The Mid-Atlantic accent, or Transatlantic accent,[1][2][3] is a consciously learned accent of English, fashionably used by the late 19th-century and early 20th-century American upper class and entertainment industry, which blended together features regarded as the most prestigious from both American and British English (specifically Received Pronunciation). ( https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2013/08/the-rise-and-fall-of-katharine-hepburns-fake-accent/278505/ Thered be lots of h-dropping the pronunciation of words like human or huge as you-man and yuge (think Bernie Sanders) and plenty of that classic Brooklynite charm found in phrases like ovah theah deah. In fact, the only places youd be likely to run into the Trans-Atlantic Accent at all might be the Upper West Side or other affluent neighborhoods. [63] Humorist Tom Lehrer lampooned this accent in a 1945 satirical tribute to his alma mater, Harvard University, called "Fight Fiercely, Harvard". NP%q[l1mF#;]'6ijkWP jXkxq l@U$Kq >q${>OR[-@l- 8u:Bp;?Yuea)ILDX}xN{4hvq|t[[Q1/m&=>Gi0,Ar=VG^; endobj And I cant even find a pair of earrings to match this . stream PEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPEPAF0q^ xEmy*]DfE0@%A8VXe:e'&ZC-i$ckcJ mf{}:(i&,7Y{$"9>XyF9 ?s4./Un.wf. Mmn)^L+ All monologues are property and copyright of their owners. [7] More recently, the term "mid-Atlantic accent" can also refer to any accent with a perceived mixture of American and British characteristics. ._1x9diBHPBP-hL1JiwUwJ5J{font-size:14px;font-weight:500;line-height:18px;color:#ff585b;padding-left:3px;padding-right:24px}._2B0OHMLKb9TXNdd9g5Ere-,._1xKxnscCn2PjBiXhorZef4{height:16px;padding-right:4px;vertical-align:top}.icon._1LLqoNXrOsaIkMtOuTBmO5{height:20px;vertical-align:middle;padding-right:8px}.QB2Yrr8uihZVRhvwrKuMS{height:18px;padding-right:8px;vertical-align:top}._3w_KK8BUvCMkCPWZVsZQn0{font-size:14px;font-weight:500;line-height:18px;color:var(--newCommunityTheme-actionIcon)}._3w_KK8BUvCMkCPWZVsZQn0 ._1LLqoNXrOsaIkMtOuTBmO5,._3w_KK8BUvCMkCPWZVsZQn0 ._2B0OHMLKb9TXNdd9g5Ere-,._3w_KK8BUvCMkCPWZVsZQn0 ._1xKxnscCn2PjBiXhorZef4,._3w_KK8BUvCMkCPWZVsZQn0 .QB2Yrr8uihZVRhvwrKuMS{fill:var(--newCommunityTheme-actionIcon)} Originating from the American upper class, the Transatlantic accent was taught in American schools for actors right up into the early 1900s. Soon many actors, including Hepburn, were taking elocution classes to train their voices for the big screen. ( ( (With fake accent.) They go on to have wild, crazy, Technicolor sex! ( Is your language rhotic? ( ( and Ive got to impress some Yank b*stard, and sell my soul to coax money out of him. Learn the accent on purpose (actors used to do that). But with a little work, and maybe some more source material (and higher quality no doubt), I think accents are certainly doable. However, when preceded by a short vowel, the // is elided. 1. xZ[o6~7p&5(` Ma0{P$&X,md*|",%C:8B~O'trN 8+,nqbdJ>z[wpt.?at&|/xo9L.A9HfN'8 D.xc(ls [64] Actor and singer David Cassidy noted that his father, Jack Cassidy, used the Mid-Atlantic accent.[65]. ), Well, according to our good friend Bernard, WaveLine Productions is a young highbrow, alternative company, looking for arty, intellectual projects., So, just imagine what arty suggestions hell make to enhance my script. So Mill pops him one whammo! What was once the "transatlantic accent" was the accent often heard spoken in American movies from the 1940s and earlier. Orson Welles, Shakespeare, and Popular Culture. Columbia University Press. The longer a sentence gets, the greater the amount of "shift" in the accent. No, youre right, of course. Answer (1 of 2): A transatlantic accent, or mid-Atlantic accent, as I prefer to call it, was an artificial accent