Need (limited) help from a native speaker? [無断転載禁止]©2ch.net
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As the title says I'm a native speaker, and at this moment I've got
nothing to do, so if anybody wants to ask me a question about vernacular
English or English speaking countries I'd be happy to help. what brought you here anyway? >>2
curiosity, of course! I've always like finding alternate perspectives,
and you can't get much more alternate than another person from another culture
in another country. nobody seems interested. now that's sad considering the very raison d'etre of this place. >>3
What kind of vernacular English do you know?
African-American? >>4
Most people here seem to basic Learners, so they wouldn't get much use out
Of this.
>>5
I was born and raised in the Midwestern united States, so that's the dialect I speak,
But because of my travel and study I understand most English dialects. >>6
What's the difference in dialects between the Midwestern and the Western? >>8 Midwestern is closer to Canadian, with speakers using softer, longer
Vowels, in particular the long "a". The double e can sound closer to "I" as
Well, so foreign speakers who move to the Midwest sometimes get confused when
They hear the words "been" and "bin".
Western is a mix of Midwestern and southern American accents- this happened
because Of how America was settled.
Anyway, I'll be gone for a few days but I'll reply when I can and if the thread dies I'll make
A new one when go to berlin i met some arab people who runaway war from syria and afganistan,iraq etc. i had conversation them about their own story with smoking(they loves smoke because it is some kind of killing time) so, in conclusion their have no racist but you don't make a connection with them you're stolen stuff why did you use 'Ive got' instead of 'I have' despite you are an Anerican? I thought that it is British English. >>13
It's possible I say that because I have English friends and some of their l
Mannerisms rubbed off on me, but honestly I'm not sure that difference exists-
And if it does, you're the first person whose ever noticed. >>13
united kingdom, the birth of modern english Been touring around France. Lovely place. >>13
I'm American too and "I've got" is very common in American English. Heh, people sure talk a lot of theory here,
then a thread completely in English comes up and it's silent. you guys should totally read Life and times of the thunderbolt kid >>27
it's a really good book about 1950s america Nobody has translated it into Japanese yet. hum.
Maybe somebody could do it and make some money
if it's so good. >>30
I would if I had the talent, trust me.
if your English is good enough, you can get the English version or it's
audiobook Wait what happened to the other thread where people were talking about "named after" 英語を誰でも簡単に上達できる方法は、「船山ゴロウの英会話誰でもマスターできるブログ」というブログで見られるらしいよ。ネットとか調べてもいいかもね。
PJY0A ■ このスレッドは過去ログ倉庫に格納されています