Quizzes & Puzzles3 mins ago
The Rise Of The Upward Inflection When Speaking
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https:/ /www.bb c.co.uk /news/m agazine -287085 26
I know this link is old news but someone mentioned it to me the other day and I dont know if its been discussed on here before.
Has anyone else noticed, especially among the young? I have and I must say i do find it rather irritating and it's becoming more prevalent.
I know this link is old news but someone mentioned it to me the other day and I dont know if its been discussed on here before.
Has anyone else noticed, especially among the young? I have and I must say i do find it rather irritating and it's becoming more prevalent.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It's weird because all of that sounded perfectly normal to me, I struggle to even hear it as a definite upward inflection, it's just accent and dialect of those particular communities, but then my Dad is from Belfast, I'm going out with someone from New York and I have family dotted all over the place, so it's quite normalised for me. I however don't do it I've noticed and neither does my mother and we're both RP, so I'm not sure it's an age thing, more just cultural.
The upward inflection is an essential part of the Suffolk accent (and particularly the Ipswich one) so everyone around here uses it. However it's far more noticeable among older people than younger ones.
Yes, it's definitely similar to many Australian accents. When I visited Oz I got asked which part of the country I was from several times. Nobody would believe that I was a pommie!
Yes, it's definitely similar to many Australian accents. When I visited Oz I got asked which part of the country I was from several times. Nobody would believe that I was a pommie!
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