I've heard a lot of subtly different Rhode Island accents. Its a state situated around a bay and though small I think there's a fair bit of separation between east and west, and Providence and Newport. In addition its a state with lots of immigrants. Whether their families were Portuguese, Italian, French, Polish, British or maybe Irish, can I think also be an influence. I came on here to hear what my relatives sound like as half my family are from Rhode Island and the accent reminds me of childhood memories. They sometimes have very heavy accents depending on the occasion and whether they're around lots of people from other states they don't know that well (in which case they might tone it down, or not care at all and flaunt it depending). This isn't quite what they sound like but the al- in 'always' did remind me.
I live in Narragansett (which is almost all Irish and Itallian with some native americans) and the only accent you really hear here is that Rs in the middle of words get dropped and random Rs will get added in on the end of words (Idear)
I'm a Rhode Islander, and I wanted to let you know that your RI dialect is on the thicker side. Most of the people that I grew up with/know do not talk that exaggerated. The key word is most. I find that the areas around Pawtucket tend to have the dialect the thickest (also would like to note this is not the rule). Nice job over all.
I have lived in Rhode Island now for nearly 9 years, and this is it!! Two things I would add: idea is nearly universally pronounced idear, and drawer is draw, while draw is drawr. Friends and fellow humans, please do not take offense when people notice a regional dialect that you don't hear because you are used to it. I'm sure you hear things in my western American speech that I can't hear. Be proud of your local speech patterns. They're part of what makes life diverse and interesting!
It was hilarious hearing you try the Rhode Island accent bc i am from Rhode Island. Some things sounded off, but other wise it was fine. It also depends on what part of RI you're from with the dialect of the accent.
very accurate, an interesting fact about Rhode Island accents is that some people (generally families and very small communities) tend to pick and choose different words to become accented, especially as you get closer to Mass
@@narratormatt the hard "R" to "ah" change is seen more in and around Providence and northern RI, Newport has a more New York "Kennedy" style accent, and I've noticed it's even different by age too, older Aquidneck Islanders actually add a hard "R" to words that don't have one like "idea" becoming "idear"
Matt there’s something else you might want to know about RI they have words here that no one has in any other part of the country (another commenter mention a few of these) but you should definitely add them to your tutorial. Two examples of these words are bubblah, (bubbler which is a water fountain) and cabinet which is a milkshake.
There's a great book by Mark Patinkin called the Rhode Island Dictionary. If you can get ahold of it you'll get a pretty good insight into our accents. Yours was close but you focused on it too much. A lotta ah ackzent cahmes frahm ah nah thinkin' abou' ah woodz. It's like a lazy New Yorker accent by way of Cambridge.
General rule is if a word ends with an "r", drop it (with specific exceptions where a "v" or "w" sound is substituted, such as "chowdew" instead of "chowder", unlike Boston which to my knowledge always drops no "matta" what), and add an "r" to words ending in "a" such as "pizzer" or "idear". In older generations of the accent (say, my parents' generation and older, but not necessarily anyone my age), "r" is also sometimes substituted in the middle of words for "w" or "v", such as the name "Chevyl" (Cheryl) or "tewn" (turn). Very important w the RI accent is also different words not used elsewhere, even Boston. Fun fact: due to the amount of words used only in RI and not other places, RI is the only American accent to be technically considered a dialect of English rather than just an accent of it. These include bubbler ("bubblah") instead of drinking fountain, bunking ("bunkin'") school instead of skipping school, and cabinet ("caeb'neh'") instead of a frappe or milkshake. This along with the adverb "wicked" and the plural "yous" (pronounced "yiz") makes the RI dialect a unique animal indeed. Unfortunately, this dialect is seen as lower class or less educated in some parts of RI, so many deny it or say it sounds "fake". I assure you it's real and, after living in NYC for the last 7 years and pretty wicked pissah of an accent, I get made fun of constantly for it. Anyways, this was a good first try!
born here, and had no idea that we're the ones who say bunking school. The heavy accent really is more prevalent in the cities where older (not elderly, but including the elderly) people live. I live more or less across the bay from Newport, and while my father from Providence sounds like Joe Pesci, I have more of a common accent. Although I have been made fun of when I traveled to the great lakes area of Ohio. lol
I only lived in RI for a little over a year when I was around five, but I still maintain bits and pieces of the RI accent. God, I miss ordering the Boston Cremes at Dunkin' Donuts.
@@narratormatt Not sure. I haven't been to a DD's in a long time. Judging from the menu, the Bostons have been replaced by the Bavarians. Not sure if they're the same or not, or if it's just a West Coast thing. I'll have to try one , one of these days.
@@narratormatt I double checked. Apparently, They're still serving Boston Kremes. That's a relief. I was about to go on a state-wide murder spree. Lol. I'll have to get one, one of these days. I miss those delicious creamy bastards somethin' fierce.