developed to improve the comprehension of English on both sides of the Atlantic in early radio and movies. ( How might some one Google search that? video file (mov) Transatlantic Accent Audition (WW2) video file (mp4) Comedy Presenter. ( ( <> Paul Meier has been teaching British and American dialects, and foreign-language accents, for more than 45 years in the United States and his native England, coaching the biggest names in movies Tobey Maguire and Mark Ruffalo, for example and hundreds of plays, films, and musicals. ", https://www.researchgate.net/publication/357134848_Franklin_D_Roosevelt_and_the_American_Theatre_Standard_The_low_vowels, http://web.mit.edu/flemming/www/paper/rosasroses.pdf, https://assets2.merriam-webster.com/mw/static/pdf/help/guide-to-pronunciation.pdf, "How a Fake British Accent Took Old Hollywood by Storm", https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mid-Atlantic_accent&oldid=1141127744, An example of this accent appears in the television sitcom. Dumb and Dumber. No . [4] The accent was embraced in private independent preparatory schools, especially by members of the American Northeastern upper class, as well as in schools for film and stage acting,[5] with its overall use sharply declining after the Second World War. ( Reddit and its partners use cookies and similar technologies to provide you with a better experience. Think Ill buy it. (A beat.) ( This includes just over half who were raised specifically in New York (most of them New York City) and five of whom were educated specifically at the independent boarding school Groton in Massachusetts: Franklin Roosevelt, Harriman, Acheson, Alsop, and Auchincloss. So perhaps VE, short for Vehicular English, would . Soon enough, mastery of the accent became a prerequisite for actors trying to break into the industry. My Fair Lady Audition Monologues Please choose one! ( ( ._2ik4YxCeEmPotQkDrf9tT5{width:100%}._1DR1r7cWVoK2RVj_pKKyPF,._2ik4YxCeEmPotQkDrf9tT5{display:-ms-flexbox;display:flex;-ms-flex-align:center;align-items:center}._1DR1r7cWVoK2RVj_pKKyPF{-ms-flex-pack:center;justify-content:center;max-width:100%}._1CVe5UNoFFPNZQdcj1E7qb{-ms-flex-negative:0;flex-shrink:0;margin-right:4px}._2UOVKq8AASb4UjcU1wrCil{height:28px;width:28px;margin-top:6px}.FB0XngPKpgt3Ui354TbYQ{display:-ms-flexbox;display:flex;-ms-flex-align:start;align-items:flex-start;-ms-flex-direction:column;flex-direction:column;margin-left:8px;min-width:0}._3tIyrJzJQoNhuwDSYG5PGy{display:-ms-flexbox;display:flex;-ms-flex-align:center;align-items:center;width:100%}.TIveY2GD5UQpMI7hBO69I{font-size:12px;font-weight:500;line-height:16px;color:var(--newRedditTheme-titleText);white-space:nowrap;overflow:hidden;text-overflow:ellipsis}.e9ybGKB-qvCqbOOAHfFpF{display:-ms-flexbox;display:flex;-ms-flex-align:center;align-items:center;width:100%;max-width:100%;margin-top:2px}.y3jF8D--GYQUXbjpSOL5.y3jF8D--GYQUXbjpSOL5{font-weight:400;box-sizing:border-box}._28u73JpPTG4y_Vu5Qute7n{margin-left:4px} Sociolinguist William Labov et al. [14] The related term "boarding-school lockjaw" has also been used to describe the accent once considered a characteristic of elite New England boarding school culture. And theres Carlyle. This is a place to learn how to do cool things that have no use other than killing time and impressing strangers. endstream It's been a lil while! When she quotes him, she lapses into a fake American accent again. [12] His distant cousin Franklin D. Roosevelt also employed a non-rhotic Mid-Atlantic accent,[13] though without the tapped r. In and around Boston, Massachusetts, a similar accent, in the late 19th century and early 20th century, was associated with the local urban elite: the Boston Brahmins. Therefore, tense and lax vowels before /r/ are