ITT: a bunch of people hoping that they have a “posh” American accent
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| Lol “posh American accent”! Please never stop DCUM. |
| I had a lisp as a little kid and had to go to a few years of speech class and they basically wash out your accent as part of the classes. I often unconsciously add an accent in from where i'm living because it sounds strange outside of a news cast |
Not Dixie Carter! I loved her voice. |
| The “poshest” 😂 American accent is no accent at all. |
Both my dad's parents and their siblings etc had this. It wasn't affected: before mass media, this class was fairly insular, going to the same churches, schools, colleges, belonging to the same clubs, living and vacationing in the same places, marrying each other. Typical would be a home on the upper east side, a country place in Oyster Bay, and something in Palm Beach. Personally, I loved it: sing-songy, melifluent. As someone else wrote, anyone under 70 speaking this way sounds affected. |
Phillip Seymour Hoffman was many things, but his accent was not from affect. |
Kids used to get them at elite NE boarding schools (and from parents). Alas, neither of my kids returned home sounding like FDR (one having even gone to the same school).
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| A close adjacent, is it still proper to say “how do you do?” My parents and grandparents would say this in formal situations. My dad and my grandparents on his side had some of this accent. It was always “how do you do?” Instead of “hello” or “nice to meet you”. It seems rather stuffy and old fashioned now - but I also wonder if it’s actually the proper way to meet people formally. I don’t say it because I worry it will hit people in the wrong way. This and a few other quirks I either consciously suppress or have unlearned. Anyone else? |
I am sorry for your loss. |
Agree, today at least, it's the nondescript, newscaster "accent" that is impossible to place. Any additional "poshness" would then be more about diction, enunciation, tone--basically you are looking for a clear, lower-pitched, well-modulated voice from an educated person (with no discernible accent). |
LOL! Who told you that?? 🤣🤣🤣 |
| Slightly overly articulated, reasonably fast speech with no discernible accent reads as most educated. |
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mid-Atlantic_accent |
Which raises a good point. There is no such thing as a “posh” accent. But people who sound educated are valued. Sometimes. |