Matt, I have lived in RI for 12 1/2 years but originally from Brooklyn NY. I thought you got some stuff correct but RI’ers all have different sounds based on which area they’re from. You’ll have to listen to the different nuances of RI’ers. Newporters sound different than someone from South County and people from Cranston and Federal Hill which is in providence sound different and then you get the real thick old timey accents from the swamp Yankees who live in the more rural parts of the state like Coventry, Exeter, and Hope Valley. Then there’s folks from the east bay (Aquidneck island) that aren’t from Newport but live “on the island” also sound different. There are some similarities though amongst most RI’ers which you did cover in your tutorial but you didn’t mention adding and dropping of the letter R like in the word idea people here say idear 🤷🏻♀️ but also the r in the word nurse is very prevalent here and it drives me crazy. I’m wondering if the reason they do that is due to mostly an English background? Because that is the only other accent I can liken that to. It’s really bizarre. They say it as an H instead of R like nuhse. I’d like to check out some of your other tutorials. I have been to around 46 states in the US and love listening to and trying to mimic various accents. You have a cool job btw
I lived in the city of Rhode Island and that's how I talk most of my life. My teachers made me talk that, they said that's the correct way to speak at least where's I stayed at.
Lived there for seven years, its spot on but it's always slightly different depending on the person, some people don't even have the accent and they're native there so it depends more on who you're around when you're growing up I'd say.
I know someone from RI. He always says "idear", "tooken" (instead of taken), "wooder" (instead of water), "galf" (instead of golf), he says "guy" instead "dude" or "bro" (like "what's up guy") sometimes switches out r for w (explorer would be pronounced "explowah") 😂 I love that dude's accent
If you're still taking requests for accents, how about Norwegian? I've recently found a really talented musician here on TH-cam who goes by PelleK, mainly specialising in metal music, who hails from Norway, and his accent is really neat and foreign to me. I've got a couple things down about the accent, like how a W always turns at least halfway, if not fully, into a V, and the Rs are a bit more pronounced than in English (I think...?), but I want to be able to better learn this accent. I feel like there's a recent revival of Norse culture happening, too, like TV shows about Vikings and such, so the accent might help you, too, in reading audiobooks, if that's the case. Thanks for the awesome tutorials! If nothing else, they're a fantastic place to start, and always really helpful.
You're quite off on the prevalence of that "ooaw" sound for a short o followed by a consonant. Professional linguists note that there is no cot / caught merger in RI; in other words, cot is pronounced "kaht" and caught is pronounced "kooawt" (and so is the word court). Plus I've seen TH-cam accent tag videos where RI speakers pronounce the word probably with the short o.
I am a Rhode Islander. I have lived in Northern Florida for 15 years...accent has not diminished. I add that caught and court are the same. Instead of no sir- no sa. Stahp instead of stop. Park- pahk
Its pretty good. We speak much faster. We say our Rs as almost vs and we add Rs to the ends of words that dont have them, like idea (idear). but not bad
I cannot, CANNOT stand when people add r's. Lina = Leener, Hannah = Hanner, idear, pizzer, and the list goes on. It's more of a city accent though, very Providence.
All of the RI’s I know drop the Rs completely. RI’s also talk fast and blend words together. A tricky one: produce is praaduce. Since I moved away I worked hard to drop the awful accent!
I was born, raised and still live in little Rhodey. I love it. Coffee milk is a nectar from the gods, and nothing is over a 45 minutes drive. But we don't sound like Family Guy xD there's a lot of people who speak like that, but most of us just speak normally lol.
I want to travel and live elsewhere, but I can't do it. 20 minutes from like 3 beaches, 25 min from the city, and I live in a town with trees and lawns and parks (read: suburb, if you're from anywhere else in the country lol)
Not bad Matt, you made some good observations. Check out TH-cam videos of Arlene Violet, former RI Attorney General and longtime Providence radio host. She has a classic RI accent.
I was born in RI and grew up in Woonsocket until my family moved to northern NJ just 15 min outside of NYC when I was 7. I'll never forget my first day in elementary school when I asked to go to the bubblah and all the kids started laughing. Fast forward nearly 30 years and I have a PhD in sociolinguistics, go figure. In fact, I'm starting a new research project on RI English. The RI accent is interesting because it has more in common with oldschool NY than Boston despite being geographically closer. But this has a lot to do with historic migration patterns, among other reasons. There's a lot of cool overlaps in vocabulary and pronunciation with different parts of England and the US found in this little part of New England. Of course, accents are constantly changing and the youth don't speak the same way now as they did generations ago. In any case, I'll be visiting family and friends in lil Rhody this coming Wednesday for a week or so. If anybody is interested in being interviewed on the Rho Dielan' accent let me know! I would love to hear about your experiences with language, not to mention what the RI accent means to you :)
I'm from Rhode island. Have family from Houston. I remember not thinking they sounded all that weird. But my cousins were BLOWN away by my RI accent lol. " Y'all don't pronounce your Rs" lol
Native Rhode Islander here with a semi-strong accent. I would say "O+consonants" is more like the annoying AEM sound of "AM". Like a New Yorker. As in "Put the dishes AH-N T-AH-P of the table." Where as Boston and Maine would be more like "AWN TAWP". More examples, I say the word "GOLF" like "GAHLF". Saying FLAHRIDA vs FLORIDA is to me the biggest give away that you're from RI. I've never heard it anywhere else like that. Words that are plural and end in ERS change to IZ, As in "sawsage and PEPPIZ" and "make sure you take ya "WORKIZ CAHMP!" (Worker's Comp). AR sounds in the middle of words are all AH but I feel like AR at the end of a word gets pronounced. Think of the word "COT", the bed you sleep on. Say it that exact way for the Rhode Island "CART". Same as "DOCK", and RI "DARK!" For words ending in AR there is no consistency! For example I'd say CEDAR "see-der" and MOLAR "mo-ler" but FAMILIAR as in "he doesn't look familiah to me". Hope this helps! You've got a good "stAHt!" 😂😜
callawaysam I’m from NY but have lived in RI 12 1/2 years. I think the A sound in put the dishes AntAp sounds more like a Chicago Accent. Like Fiona in shameless. But everything else you said about the RI accent is spot on
We just add and drop letters where ever we want especially 'r' lol we give no fucks. Not all of RI has the same accent though, Cranston and Johnston are pretty strong
Honestly all of these quirks are dying. Most of the cities are actually full of people who speak english as a second language(at least the youth). The last people with this heavy an accent were my grandparents. My parents only occasionally drop r. I have to say the only unique part left is when we add a random r to the end of a word, like idea becomes idear.
