Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up in central NJ and can tell you within 10 miles or so if someone grew up near me. It's a very distinctive place on the NY-Philly-Maryland spectrum. North and South Jersey are different yet again from that. You just have to know how to hear it.
+1
I grew up in central NJ and I would told you that we had no discernible accent. Then I returned for my 30th reunion and was absolutely blown away by the accents of my classmates who stayed in our town.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up in central NJ and can tell you within 10 miles or so if someone grew up near me. It's a very distinctive place on the NY-Philly-Maryland spectrum. North and South Jersey are different yet again from that. You just have to know how to hear it.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Corey Booker has a great NJ accent.
He is from Newark/Essex County which is close to NYC but you will note that he does NOT have a NY accent.
Also, Chris Christie has a solid NJ accent, also from Essex County.
I agree with this as well as the poster who mentioned HOW people from Jersey (really North Jersey) talk. It's the rate of speed, as well as the volume. I grew up in Union County as did my husband. We speak really fast and when we are with our siblings/cousins it gets LOUD.[/quote]
+1
We think southerners are SLOW.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up in central NJ and can tell you within 10 miles or so if someone grew up near me. It's a very distinctive place on the NY-Philly-Maryland spectrum. North and South Jersey are different yet again from that. You just have to know how to hear it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Corey Booker has a great NJ accent.
He is from Newark/Essex County which is close to NYC but you will note that he does NOT have a NY accent.
Also, Chris Christie has a solid NJ accent, also from Essex County.
These are perfect examples.