typically only distinguished by the presence/absence of //. Its distinctive sound is part of what defines the style of the Golden Age of Hollywood. I'm quoting from the Wikipedia article on lingua franca here. You hear it in old Hollywood films from the 1930s and 1940s. ._2FKpII1jz0h6xCAw1kQAvS{background-color:#fff;box-shadow:0 0 0 1px rgba(0,0,0,.1),0 2px 3px 0 rgba(0,0,0,.2);transition:left .15s linear;border-radius:57%;width:57%}._2FKpII1jz0h6xCAw1kQAvS:after{content:"";padding-top:100%;display:block}._2e2g485kpErHhJQUiyvvC2{-ms-flex-align:center;align-items:center;display:-ms-flexbox;display:flex;-ms-flex-pack:start;justify-content:flex-start;background-color:var(--newCommunityTheme-navIconFaded10);border:2px solid transparent;border-radius:100px;cursor:pointer;position:relative;width:35px;transition:border-color .15s linear,background-color .15s linear}._2e2g485kpErHhJQUiyvvC2._3kUvbpMbR21zJBboDdBH7D{background-color:var(--newRedditTheme-navIconFaded10)}._2e2g485kpErHhJQUiyvvC2._3kUvbpMbR21zJBboDdBH7D._1L5kUnhRYhUJ4TkMbOTKkI{background-color:var(--newRedditTheme-active)}._2e2g485kpErHhJQUiyvvC2._3kUvbpMbR21zJBboDdBH7D._1L5kUnhRYhUJ4TkMbOTKkI._3clF3xRMqSWmoBQpXv8U5z{background-color:var(--newRedditTheme-buttonAlpha10)}._2e2g485kpErHhJQUiyvvC2._1asGWL2_XadHoBuUlNArOq{border-width:2.25px;height:24px;width:37.5px}._2e2g485kpErHhJQUiyvvC2._1asGWL2_XadHoBuUlNArOq ._2FKpII1jz0h6xCAw1kQAvS{height:19.5px;width:19.5px}._2e2g485kpErHhJQUiyvvC2._1hku5xiXsbqzLmszstPyR3{border-width:3px;height:32px;width:50px}._2e2g485kpErHhJQUiyvvC2._1hku5xiXsbqzLmszstPyR3 ._2FKpII1jz0h6xCAw1kQAvS{height:26px;width:26px}._2e2g485kpErHhJQUiyvvC2._10hZCcuqkss2sf5UbBMCSD{border-width:3.75px;height:40px;width:62.5px}._2e2g485kpErHhJQUiyvvC2._10hZCcuqkss2sf5UbBMCSD ._2FKpII1jz0h6xCAw1kQAvS{height:32.5px;width:32.5px}._2e2g485kpErHhJQUiyvvC2._1fCdbQCDv6tiX242k80-LO{border-width:4.5px;height:48px;width:75px}._2e2g485kpErHhJQUiyvvC2._1fCdbQCDv6tiX242k80-LO ._2FKpII1jz0h6xCAw1kQAvS{height:39px;width:39px}._2e2g485kpErHhJQUiyvvC2._2Jp5Pv4tgpAsTcnUzTsXgO{border-width:5.25px;height:56px;width:87.5px}._2e2g485kpErHhJQUiyvvC2._2Jp5Pv4tgpAsTcnUzTsXgO ._2FKpII1jz0h6xCAw1kQAvS{height:45.5px;width:45.5px}._2e2g485kpErHhJQUiyvvC2._1L5kUnhRYhUJ4TkMbOTKkI{-ms-flex-pack:end;justify-content:flex-end;background-color:var(--newCommunityTheme-active)}._2e2g485kpErHhJQUiyvvC2._3clF3xRMqSWmoBQpXv8U5z{cursor:default}._2e2g485kpErHhJQUiyvvC2._3clF3xRMqSWmoBQpXv8U5z ._2FKpII1jz0h6xCAw1kQAvS{box-shadow:none}._2e2g485kpErHhJQUiyvvC2._1L5kUnhRYhUJ4TkMbOTKkI._3clF3xRMqSWmoBQpXv8U5z{background-color:var(--newCommunityTheme-buttonAlpha10)} This dialect has certain characteristics in common with Received Pronunciation (of British English) and the Transatlantic accent. Yes, dear, thats right, he said Ill retain creative control which means precisely nothing. (Stopped short.) Anderegg, Michael. Although most of its speakers including Julia Child, Franklin D. and Eleanor Roosevelt, Jackie Kennedy Onassis, Bette Davis, and Norman Mailer hailed from the Northeastern United States, the accent they shared could hardly be called a regional dialect. 3 0 obj 7 0 obj How snoringly dull! ( ._1aTW4bdYQHgSZJe7BF2-XV{display:-ms-grid;display:grid;-ms-grid-columns:auto auto 42px;grid-template-columns:auto auto 42px;column-gap:12px}._3b9utyKN3e_kzVZ5ngPqAu,._21RLQh5PvUhC6vOKoFeHUP{font-size:16px;font-weight:500;line-height:20px}._21RLQh5PvUhC6vOKoFeHUP:before{content:"";margin-right:4px;color:#46d160}._22W-auD0n8kTKDVe0vWuyK,._244EzVTQLL3kMNnB03VmxK{display:inline-block;word-break:break-word}._22W-auD0n8kTKDVe0vWuyK{font-weight:500}._22W-auD0n8kTKDVe0vWuyK,._244EzVTQLL3kMNnB03VmxK{font-size:12px;line-height:16px}._244EzVTQLL3kMNnB03VmxK{font-weight:400;color:var(--newCommunityTheme-metaText)}._2xkErp6B3LSS13jtzdNJzO{-ms-flex-align:center;align-items:center;display:-ms-flexbox;display:flex;margin-top:13px;margin-bottom:2px}._2xkErp6B3LSS13jtzdNJzO ._22W-auD0n8kTKDVe0vWuyK{font-size:12px;font-weight:400;line-height:16px;margin-right:4px;margin-left:4px;color:var(--newCommunityTheme-actionIcon)}._2xkErp6B3LSS13jtzdNJzO .je4sRPuSI6UPjZt_xGz8y{border-radius:4px;box-sizing:border-box;height:21px;width:21px}._2xkErp6B3LSS13jtzdNJzO .je4sRPuSI6UPjZt_xGz8y:nth-child(2),._2xkErp6B3LSS13jtzdNJzO .je4sRPuSI6UPjZt_xGz8y:nth-child(3){margin-left:-9px} Now we can all sound like Stewie Griffin! video file (mov) Monologue Nov 2021. video file (mp4) Commercial Reel. I've been trying to read "Speak With Distinction" but so far, it really isn't helping me. This means that people in the United States were taught to speak in this voice. Also called "Transatlantic", this is an easily-recognized accent used in the first half of the 20th Century by the American upper class, movie stars and stage actors. Read Edith Skinner's Speak With Distinction, a comprehensive guide to learning the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) and the "Stage Standard" dialect (also known as Transatlantic, Mid-Atlantic, elevated speech, whatevrurr d00d). 2015. [5] Cary Grant, who arrived in the United States from England at age of sixteen,[62] had an accent that was often considered Mid-Atlantic, though with a more natural and unconscious mixture of both British and American features. World English would eventually define the pronunciation of American classical actors for decades, though Tilly himself actually had no special interest in acting. ._1LHxa-yaHJwrPK8kuyv_Y4{width:100%}._1LHxa-yaHJwrPK8kuyv_Y4:hover ._31L3r0EWsU0weoMZvEJcUA{display:none}._1LHxa-yaHJwrPK8kuyv_Y4 ._31L3r0EWsU0weoMZvEJcUA,._1LHxa-yaHJwrPK8kuyv_Y4:hover ._11Zy7Yp4S1ZArNqhUQ0jZW{display:block}._1LHxa-yaHJwrPK8kuyv_Y4 ._11Zy7Yp4S1ZArNqhUQ0jZW{display:none} 28 Feb 2023 21:22:43 Oh, bloody marvelous. When preceded by a long vowel, the /r/ is vocalized to [], commonly known as schwa, while the long vowel itself is laxed. Who would want to see a film about John Stuart Mill and Harriet Taylor? endobj Whether you abhor the accent for its woeful pretentiousness or adore its trilling, all-treble sound, I think we can all agree on one thing: the era of the Trans-Atlantic accent gave us some pretty incredible cinema. [18] From the 1920s to 1940s, the "World English" of William Tilly, and his followers' slight variations of it taught in classes of theatre and oratory, became popular affectations onstage and in other forms of high culture in North America. Check out our monologue archive below for more monologues. What is the matter with my hair? /*# sourceMappingURL=https://www.redditstatic.com/desktop2x/chunkCSS/TopicLinksContainer.3b33fc17a17cec1345d4_.css.map*/Find a retired finishing school teacher and have tea with her once a week. Yay! British Dialect assumed British RP (received pronunciation) or, in other words, a very "posh" British accent. If you buy something through one of these links, we may earn an affiliate commission at no additional cost to you. (Defensive.) q&=;M>1,c\ {esc==RJD#cqPI"iuMqk8N=9vIcca#%6hG=Cr[jidrm\qjz}-uZZgeKD Skinner approved of the -day suffix (e.g. We cant put it off, theyll suppose were incompetent, what do you think? endobj Studia Linguistica Universitatis Iagellonicae Cracoviensis, 2021(4), 227-245. ( iB5+'i!6HB9aP15a.j)Z}DHrS `^D]bt%KwY;UZo?hRnPrRdp+5Kyw( 1+](}}F-FQ}N. Violence? By accepting all cookies, you agree to our use of cookies to deliver and maintain our services and site, improve the quality of Reddit, personalize Reddit content and advertising, and measure the effectiveness of