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- Jan 2, 2008
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Many people (deaf and hearing) work on public speaking skills and dialects throughout their careers, some jobs depend on having an excellent command of the language, good articulation.
Every time you speak, you give your listeners a whole lot of information about yourself, from your age and place of birth to your social class and level of education. But sometimes that info is misinterpreted by others. Kids with strong regional dialects are sometimes mistakenly classified as uneducated or as having speech defects. From the day I set foot in the doors of my southern university I realized that my New York accent was going to be a hindrance in communicating effectively. I consciously worked to acquire Standard American English so that people heard what I was saying, not just where I grew up, when I spoke. No more cawfee in the mawning, just coffee in the morning for me now. Helps, too, to have married a Southerner, so I don't slip back into my native accent now that I'm in the Northeast again.
Every time you speak, you give your listeners a whole lot of information about yourself, from your age and place of birth to your social class and level of education. But sometimes that info is misinterpreted by others. Kids with strong regional dialects are sometimes mistakenly classified as uneducated or as having speech defects. From the day I set foot in the doors of my southern university I realized that my New York accent was going to be a hindrance in communicating effectively. I consciously worked to acquire Standard American English so that people heard what I was saying, not just where I grew up, when I spoke. No more cawfee in the mawning, just coffee in the morning for me now. Helps, too, to have married a Southerner, so I don't slip back into my native accent now that I'm in the Northeast again.