Alrighty then. |
| To me, NPR hosts Steve Inskeep and Kai Ryssdal have posh accents. |
FDR, yes. He had a “Locust Valley Lockjaw.” The Kennedy’s had a completely different accent. In fact, almost no one but them had that specific accent. |
Oh, the irony. |
| Whoever said Thurston Howell from Gilligan’s Island . . . Spot on. |
This is ptretty much the only right answer so far. |
| In the 1970s my family moved from the Midwest to the Boston area. We were expecting everybody to talk like JFK or RFK, but none did. We asked locals about it & were told the Kennedys somehow had their own accent, & nobody else sounded exactly like them. And sure enough, I lived there for years and never met anybody with a Kennedy accent. |
| A good movie for the Mid-Atlantic accent is Hitchcock’s “North by Northwest.” It features at least 3 English actors who toned down their accents just enough enough to be able to play classy Americans in many films: Cary Grant, James Mason, & Leo G. Carroll. |
knew a yalie who had a hardcore brooklyn accent |
| Doesn’t exist |
| Yes. It’s called a Mid-Atlantic accent, and is also the American definition of having no accent. However these things are much less meaningful than they were 50 years ago. |
| Vivian Leigh had a pretty good one. |
| Isn’t it considered a transatlantic accent which basically nobody has anymore? I think maybe regionally rather than nationally there are more posh accents. For example when I went to New Orleans some southern accents sounded more “posh”, proper and gentile than others but wouldn’t be considered posh nationally. |
Ant accent that people actively practice for public speaking sounds impressive in some way. Beyond that, racism determines whether the accent is high class or low class. The key features are enunciating words, varying pauses and emphasis, and speaking with slow enough pacing to be understood clearly. Fast talking where outsiders can't get a handle on the rhythm and pick out syllables and word boundaries, or boring monotone talking, is what sounds bad. |
| When I moved to California from DC in the early 90s at age 8 the other kids in school made fun of me for having, as they called it a “fancy accent”. I think it was mid Atlantic, although I have heard that Mid Atlantic actually means something like the way the children in The Sound of Music spoke - not fully “posh” British but in between that and American. |