If you want to hear the stereotypical family guy type accent you have to come to East Providence/Pawtucket, or just the Providence metro area. It’s honestly hilarious, I’m born and raised in Pawtucket (3/23/1998) and you will hear the thick accent from people that are older and it’s so funny.
Dude, wish you had practiced some RI lingo, like grindehs. Cabinits. Takin yoah shirhts to the cleansers. "Salid bah an assoahted dessehrts" (That was from the Menu Line at Brown back in the day, bless you Mrs. Glass) I loved Prov and RI in college, and that accent is totally in my head. Cheeehs with my cawfee milk hah!
Sorry Matt, ALL of this is WRONG! You did not get any of the dialect correct!I I am from Cranston and you would be viewed as a tourist, talking like this.
People think we sound like Peter Griffin lol. With that said, we do weird shit to words. Idear, Pizzer, you'z (lots of people do this one, its awful lol), etc.
Ok, so you've got the Warwick accent *almost * down, now try other cities in Rhode Island. Try Craaaanstin, now, or WOONsacket. Newport, where we, like, dude, say the R's aaaaannnd stuff? East Bay RI... Foah when Long Island ain't loud or fast enough. Just stick to Federal Hill, Provdinse, alla da mobstahs ah deyah. Like Disney Wold, tellin ya. The Cranston Whine and Woonsocket Grammer deserve their own episodes. Also do New Bedford. Richest fishing port in the world, poorest city in Massachusetts.
As small as Rhode Island (Ruh Dyland) is, the accents vary around the state. There's no one RI accent. There's lots of ethnic influence in the accent from the state's history of manufacturing in the 1900's. What's strange is the state is still 2/3rds rural with 420+ miles of coastline.
I'm from RI and this is too nasally. You are mixing it up with NY. Here are some RI words - Tawk vs talk, staw vs store, cah vs car, pok vs park, thare vs there.
Jenny Morel you forgot Wahwick instead of Warwick and Cahventry instead of Coventry. We also say bubbler instead of water fountain, jimmies instead of sprinkles (I forgot some other things). There is also sometimes a er or a ah at the end of a name like Petah instead of Peter and Kayler instead of Kayla.
In Rhode Island the city that every holds up as having the most accented speach is Cranston (super nasal ponunciation Craaanst'n). In Cranston, when there is an "R" in the middle of a word, where you can't really turn it into an "AH" sound, (typically this would be in a case where a sylable other than the first starts with an "R" sound) it oven get replaced by a swallowed "V" sound. Almost a combination of "V" and "R" simlar to the "RLD" thing that happens with Japanese pronunciations Flavida is the shining example of this. Say Florida as nasal-y as you can but replace the "R" with a "V" and you'll be pretty close. This is the quintessential Rhode Island acceent: th-cam.com/video/fZqXIzs6pxs/w-d-xo.html When she says "sincerity" at 0:21 in the video she almost make it into a "v". I looked around the internet quite a bit and couldn't find a great example of it because it occurs in only a limited number of words. In any case, here are a few examples of some of the most RI accents: th-cam.com/video/SQ55_XV_HPU/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/ZiqJmnLkZWY/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/mKcU3LrMo24/w-d-xo.html
I think your problem here was you were mixing two separate accents in Rhode Island and you came off as sound like a Kennedy. Believe it or not even though we're a little state, people in Northern RI (Woonsocket, Cumberland, Lincoln) talk differently than people in Cranston.
I’m not sure if this is just a professional decision for you, as a narrator, but you’re putting too much emphasis on the (t). Without you - withouchue - Withou( ) you. We would typically drop the (t) there.
This is so offensive!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I am from Rhode Island, and nobody sounds like that unless they're doing it for comedic relief. 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
I was born and lived in RI for 36 years and he absolutely nails it. You've got a bias because you hear people around you talking like you and just don't think about how weird our accent sounds.
