DD has an English accent, like us (think Downton Abbey but the "downstairs" staff). She has plenty of exposure to Canadian and American accents though, so I wouldn't be surprised if she picks up a North American twang.
How about your LO?
DD has an English accent, like us (think Downton Abbey but the "downstairs" staff). She has plenty of exposure to Canadian and American accents though, so I wouldn't be surprised if she picks up a North American twang.
How about your LO?
grapefruit / 4120 posts
My son speaks English with a Mexican accent. We're working on it LOL.
blogger / wonderful cherry / 21616 posts
interested in this! My sister's family is bilingual, so her kids will be. BIL has strong accent, but my sister is American. When she speaks spanish though, her accent is impeccable. I wonder if the kids will be similar, since they are growing up in America? Ability to speak well, accented, in either language?
pear / 1955 posts
My good friends (one parent Australian, one parent Indian) have a 3-year old who's lived in the United States his whole life and sounds completely American!
cantaloupe / 6630 posts
@mamimami: ha ha, I bet that is super cute!
@Mrs. Pen: They will probably be like your sister. DH has two cousins that grew up in Spain with a Spanish dad and English mum. They can speak both languages brilliantly with perfect accents and grammar in both.
cantaloupe / 6630 posts
@raspberries: Is the LO in daycare or do they stay home with him? I wonder if A has my accent because she's with me all day. I have another English friend here whose daughter went to daycare and sounds very Canadian now (although all her friends think she sounds very English). It's so interesting how it differs.
pear / 1955 posts
@travelgirl1: He goes to a half-day daycare (so 9AM to noon, I think?) His parents speak to him in Punjabi, Hindi, and English, and the daycare is English/Spanish bilingual, so everyone was curious what kind of accent he would have, but American seems to be winning!
cantaloupe / 6630 posts
@raspberries: Wow, he's so lucky having exposure to all those languages. Such a great skill for him to have when he's older!
GOLD / squash / 13464 posts
My husband and I are from Boston but we live in the South. So far M seems to be picking up a slight southern twang. Particularly when she says "buh-bye"
wonderful pear / 26210 posts
I grew up in the US, with immigrant parents with an accent. I speak with an American accent, even when I am speaking a foreign language. I know the dialect, which is unusual for a nonlocal person.
My son speaks German (again technically a Swiss dialect) with an American accent largely because I spoke a lot of American English to him, even though he was born abroad.
cantaloupe / 6630 posts
@MamaMoose: That sounds super cute!
@looch: Did you ever speak with your parents' accent when you were talking to them? I had a friend at school whose parents were Scottish, and she went between both accents depending on who she was with.
pomegranate / 3858 posts
We have family friends where the mom is English, and the dad is Canadian. I haven't seen them in a while, but the kids used to have a generally Canadian accent but would pronounce a few words with an English accent and use English terms for some things (would say zehbra instead of zeebra, and would call dessert pudding, for example).
wonderful pear / 26210 posts
@travelgirl1: that is a good question, I don't think I did, othwerwise I feel like I would have retained the accent.
watermelon / 14467 posts
We are both from America, but my daughter will likely have a strong Southern/Appalachian accent like her father and I speak with more of a Northern accent. I'm from the DC metro and he's from Eastern Kentucky.
cantaloupe / 6630 posts
@tinyperson: ha the zebra thing came up with some friends of ours last week. They were trying to teach A what a zebra was and thought I was joking when I said it after them "zehbra"!
pineapple / 12566 posts
My father is an immigrant, but my English is, I've been told, accentless for an American.
My husband is French and we each speak our respective language to our kids. However, we live in a German speaking country and my son goes to daycare here. I've been told he speaks with a French accent at school, so maybe he pronounces German with a French accent. His English sounds mostly like mine, but some of his pronunciations and vocabulary are more UK since the English speakers at daycare are non native English speakers, but use British English.
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