unpredictable. Some emigrants change accents to fit their adopted country

 

very quickly. Some never change. Others merge the two accents (like

 

Loyd Grossman), or switch between accents, like Sheena Easton (you may

 

not have heard of her, depending on your age!). My point is: if you are

 

exposed to your parents' accented English early in life (and maybe you

 

don't attend nursery school, or playgroup) you might not change once you

 

go to school. While I don't know anyone like this, I have known people

 

whose accent came from merging the local and their parents' accent. So

 

they were on the continuum, as it were.

 

Warp Spider wrote:

Yes, but if you were talking to someone who might NOT have heard of thailand you might use chinese instead because they've probrably heard of China. Believe it or not, there are people who don't know what Thailand is, let alone that the word Thai relates to it.

 

This is a good point, but it doesn't apply here because

 

whitemanwithchineseaccent's father is from Thailand. So he has at least

 

heard of it, even if maybe his father doesn't really talk about it (for all we

 

know). Surely he wouldn't use the uninformed term used by his peers?

 

wrestlingkaratechamp17 wrote:

You have no friends that could have jumped in and helped you?

 

For a second after I read this, I thought...What? Then I realised this

 

refered to the thread topic!

 

Regards,

 

Bart the Lover

Posted

anyway

 

i dont think i need to explain myself further.

 

if warp spider insists theat a person who knows he has thai origins would say he is chinese then fine. i'm not going to argue.

 

as for the accent thing, well, there is a lot to consider. however, i am suuming that he had a "normal" upbringing that includes education at a place where english is spoken without any thai/chinese accent (which are very, very different i should add). it's a very hard against him saying he has an accent on his english...

 

maybe i'm just too cynical.

 

maybe i should trust people more.

post count is directly related to how much free time you have, not how intelligent you are.


"When you have to kill a man it costs nothing to be polite."

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