+Isabelle Sharp Alright, I've lived in RI all my life, born here, the whole deal. Have you noticed that while we new englanders drop r's, Rhode Islanders will sometimes add an r? Pizza == Pizzer, Lina == Leener, Hannah == Hanner, Idea == Idear, etc. It's real, real bad.
he is definitely trying to do Rhode Island, but All i hear is an attempt at the stereotypical Cranston. i give you 6/10 clam cakes cause i think you got the "Always" pretty decent
Yeah, it was more a cranston/johnston accent. The real challenge is to do the swamp yankee one from the rural areas. Now THATS an accent. Sounds completely different from the cities. Its amazing considering how small a state we are.
Any Rhode Islanders here
E.P right here
The bucket
layla yea all 7 of us
Yeah
layla Here..
Don't forget when we change idea to idear (I don't do this, my mom does). It's very important.
I've heard pizza pronounced "peet-zer"
Lmao same my mom said soader and Idear it's so funny to here and I make fun of her because of that😂😂😂
My grandma says "Californier" 😂
Lol I'm from Portsmouth and yeah Cranston has its own accent
And Florida is Flahrida
I've heard a lot of subtly different Rhode Island accents. Its a state situated around a bay and though small I think there's a fair bit of separation between east and west, and Providence and Newport. In addition its a state with lots of immigrants. Whether their families were Portuguese, Italian, French, Polish, British or maybe Irish, can I think also be an influence. I came on here to hear what my relatives sound like as half my family are from Rhode Island and the accent reminds me of childhood memories. They sometimes have very heavy accents depending on the occasion and whether they're around lots of people from other states they don't know that well (in which case they might tone it down, or not care at all and flaunt it depending). This isn't quite what they sound like but the al- in 'always' did remind me.
a buttload of irish-italians here. It's actually funny imo.
I live in Narragansett (which is almost all Irish and Itallian with some native americans) and the only accent you really hear here is that Rs in the middle of words get dropped and random Rs will get added in on the end of words (Idear)
@@__sm1441 at least in the end it all evens out. 😂
Lived in RI for 25 years! Spot on! Great job!
Few! Always good to have an ally with one of my more "controversial" vids.
I'm a Rhode Islander, and I wanted to let you know that your RI dialect is on the thicker side. Most of the people that I grew up with/know do not talk that exaggerated. The key word is most. I find that the areas around Pawtucket tend to have the dialect the thickest (also would like to note this is not the rule). Nice job over all.
Hey I’m travelling over to Rhode Island for a few weeks from England, do you think I’ll struggle to understand the accent?
I have lived in Rhode Island now for nearly 9 years, and this is it!! Two things I would add: idea is nearly universally pronounced idear, and drawer is draw, while draw is drawr.
Friends and fellow humans, please do not take offense when people notice a regional dialect that you don't hear because you are used to it. I'm sure you hear things in my western American speech that I can't hear. Be proud of your local speech patterns. They're part of what makes life diverse and interesting!
Lmao I've never realized that whole draw thing I do the same thing
I totally agree!!
what do you call a dear with no eyes? no idear.
It was hilarious hearing you try the Rhode Island accent bc i am from Rhode Island. Some things sounded off, but other wise it was fine. It also depends on what part of RI you're from with the dialect of the accent.
That is more like a bad South County accent. You need to hang out at a Dunkin Donuts in Cranston.
Hahahaha sounds like a verifiable paradise .... im stuck being out of place in the midwest ......maybe in retirement nice tip!
Y’all-
I was in the Italian part of Providence, and I noticed an accent about halfway toward Boston.
Tell us more! How did it become more clear that there was an accent?
My relatives up in Rhode Island definitely sound like this! I don't have much of an accent, but sometimes my parents have a strong accent.
Very cool, so inspirational, looking forward to new hampshire
Wonderful. Do you know where to find it?
Not the state, the video :) I already have it up, to some controversy ("there is no NH accent!")
very accurate, an interesting fact about Rhode Island accents is that some people (generally families and very small communities) tend to pick and choose different words to become accented, especially as you get closer to Mass
Huh, can you give some examples?
@@narratormatt the hard "R" to "ah" change is seen more in and around Providence and northern RI, Newport has a more New York "Kennedy" style accent, and I've noticed it's even different by age too, older Aquidneck Islanders actually add a hard "R" to words that don't have one like "idea" becoming "idear"
Born and raised in NJ. Lived in Boston (North Shore) for 14 years. Now live in RI.
This man gets it!
Why thank you!
This is really helpful for a small, from Rhode Island character I had in a recent book -- appreciate your video!
I'm so glad. What are you working on these days?
@@narratormatt Big Swiss by Jen Beagin : )
Matt there’s something else you might want to know about RI they have words here that no one has in any other part of the country (another commenter mention a few of these) but you should definitely add them to your tutorial. Two examples of these words are bubblah, (bubbler which is a water fountain) and cabinet which is a milkshake.
