Anonymous wrote:Fascinating. Two years ago we paid $1,000+ out of pocket to a speech pathologist who worked with DS on articulation deficiencies.
Guess what one of the sound combos was? Uh huh, the ending /g/ in /-ing/ words. Because that's proper standard English.
For the person talkinG about hicks .... it's actually 'hick' to drop the /g/ in /-ing/ .... I'm a fixin' to git goin' in the mornin' . See?
Anonymous wrote:Is it like the way Forrest Gump pronounces 'running'?
Anonymous wrote:Are you kidding me?
Informal dropping of "g" in "ing" is OK but as an everyday, all-the-time thing IMO it marks you as a rube, a slovenly user of the English language, one who doesn't care if they sound like they know what they're talking (or talkin') about...
I particularly hate the phony folksiness of people I have worked with in senior managment positions who will put on the informal leveler of dropping "g"s... I mean droppin'
"g"s when they're talkin' to folks, etc., etc.
You're either a troll, a non-native English speaker, or a linguistic slob, lol.
Anonymous wrote:
You won't go far in many professions, including mine, if you're droppin' yer g's and you don't have an authentic regional accent that accounts for it, and even then some will wonder.
Anonymous wrote:In the UK, we pronounce the "g" at the end of words, as well as the "t" in twenty, etc.
Dropping the "g" entirely definitely comes off as uneducated. Having a softer or harder "g" sound is perfectly fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You know....there is a difference between a "hick" and someone who simply has a southern accent. I would rather listen to the soft sound of a southern accent all day long then have to listen to five minutes of that horrid Yankee accent.
So very, very true.
There are two types of Southern accents. The first is genteel and Faulkneresque. The second is horrid and sounds hateful... shades of the KKK.
I'd still rather listen to a "Yankee" accent any day. Southerners take about twice as long to say the same words as everyone else. "Thank youuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu." Okay, I got you two minutes ago. Shut up please.
What state gets to claim you and your genteel manners?
Anonymous wrote:Op here:
This person is from the USA and grew up in a place without a particular accent. ...and has no accent. parents are both professional. went to a selective college so not stupid...
drives me crazy. I was hoping someone would say they can't help it...like they are color blind for the fact that almost nobody else says the g in ing...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You know....there is a difference between a "hick" and someone who simply has a southern accent. I would rather listen to the soft sound of a southern accent all day long then have to listen to five minutes of that horrid Yankee accent.
So very, very true.
There are two types of Southern accents. The first is genteel and Faulkneresque. The second is horrid and sounds hateful... shades of the KKK.
I'd still rather listen to a "Yankee" accent any day. Southerners take about twice as long to say the same words as everyone else. "Thank youuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu." Okay, I got you two minutes ago. Shut up please.
Anonymous wrote:In the UK, we pronounce the "g" at the end of words, as well as the "t" in twenty, etc.
Dropping the "g" entirely definitely comes off as uneducated. Having a softer or harder "g" sound is perfectly fine.
Anonymous wrote:
The first is genteel and Faulkneresque. The second is horrid and sounds hateful... shades of the KKK.
Anonymous wrote:What? You're not supposed to say the g at the end of ing?
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Anonymous wrote:You know....there is a difference between a "hick" and someone who simply has a southern accent. I would rather listen to the soft sound of a southern accent all day long then have to listen to five minutes of that horrid Yankee accent.
So very, very true.