advertising. She studied Written Arts at Bard College, and her fiction has appeared in Easy Street and Adelaide Magazine. ._3K2ydhts9_ES4s9UpcXqBi{display:block;padding:0 16px;width:100%} East London Accent Monologue. Ill molest it on the spot, I swear to God I will! ALTA offers a variety of language services, including translation, interpreting, language training, and more. Rosa's Roses: Reduced Vowels in American English, Merriam-Webster Unabridged Dictionary: Pronunciation Guide, Last edited on 23 February 2023, at 13:58, "That Weirdo Announcer-Voice Accent: Where It Came From and Why It Went Away. [3][55] Skinner, who referred to this accent as Good (American) Speech or Eastern (American) Standard, described it as the appropriate American pronunciation for "classics and elevated texts". She starts using the Transatlantic accent at the 2:12 . Here Ive been a good girl, toadying up to the men in the company, and finally I get a chance to produce my film, with my script . Hot Chick. It makes you sound like you have a good education but no one can tell quite where you are from. The Transatlantic dialect is frequently mistaken for British because of those open vowels as well as a reduction in "r-coloring" - for example, the word "carpenter" will sound like "CAH-pen-teh" (unless the next word begins with a vowel, in which case the r may be elided with that next word). DuLF&F=Sz}kRknlcC#I3!PK.%S>4;9WHl1 4y\0`{"U7T7JG @:v2^^F "i&GyKn=AM2Z]ZI ( Press J to jump to the feed. Always make sure the breath is properly supported by the diaphragm, and the jaw is REALLY dropped/relaxed enough for the breath to fully resonate through those nice, open vowels. If An Affair to Remember, Gone With the Wind, and Breakfast at Tiffanys are all seminal American films, why do Cary Grant, Scarlett OHara, and Audrey Hepburn all sound like theyve been binging on tea and crumpets? Its frightful! Examples of individuals described as having a cultivated New England accent or "Boston Brahmin accent" include Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.,[note 1] Charles Eliot Norton,[37] Samuel Eliot Morison,[38] Harry Crosby,[39] John Brooks Wheelwright,[40] George C. Homans,[41] Elliot Richardson,[42] George Plimpton (though he was actually a lifelong member of the New York City elite),[43] and John Kerry,[44] who has noticeably reduced this accent since his early adulthood toward a more General American one. It makes perfect sense. [73] It is still taught to actors for use in playing historical characters. Lots of actors used to speak in that way to be appealing to audiences in the UK and the US. This type of pronunciation is called the Transatlantic, or Mid-Atlantic, accent. A bit of MTV flash editing, a throbbing title track by Bryan Adams . You see, there is absolutely no trace of this accent arising naturally. [citation needed] Roscoe Lee Browne, defying roles typically cast for black actors, also consistently spoke with a Mid-Atlantic accent. As a result of nervously blurting out her lines again and again, she was fired from her first production in 1928. It is not a native or regional accent; rather, according to voice and drama professor Dudley Knight, "its earliest advocates bragged that its chief quality was that no Americans actually spoke it unless educated to do so". Why should it surprise you hes interested? Differences Between Australian and American English The English language is the world's most widely spoken language. Plus a car chase scene. ( [12] This tapped articulation is additionally sometimes heard in recordings of Theodore Roosevelt, McKinley's successor from an affluent district of New York City, who used a cultivated non-rhotic accent but with the addition of the coil-curl merger once notably