There's a great book by Mark Patinkin called the Rhode Island Dictionary. If you can get ahold of it you'll get a pretty good insight into our accents. Yours was close but you focused on it too much. A lotta ah ackzent cahmes frahm ah nah thinkin' abou' ah woodz. It's like a lazy New Yorker accent by way of Cambridge.
Zidders Roofurry exactly
a cross between bronx and maine when I was 6 my neighbor was from RI and she would say rode dialin.
Yeah, I've noticed that merge between New England and New York as well.
General rule is if a word ends with an "r", drop it (with specific exceptions where a "v" or "w" sound is substituted, such as "chowdew" instead of "chowder", unlike Boston which to my knowledge always drops no "matta" what), and add an "r" to words ending in "a" such as "pizzer" or "idear". In older generations of the accent (say, my parents' generation and older, but not necessarily anyone my age), "r" is also sometimes substituted in the middle of words for "w" or "v", such as the name "Chevyl" (Cheryl) or "tewn" (turn).
Very important w the RI accent is also different words not used elsewhere, even Boston. Fun fact: due to the amount of words used only in RI and not other places, RI is the only American accent to be technically considered a dialect of English rather than just an accent of it. These include bubbler ("bubblah") instead of drinking fountain, bunking ("bunkin'") school instead of skipping school, and cabinet ("caeb'neh'") instead of a frappe or milkshake. This along with the adverb "wicked" and the plural "yous" (pronounced "yiz") makes the RI dialect a unique animal indeed.
Unfortunately, this dialect is seen as lower class or less educated in some parts of RI, so many deny it or say it sounds "fake". I assure you it's real and, after living in NYC for the last 7 years and pretty wicked pissah of an accent, I get made fun of constantly for it.
Anyways, this was a good first try!
born here, and had no idea that we're the ones who say bunking school. The heavy accent really is more prevalent in the cities where older (not elderly, but including the elderly) people live. I live more or less across the bay from Newport, and while my father from Providence sounds like Joe Pesci, I have more of a common accent. Although I have been made fun of when I traveled to the great lakes area of Ohio. lol
Born & raised in RI & though I agree, some of this was aw-ffensive, overall you pretty much nailed it. ;)
I only lived in RI for a little over a year when I was around five, but I still maintain bits and pieces of the RI accent. God, I miss ordering the Boston Cremes at Dunkin' Donuts.
Wait, they don't sell them, anymore?
@@narratormatt Not sure. I haven't been to a DD's in a long time. Judging from the menu, the Bostons have been replaced by the Bavarians. Not sure if they're the same or not, or if it's just a West Coast thing. I'll have to try one , one of these days.
@@ZIM626 I thought bavarian was just Boston Creme without the chocolate icing.
@@narratormatt I double checked. Apparently, They're still serving Boston Kremes. That's a relief. I was about to go on a state-wide murder spree. Lol. I'll have to get one, one of these days. I miss those delicious creamy bastards somethin' fierce.
Rhode island has the best accent.
Ok I’m from RI and that was actually pretty good ngl
I think otherwise
Matt, I have lived in RI for 12 1/2 years but originally from Brooklyn NY. I thought you got some stuff correct but RI’ers all have different sounds based on which area they’re from. You’ll have to listen to the different nuances of RI’ers. Newporters sound different than someone from South County and people from Cranston and Federal Hill which is in providence sound different and then you get the real thick old timey accents from the swamp Yankees who live in the more rural parts of the state like Coventry, Exeter, and Hope Valley. Then there’s folks from the east bay (Aquidneck island) that aren’t from Newport but live “on the island” also sound different. There are some similarities though amongst most RI’ers which you did cover in your tutorial but you didn’t mention adding and dropping of the letter R like in the word idea people here say idear 🤷🏻♀️ but also the r in the word nurse is very prevalent here and it drives me crazy. I’m wondering if the reason they do that is due to mostly an English background? Because that is the only other accent I can liken that to. It’s really bizarre. They say it as an H instead of R like nuhse. I’d like to check out some of your other tutorials. I have been to around 46 states in the US and love listening to and trying to mimic various accents. You have a cool job btw
Lol I’m from ri living in AZ and still have my RI accent !
YO same from ri living in az lol
2:14 starting to demonstrate Rhode Island Accent
Hell yasssssssss thank you so much for your knowledge. I love 44 lol my husband is from Rhode Island
Wonderful.
I live in ri, someone who doesn't live in ri do we really sound like this it sounds so weird
late, but you do, yeah
I lived in the city of Rhode Island and that's how I talk most of my life. My teachers made me talk that, they said that's the correct way to speak at least where's I stayed at.
Rhode island is a state lol
Lived there for seven years, its spot on but it's always slightly different depending on the person, some people don't even have the accent and they're native there so it depends more on who you're around when you're growing up I'd say.
skittle63099ify I lost some of mine when I lived outside the state. It still comes out when I’m excited or pissed off..
I'm a proud RI native. Not a bad job! Naht a bad jahb. xo
Sounds good!
