Originally posted by slobodan
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L@@K Transl@t@r Reqd.L@@K
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Eat.Sleep.Surf.Repeat.
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Originally posted by Albannach View PostHow does one type with a dialect?
I'm Glaswegian, to make my point using one of those two words; if you say Glaswegian, you'll pronounce differently from me. The spelling of the word doesn't change.
Anyway, Frank's problem isn't that he's Glaswegian ...
Does Frank really type ? I was under the impression that the posts were created by random strikes on the keyboard?Eat.Sleep.Surf.Repeat.
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Originally posted by Albannach View PostHow does one type with a dialect?
People really do talk like that around here. Thankfully I never ended up with a strong local accent even though I was born and grew up here. During my school days however, I did get the p1ss taken quite mercilessly because of my, at times, rather odd accent. (My dad is from somewhere between Motherwell & Glasgow & my mum was from near Halifax in Yorkshire).
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That's not a dialect, to someone not from Stoke, that's just a different way of spelling and punctuating.
I could read those words out loud, but it wouldn't sound anything remotely like it would if a local were to orate them. Dialect is more about accent and pronunciation than it is about spelling and punctuation.Do you know that, with a 50 character limit, it's
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Originally posted by Albannach View PostThat's not a dialect, to someone not from Stoke, that's just a different way of spelling and punctuating.
I could read those words out loud, but it wouldn't sound anything remotely like it would if a local were to orate them. Dialect is more about accent and pronunciation than it is about spelling and punctuation.
From when I lived on Tyneside I remember a few things I used to hear now & again that were fairly similar (Wor geordie lost his liggie doon tha nettie, etc)Last edited by Rustinho; 13 November 2011, 01:11.
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