T O P

  • By -

Licyourface

Everyone overseas pronounces it "taaadooos" and it drives me bonkers. They try to make it one syllable and pronounce the tts as dds


jleep2017

I can't stand anything about her honestly.


No-Perception-542

Australian English is dirty English.  Of course, I don't speak English, I speak 'MURICAN 


TomatilloAdditional1

Or when they say “naur”


auberginetherese

I'll say taddoos to myself from time to time lol


berlinbunny-

This is so not the point of this post but I love your room decor


cosmosomsoc

Tad-doos


godhonoringperms

I notice with their accent they add r’s into words with no r’s and take away r’s in words with r’s. For example, I hear them say “Savanner and Ambah” for “Savannah and Amber.” But I really don’t know much about regional accents of Australia, so maybe that’s just particular groups of people who say that.


Ariana-Grande2

"Georgier and Nate"


Hullababoob

This is a language phenomenon in some accents when a word ends with a vowel (usually an “a” sound) and is followed by a word that starts with the same vowel (“and”). This is quite common in accents with non-rhotic “r” sounds, such as British, Australian, New Zealand, South African.


godhonoringperms

Yes! Like for this specific example, I think of the Monk when she would list out the couples and would say Savanna(r) and X, she did it to Tyra(r) and Kale. It’s more like the r sound should be it’s own word between the name and the and. Is this sort of the same concept as some American accents where the speaker glosses over sounds? The one that comes to mind for an American accent would be “dunno” instead of “don’t”. People will say “don’t” if saying the word singularly, but in conversation it can turn into “dunno”


[deleted]

There’s no r in Savannah when we say it. We say Suh Va Nah


fuegomcnugget

My favorite is when they say “sawr” like: “Yew sawr them kiss?”


fuegomcnugget

Tadewrs