associated with New York accents. ( Yes, well have to show them where all the McDonalds are, and take them to the Guinness Book of Records Museum. (Bitterly, with fake Yank accent.) document.getElementById( "ak_js_1" ).setAttribute( "value", ( new Date() ).getTime() ); To facilitate a faster, more accurate estimate, please provide the following information in the Notes section of your request: For further assistance, please call us during business hours (9 AM to 6:00 PM ET) at 800.895.8210. ( Professional voice actors will ensure high-quality performances that audiences understand far and wide. Still, the Mid-Atlantic accent isn't an American invention, as its origins can be traced back to an Australian phonetician William Tilly, who taught at Columbia University between 1918 and 1935. . ( <> A good tip I can give you (without going through everything I learned in a dialects class I took, in which we learned Stage Standard) is to start purifying your vowel sounds. A vehicular language is one that "goes beyond the boundaries of its original community and is used as a second language for communication between communities.". Hes all charm, and bluff good fellowship. [46], After the accent's decline following the end of World War II, this American version of a "posh" accent has all but disappeared even among the American upper classes, as Americans have increasingly dissociated from the effete speaking styles of the East Coast elite;[13] if anything, the accent is now subject to ridicule in American popular culture. <> ( Something this fellow will respect. and/or watch old black and white movies from the 1930s like shirley temple films. It basically had an American intonation but without the rhoticism. By the mid-forties, though, Americans were no longer buying the neutrality argument. Early recordings of prominent Americans born in the middle of the 19th century provide some insight into their adoption or not of a carefully employed non-rhotic Mid-Atlantic speaking style. (1997). Just sit tight. And Carlyle says, yeah, John, I think the wogs on the Jamaican plantations should stay slaves. Cant have a sexless marriage, lady. [54], American cinema began in the early 1900s in New York City and Philadelphia before becoming largely transplanted to Los Angeles beginning in the mid-1910s, with talkies beginning in the late 1920s. (Beat.) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mid-Atlantic_accent#cite_note-20 :tL.0{%gZ>_cl ! Urban, Mateusz (2021). Yes, you would do, wouldnt you. In 1927, Warner Bros and the Vitaphone Corporation released the very first feature-length talkie a black and white film called The Jazz Singer. ._2cHgYGbfV9EZMSThqLt2tx{margin-bottom:16px;border-radius:4px}._3Q7WCNdCi77r0_CKPoDSFY{width:75%;height:24px}._2wgLWvNKnhoJX3DUVT_3F-,._3Q7WCNdCi77r0_CKPoDSFY{background:var(--newCommunityTheme-field);background-size:200%;margin-bottom:16px;border-radius:4px}._2wgLWvNKnhoJX3DUVT_3F-{width:100%;height:46px} w !1AQaq"2B #3Rbr U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who came from a privileged New York City family, has a non-rhotic accent, though it is not an ordinary New York accent; one of Roosevelt's most frequently heard speeches has a falling diphthong in the word fear, which distinguishes it from other forms of surviving non-rhotic speech in the United States. Historically Transatlantic speech was the hallmark of aristocratic . ._2Gt13AX94UlLxkluAMsZqP{background-position:50%;background-repeat:no-repeat;background-size:contain;position:relative;display:inline-block} [14], Vocal coach and scholar Dudley Knight describes how the Australian phonetician William Tilly (n Tilley), teaching at Columbia University from 1918 to around the time of his death in 1935, introduced