D&D General Accents

Not very good at accents - my own is a mixed up jumble of Scouse, Lancashire and Surrey. I switch between long and short vowels at random. I have used broad Yorkshire for a halfing village. Did have a bad attempt at Irish for a leprechaun.
 

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I am italian, playing with italian speaking people.

Italian accents I can do: Roman (my native dialect), Neapolitan, Sicilian, Milanese, Venetian, a little bit of Sardinian.
Foreign accents I can do: French, Spanish, UK English, very stereotypical German and Russian.
 

IME, Non-Southerns attempting to do Southern dialects (1) often do it in offensive ways that attach them to uneducated rural folk and/or villains, and (2) butcher Southern dialects, sounding like screeching cats desperately clawing a chalkboard to avoid falling into a bathtub.

As dialects are often coded with classism, racism, and regionalism, I typically avoid them entirely when gaming.
 

The ones I know
  • NYC
    • Professional
    • New Brooklyn
    • Old Brooklyn
    • NY AAVE
    • NYLE
    • Bronx Female
  • Southern US
    • Georgia
    • Atlanta
  • West Indian
    • Jamaican
    • Trinidadian
    • Haitian
    • Lesser Antilles
  • UK
    • RP
    • Scouse
    • Yorkshire
  • Nigerian American
  • Russian American
  • Ukrainian American
  • Mexican American
Though I don't use them often as it is hard to keep them up and I have to listen to speakers to lock accents back in my head.
are there so many different dialects in NY alone? You surely need to be a native to hear the differences, no?
 

My impressions of accents are usually atrocious, but I can do a pretty good Cockney accent, RP accent (this is the best accent I can do apart from my native Aussie), southern American accent, and passable South African accent. I've found if I get a chance to hear an accent I can imitate it pretty well, but otherwise yeah it's not pretty.
 

are there so many different dialects in NY alone? You surely need to be a native to hear the differences, no?

NYC is full of immigrants and it's an old city. And a lot of people. There are several native NYC accents differing from borough or age.

More accurately, my accents as a DM are:

  • NYC
    • Manhattan
      • Professional
    • Brooklyn
      • Old Jewish
      • Old Italian
      • Old AAVE
      • New AAVE
      • New NYLE PR
      • New NYLE DR
      • Mike Tyson
    • Bronx
      • New NYLE
 

As dialects are often coded with ... regionalism
In role-playing context, this part is a feature not a bug. The point is to give an easily-understood cue "you have travelled a long way".

(The other two adjectives could start a mutual Fireball contest, so I will decline.)
 

I cannot sustain any accent other than my own past the second sentence--probably not even to the end of the first if I'm improvising, as opposed to reading--so I don't even try. I occasionally hit on mannerisms or tones for specific NPCs, but I don't try to make them sound like someone other than me. Part of my reluctance, I suspect, is working for more than fifteen years recording people who could do accents; my standards for that are ... higher than I can attain, at least.
 

In role-playing context, this part is a feature not a bug. The point is to give an easily-understood cue "you have travelled a long way".

(The other two adjectives could start a mutual Fireball contest, so I will decline.)
I'm talking about real world regionalism with prejudice, not simply communicating long distances travelled.
 

I've tried as a player, but it's just too much of a pain to keep up. As a DM, I've incorperated a few accents, typically cockney for human peasants and scandinavian for dwarves (who are NOT Scottish). I might put a twist of an accent on a special NPC, but overall that's it, as I can't maintain it for long.
 

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