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Post by MagpieBird777 on Dec 30, 2011 20:47:19 GMT
Whut's Crunch? *shot*
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Post by Vorgon on Dec 31, 2011 2:38:47 GMT
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Post by Lonin on Dec 31, 2011 8:47:47 GMT
XD Yeah. Chocolate with rice
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Luna
Aqualla
The Moon Knight[M:0:]
Do not fear the Dark, fear the Creatures of the Night.
Posts: 148
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Post by Luna on Jan 1, 2012 0:08:01 GMT
i cant believe ruby didnt know what a crunch bar was~ but then again, dont you live in australia?
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Post by Vorgon on Jan 1, 2012 14:39:23 GMT
Ooh! Maybe you are a marsupial XD
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Post by MagpieBird777 on Jan 1, 2012 17:49:18 GMT
i cant believe ruby didnt know what a crunch bar was~ but then again, dont you live in australia? A. It was me who didn't, not Ruby. Typo? B. If you were referring to me and accidentally typed Ruby, I do not live in Australia. Sadly. I hear the scuba diving there is great all around, nothing like Texas's five foot visibility. And the great barrier reef?! I can only dream of it! ❤ But anyways, yeah, I'm in Texas. With the bad scuba diving. *shot for being a nerdy certified diver*
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Post by Lonin on Jan 1, 2012 17:54:23 GMT
Scuba diving would be pretty cool.
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Post by MagpieBird777 on Jan 1, 2012 17:58:43 GMT
Would be?! IT'S AWESOME!!!!!!!!!
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Post by Vorgon on Jan 2, 2012 7:26:02 GMT
Is that the land of cowboys and horses?
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Post by MagpieBird777 on Jan 2, 2012 7:36:37 GMT
Is that the land of cowboys and horses? *eyetwitch* Please, no stereotyping. Cowboys are pretty much long gone, and horses originated in Europe *trollface* And we don't talk weird like that. No "howdy, pardner!" here! (Although my mom does say howdy. She's dorky that way ) So it's the land of stereotypes and 5-foot scuba diving visibility *shot* And I have never left it in my life. Ever. Never stepped outside of Texas, not once.
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Post by Vorgon on Jan 2, 2012 7:54:11 GMT
Duh... horses can be everywhere. How to Imitate a Texan Accent1. Drop the g's in "-ing" for example: "I'm taking a book" - "I'm takin' a book." People with a heavy Texan accent always drop the g's. 2. Drop the g's in "-ing" for example: "I'm taking a book" - "I'm takin' a book." People with a heavy Texan accent always drop the g's. 3. When the "-ing" is found within a word people say '-ang' for example : singing is pronounced: "sangin'" So do not drop "middle" g's, again: swinging is "swangin'". 4. Use the following letters as:The "r" is always heavy and strong like "ahr", or "awr." "s" and the "x" are pronounced clearly and sharply so you could compare those with "ss" and "xs" The "e" and "a's" pronounced like the "a" in "bad" are pronounced like a short "i". 5. Learn Texan slang. For example, instead of "you all" you say "y'all".
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Post by MagpieBird777 on Jan 2, 2012 15:21:12 GMT
Oh, lord.... People make guides for that? *dies* I can already do a cheesy Texan accent, I don't need a guide. Yes, there's a difference. Cheesy Texan Accent- What cowboys in movies talk like. Southern Accent- What modern Texans talk like
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Heartmane
Kolit
[AWD:01]
Saber-toothed tiger
Posts: 70
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Post by Heartmane on Jan 2, 2012 15:29:30 GMT
I'm only good at british accents (and somewhat at writing)
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Post by MagpieBird777 on Jan 2, 2012 15:35:00 GMT
I've noticed that American actors can never do a convincing English accent, no matter how much practice they have. But English actors can do an American accent so well, you wouldn't believe they're English.
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Post by Lonin on Jan 2, 2012 16:41:50 GMT
;o; *twitches* What kind of English(/British) accent? :C There's lots of different kinds. Scouse is different to Cockney which is different to Brummie and is different Yorkshire (and even then it differs from city/town to town) etc
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