I know someone from RI. He always says "idear", "tooken" (instead of taken), "wooder" (instead of water), "galf" (instead of golf), he says "guy" instead "dude" or "bro" (like "what's up guy") sometimes switches out r for w (explorer would be pronounced "explowah") 😂 I love that dude's accent
Sounds like a child talking
I don’t know how to spell it but there’s no r sound in most words in ri
Yeah for example you would drive ya cah to the bah (instead of drive your car to the bar)
Yo mike u from ri if u are wanna meet up in Sunoco chepachet
Some Connecticut natives (especially ones in New London county) talk like Rhode Islanders
We have a wonderful accent, beautiful and thick like a bowl of chowduh
I hear ya. That sentiment ain't a buncha gahbage.
If you're still taking requests for accents, how about Norwegian? I've recently found a really talented musician here on TH-cam who goes by PelleK, mainly specialising in metal music, who hails from Norway, and his accent is really neat and foreign to me. I've got a couple things down about the accent, like how a W always turns at least halfway, if not fully, into a V, and the Rs are a bit more pronounced than in English (I think...?), but I want to be able to better learn this accent. I feel like there's a recent revival of Norse culture happening, too, like TV shows about Vikings and such, so the accent might help you, too, in reading audiobooks, if that's the case.
Thanks for the awesome tutorials! If nothing else, they're a fantastic place to start, and always really helpful.
Depending on the generation and which part of RI sometimes we add an unnecessary ‘R’ lol like ‘soder’ instead of ‘soda’
Why, When its spelled sodA...
@@ceeceetracey9839 Are you naturally always so dense and obvious? Or did you just decide to be that way today?
@@raynem6587 Dense and obvious? If I'm dense and the answer to my question is OBVIOUS, can you answer it???
You're quite off on the prevalence of that "ooaw" sound for a short o followed by a consonant. Professional linguists note that there is no cot / caught merger in RI; in other words, cot is pronounced "kaht" and caught is pronounced "kooawt" (and so is the word court). Plus I've seen TH-cam accent tag videos where RI speakers pronounce the word probably with the short o.
I am a Rhode Islander. I have lived in Northern Florida for 15 years...accent has not diminished. I add that caught and court are the same. Instead of no sir- no sa. Stahp instead of stop. Park- pahk
Its pretty good. We speak much faster. We say our Rs as almost vs and we add Rs to the ends of words that dont have them, like idea (idear). but not bad
I cannot, CANNOT stand when people add r's. Lina = Leener, Hannah = Hanner, idear, pizzer, and the list goes on. It's more of a city accent though, very Providence.
+Matt Hayness
I have a question. Do Lynette Scavo and Bree Van de Kamp from Desperate Housewives speak with this accent?
I've never watched the show... anyone else know?
The fictional show desperate housewives is in California.
All of the RI’s I know drop the Rs completely. RI’s also talk fast and blend words together. A tricky one: produce is praaduce. Since I moved away I worked hard to drop the awful accent!
Sounds pretty authentic. He should mention adding “r”s where there aren’t any. Pizza - “petzer”
Yes, one of the best tips I got since this vid. Have you seen the follow up vid to this one?
I thought the rhode island accent was disappearing until I watched Rhode Island cops in Live PD.
Yeah, it can surprise you, can't it?
I was born, raised and still live in little Rhodey. I love it. Coffee milk is a nectar from the gods, and nothing is over a 45 minutes drive. But we don't sound like Family Guy xD there's a lot of people who speak like that, but most of us just speak normally lol.
I want to travel and live elsewhere, but I can't do it. 20 minutes from like 3 beaches, 25 min from the city, and I live in a town with trees and lawns and parks (read: suburb, if you're from anywhere else in the country lol)
People in Providence have an accent with the "a" sound being really long and high.
Not bad Matt, you made some good observations. Check out TH-cam videos of Arlene Violet, former RI Attorney General and longtime Providence radio host. She has a classic RI accent.
A lill' bit more work on 'Phtangh back throat plosives and silent 'Kh(k^3) consonants and you'll be on the right track
I was born in RI and grew up in Woonsocket until my family moved to northern NJ just 15 min outside of NYC when I was 7. I'll never forget my first day in elementary school when I asked to go to the bubblah and all the kids started laughing. Fast forward nearly 30 years and I have a PhD in sociolinguistics, go figure.
In fact, I'm starting a new research project on RI English. The RI accent is interesting because it has more in common with oldschool NY than Boston despite being geographically closer. But this has a lot to do with historic migration patterns, among other reasons. There's a lot of cool overlaps in vocabulary and pronunciation with different parts of England and the US found in this little part of New England. Of course, accents are constantly changing and the youth don't speak the same way now as they did generations ago.
In any case, I'll be visiting family and friends in lil Rhody this coming Wednesday for a week or so. If anybody is interested in being interviewed on the Rho Dielan' accent let me know! I would love to hear about your experiences with language, not to mention what the RI accent means to you :)
So good to hear from you, Matthew. May I share this reach out on Facebook?
I'm from Rhode island. Have family from Houston. I remember not thinking they sounded all that weird. But my cousins were BLOWN away by my RI accent lol. " Y'all don't pronounce your Rs" lol
Ah nuts. If your family had taken from old deep south, they wouldn't be pronouncing they "r"s eithuh.