a version of the Mid-Atlantic accent that, for the first time, was standardized with an extreme and conscious level of phonetic consistency. %PDF-1.7 There, people with years of private school training in r-less pronunciation and switching whs to hws (white or which become hwite and hwich) abounded. .c_dVyWK3BXRxSN3ULLJ_t{border-radius:4px 4px 0 0;height:34px;left:0;position:absolute;right:0;top:0}._1OQL3FCA9BfgI57ghHHgV3{-ms-flex-align:center;align-items:center;display:-ms-flexbox;display:flex;-ms-flex-pack:start;justify-content:flex-start;margin-top:32px}._1OQL3FCA9BfgI57ghHHgV3 ._33jgwegeMTJ-FJaaHMeOjV{border-radius:9001px;height:32px;width:32px}._1OQL3FCA9BfgI57ghHHgV3 ._1wQQNkVR4qNpQCzA19X4B6{height:16px;margin-left:8px;width:200px}._39IvqNe6cqNVXcMFxFWFxx{display:-ms-flexbox;display:flex;margin:12px 0}._39IvqNe6cqNVXcMFxFWFxx ._29TSdL_ZMpyzfQ_bfdcBSc{-ms-flex:1;flex:1}._39IvqNe6cqNVXcMFxFWFxx .JEV9fXVlt_7DgH-zLepBH{height:18px;width:50px}._39IvqNe6cqNVXcMFxFWFxx ._3YCOmnWpGeRBW_Psd5WMPR{height:12px;margin-top:4px;width:60px}._2iO5zt81CSiYhWRF9WylyN{height:18px;margin-bottom:4px}._2iO5zt81CSiYhWRF9WylyN._2E9u5XvlGwlpnzki78vasG{width:230px}._2iO5zt81CSiYhWRF9WylyN.fDElwzn43eJToKzSCkejE{width:100%}._2iO5zt81CSiYhWRF9WylyN._2kNB7LAYYqYdyS85f8pqfi{width:250px}._2iO5zt81CSiYhWRF9WylyN._1XmngqAPKZO_1lDBwcQrR7{width:120px}._3XbVvl-zJDbcDeEdSgxV4_{border-radius:4px;height:32px;margin-top:16px;width:100%}._2hgXdc8jVQaXYAXvnqEyED{animation:_3XkHjK4wMgxtjzC1TvoXrb 1.5s ease infinite;background:linear-gradient(90deg,var(--newCommunityTheme-field),var(--newCommunityTheme-inactive),var(--newCommunityTheme-field));background-size:200%}._1KWSZXqSM_BLhBzkPyJFGR{background-color:var(--newCommunityTheme-widgetColors-sidebarWidgetBackgroundColor);border-radius:4px;padding:12px;position:relative;width:auto} A bit of shagging, of course. ( Its ironic, actually. 73K views 1 year ago In this video I'll show you 5 main features of the Transatlantic/Mid-Atlantic Accent, plus a bonus feature. Starting at the beginning of the twentieth century, classical theater actors were in the habit of imitating upper-class British accents onstage. The lack of r's in transatlantic English partly due to the fact that during its development, the prestige accent of Great Britain, known as Received . ( ( He's become so famous that people like hearing his actual, sort of transatlantic accent slip through . [11] Moreover, since at least the mid-19th century, upper-class communities on the East Coast of the United States increasingly adopted many of the phonetic qualities of Received Pronunciationthe standard accent of the British upper classas evidenced in recorded public speeches of the time, with some of these qualities, like non-rhoticity (sometimes called "r-lessness"), also shared by the regional dialects of Eastern New England and New York City. Although it has disappeared as a standard of high society and high culture, the Transatlantic accent has still been heard in some media in the second half of the 20th century, or even more recently, for the sake of historical, humorous, or other stylistic reasons: The Mid-Atlantic accent was carefully taught as a model of "correct" English in American elocution classes,[6] and it was also taught for use in the American theatre prior to the 1960s, after which it fell out of vogue. As American values changed fundamentally, so did our media. 9 0 obj ", "Philip French's screen legends: Cary Grant", "Lane, Hamlisch among Theater Hall of Fame inductees", "Tom Lehrer Is Not Dead! video file (mov) Terra Hale Fitness Video. Do you suppose hell turn up in trainers and a torn sweatshirt, with five-day stubble and a little ponytail at the back?
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