Native Rhode Islander here with a semi-strong accent. I would say "O+consonants" is more like the annoying AEM sound of "AM". Like a New Yorker. As in "Put the dishes AH-N T-AH-P of the table." Where as Boston and Maine would be more like "AWN TAWP". More examples, I say the word "GOLF" like "GAHLF". Saying FLAHRIDA vs FLORIDA is to me the biggest give away that you're from RI. I've never heard it anywhere else like that. Words that are plural and end in ERS change to IZ, As in "sawsage and PEPPIZ" and "make sure you take ya "WORKIZ CAHMP!" (Worker's Comp). AR sounds in the middle of words are all AH but I feel like AR at the end of a word gets pronounced. Think of the word "COT", the bed you sleep on. Say it that exact way for the Rhode Island "CART". Same as "DOCK", and RI "DARK!" For words ending in AR there is no consistency! For example I'd say CEDAR "see-der" and MOLAR "mo-ler" but FAMILIAR as in "he doesn't look familiah to me". Hope this helps! You've got a good "stAHt!" 😂😜
callawaysam I’m from NY but have lived in RI 12 1/2 years. I think the A sound in put the dishes AntAp sounds more like a Chicago Accent. Like Fiona in shameless. But everything else you said about the RI accent is spot on
That flahrida one is familiar to me! My dad is native to Baltimore and one of the most distinct things he says to me is saying orange like ahrange.
Yes I'm in Rhode Island- been here all my life and we don't bring our back molars out and squeak talk! U betta learn b4 u talk
Well, alright. Do me a favor and check out the Rhode Island Revisited video. See if it's an improvement.
We just add and drop letters where ever we want especially 'r' lol we give no fucks. Not all of RI has the same accent though, Cranston and Johnston are pretty strong
strongest** I live in NK and I used to laugh at their accents in highschool during sporting events lol.
Ri native here...drop any R and add it on the end of words that don't need it...like ider and linder put the cider in the windeh.
I'm from south county and we talk like normal Americans. We only have cabinets and stuffies every summer! Del's is friggin' based tho.
Tell me more of the cabinets and stuffs of which you speak!
Honestly all of these quirks are dying. Most of the cities are actually full of people who speak english as a second language(at least the youth).
The last people with this heavy an accent were my grandparents. My parents only occasionally drop r. I have to say the only unique part left is when we add a random r to the end of a word, like idea becomes idear.
If you want to hear the stereotypical family guy type accent you have to come to East Providence/Pawtucket, or just the Providence metro area. It’s honestly hilarious, I’m born and raised in Pawtucket (3/23/1998) and you will hear the thick accent from people that are older and it’s so funny.
So is the RHode Island accent similar to Lois from Family Guy?
That's the one. Quahog is supposedly in Rhode Island
Sthlm By Night quahog is a clam not a real city
bullhurley74
i know. But it's *supposed* to be
Pretty close.
peter griffin
Dude, wish you had practiced some RI lingo, like grindehs. Cabinits. Takin yoah shirhts to the cleansers. "Salid bah an assoahted dessehrts" (That was from the Menu Line at Brown back in the day, bless you Mrs. Glass) I loved Prov and RI in college, and that accent is totally in my head. Cheeehs with my cawfee milk hah!
Sorry Matt, ALL of this is WRONG! You did not get any of the dialect correct!I
I am from Cranston and you would be viewed as a tourist, talking like this.
Providence residents sound like this 😂 I live there and I was thought to pronunciate words like this
I was born and bred in Cranston. Sorry, I don't agree with you. This guy is just off. He doesn't have the correct inflection.
People think we sound like Peter Griffin lol. With that said, we do weird shit to words. Idear, Pizzer, you'z (lots of people do this one, its awful lol), etc.
Cranston has it's own dialect. Cause it's an armpit of the state ;)
Same man
RI accent: I've been workin' fah 10 owiz, I lost my papiz & not far nutin, but I'm cravin' binaniz!
Got me good 😂😂
Man just taught us to speak Peter Griffin
Ok, so you've got the Warwick accent *almost * down, now try other cities in Rhode Island. Try Craaaanstin, now, or WOONsacket. Newport, where we, like, dude, say the R's aaaaannnd stuff? East Bay RI... Foah when Long Island ain't loud or fast enough. Just stick to Federal Hill, Provdinse, alla da mobstahs ah deyah. Like Disney Wold, tellin ya.
The Cranston Whine and Woonsocket Grammer deserve their own episodes. Also do New Bedford. Richest fishing port in the world, poorest city in Massachusetts.
I love my RI accent
I was born in ri but moved and never got the accent Kinda wished I did
*Occasionally* I feel that way about Downeast Maine.
That’s just northern Rhode Island (Providence, North warwick, and Pawtucket) where I’m from no one talks like that
#RiverSide
#EastProvidence
#Townie
There’s a lot of Italians in Rhode Island
As small as Rhode Island (Ruh Dyland) is, the accents vary around the state. There's no one RI accent. There's lots of ethnic influence in the accent from the state's history of manufacturing in the 1900's. What's strange is the state is still 2/3rds rural with 420+ miles of coastline.
420miles still amazes me. Lots of cliffs though...
Its glorious mostly cuz the people
Mirror becomes mirrah
I'm from RI and this is too nasally. You are mixing it up with NY. Here are some RI words - Tawk vs talk, staw vs store, cah vs car, pok vs park, thare vs there.
Jenny Morel you forgot Wahwick instead of Warwick and Cahventry instead of Coventry. We also say bubbler instead of water fountain, jimmies instead of sprinkles (I forgot some other things). There is also sometimes a er or a ah at the end of a name like Petah instead of Peter and Kayler instead of Kayla.
The first highlight is not very accurate.... Maybe if you go to the providence area but we don't sound like the first one. The rest are okay.
The most Rhode Island-y pronunciation has to be Florida; it is pronounced Flahvida and that is spoken almost entirely throungh the sinuses
Tell me more about the use of the v
In Rhode Island the city that every holds up as having the most accented speach is Cranston (super nasal ponunciation Craaanst'n). In Cranston, when there is an "R" in the middle of a word, where you can't really turn it into an "AH" sound, (typically this would be in a case where a sylable other than the first starts with an "R" sound) it oven get replaced by a swallowed "V" sound. Almost a combination of "V" and "R" simlar to the "RLD" thing that happens with Japanese pronunciations Flavida is the shining example of this. Say Florida as nasal-y as you can but replace the "R" with a "V" and you'll be pretty close.
This is the quintessential Rhode Island acceent:
th-cam.com/video/fZqXIzs6pxs/w-d-xo.html
When she says "sincerity" at 0:21 in the video she almost make it into a "v". I looked around the internet quite a bit and couldn't find a great example of it because it occurs in only a limited number of words.
In any case, here are a few examples of some of the most RI accents:
th-cam.com/video/SQ55_XV_HPU/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/ZiqJmnLkZWY/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/mKcU3LrMo24/w-d-xo.html
Absolutely fantastic, @@mischevioussage
I think your problem here was you were mixing two separate accents in Rhode Island and you came off as sound like a Kennedy. Believe it or not even though we're a little state, people in Northern RI (Woonsocket, Cumberland, Lincoln) talk differently than people in Cranston.
Read basques catoon book
Good morning Julia
This guy is from Maine? That’s a similar accent, so he must be familiar
Eh, you'd be surprised how far away close-seeming communities can be.
@@narratormatt A’yuh! I’m from RI but spent many summers in Waldoboro, ME!
As a RI person who grew up there this kindas sounds like a lazy New York accent. No one I knew speaks like that. But still entertaining to watch.
this sound like cranston
we ain sound like that
Peter Griffin.
Yup, that's the majority feedback.
I'm pretty sure you only studied one spot of Rhode Island cause i don't sound like this XD
I think I talk ok 🙂❤️
That don't seem like any boastin' gahbage ta me.
@@narratormatt 😎❤️
I’m not sure if this is just a professional decision for you, as a narrator, but you’re putting too much emphasis on the (t). Without you - withouchue - Withou( ) you. We would typically drop the (t) there.
Yup! You mean heir
Pawtucket ri 💯
Just do an impression of (any/some of) the Family Guy characters
Oh wait he already did!
No. Peter Griffen has a Mass accent. Seth MacFarlane is not a Rhode Islander and his accent sucks.
Sounds more like a Maine-ish than RI.
RI sounds like a lighter Boston and less hard NY accent
Huh... So the NY sounds Maine-ish to you?
Oo-lways starts with "A"
So I'm learning :)
@@narratormatt great video. i just couldn't let that go ._.
i wore pants on tuesday ;(
This is so offensive!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I am from Rhode Island, and nobody sounds like that unless they're doing it for comedic relief. 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Yeah I'm from Rhode Island myself and I've heard no one say stuff like this
yes exactly.
Depending a spot you're in I live in Prov, and I was taught to pronounce words this way.
I was born and lived in RI for 36 years and he absolutely nails it. You've got a bias because you hear people around you talking like you and just don't think about how weird our accent sounds.
+Isabelle Sharp Alright, I've lived in RI all my life, born here, the whole deal. Have you noticed that while we new englanders drop r's, Rhode Islanders will sometimes add an r? Pizza == Pizzer, Lina == Leener, Hannah == Hanner, Idea == Idear, etc. It's real, real bad.
Yeah I’m from Rhode Island and I don’t have that accent
Nobody around here talks like this. Nobody.
he is definitely trying to do Rhode Island, but All i hear is an attempt at the stereotypical Cranston. i give you 6/10 clam cakes cause i think you got the "Always" pretty decent
Yeah, it was more a cranston/johnston accent. The real challenge is to do the swamp yankee one from the rural areas. Now THATS an accent. Sounds completely different from the cities. Its amazing considering how small a state we are.
Not for nutin
Always is awyays no l sound
Oops aways
One word explains RI accent. Coffee = cawfee..