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-   -   Do you British guys consider say a posh London accent gay? (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=971128)

CarlosTheGaucho 05-31-2010 11:36 PM

Do you British guys consider say a posh London accent gay?
 
I just wonder

Not sure if this is the right example (meaning the announcer I love MSP):



For example I'd consider the Prague accent to be extremely gay, nothing against gays they have all the fun in the world, but if a Prague dude tries to give you a line in his posh accent and semi hysterical intonation it's rather tragicomic.

I always wondered if his girlfriend bangs him with a strap on for breakfast in their fancy new overpriced flat.

What's actually funny is that the whole country outside of Prague has exactly the same opinion, I never met anyone outside of Prague, who would think talking the Prague way is ok.

I wonder if it's the same around the world, if some sort of city or accent is considered a big no no by the majority of speakers?

beerptrol 06-01-2010 12:03 AM

Wasting time thinking about which accents sound gay....is gay.

CarlosTheGaucho 06-01-2010 12:20 AM

I'm doing a sociological research :)

papill0n 06-01-2010 12:26 AM

let us know when you evolve beyond neanderthal

Naechy 06-01-2010 01:04 AM

yes, gay, waste time

Sarah_Jayne 06-01-2010 01:42 AM

Which one there was suppose to be posh or even London? The presenter was no where near posh and questionable on even being London since he sounded like he was putting on some fake mockney accent.

Then, the Manic Street Preachers are a band from Wales. Which, isn't even England let alone London.

$5 submissions 06-01-2010 02:07 AM

Interestingly enough, according to the novelist Tom Wolfe, some ways men talk and sit may seem effeminate but it conveys so much confidence that it is actually the epitome of manliness. I suspect that there's class stratification in regards to accents--ie., working and middle class people might think a particular accent is "effeminate" or gay but those in the upper crust consider this the zenith of refinement. Example: John Malkovich's character in "Dangerous Liaisons"

ottopottomouse 06-01-2010 03:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sarah_MaxCash (Post 17195439)
Which one there was suppose to be posh or even London? The presenter was no where near posh and questionable on even being London since he sounded like he was putting on some fake mockney accent.

Then, the Manic Street Preachers are a band from Wales. Which, isn't even England let alone London.

The presenter sounds just like Guy Ritchie trying to sound like a geezer. :upsidedow

You don't normally notice your own accent but someone showed me a clip on their phone of me waffling about something and my South London accent is really noticable.

Sid70 06-01-2010 04:06 AM

i have couple guys from around London they speak like Jason Statham and all those folks in the Lock, Stock and 2 Smoking barrels, I personally find that accent a little hard to understand but sounds good to me. What i mean those are any near BBC and classic English I studied in the school.

Sarah_Jayne 06-01-2010 04:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ottopottomouse (Post 17195650)
The presenter sounds just like Guy Ritchie trying to sound like a geezer. :upsidedow

You don't normally notice your own accent but someone showed me a clip on their phone of me waffling about something and my South London accent is really noticable.

I live in South East London...that is very much its own accent. Often, I am not even sure it is actually English..lol

ottopottomouse 06-01-2010 04:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sarah_MaxCash (Post 17195667)
I live in South East London...that is very much its own accent. Often, I am not even sure it is actually English..lol

It's not just the accent part of it is always the phrases too. I seem to have had a run of insulting people lately completely unintentionally sometimes even when i'm being polite :1orglaugh

CarlosTheGaucho 06-01-2010 04:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sarah_MaxCash (Post 17195439)
Which one there was suppose to be posh or even London? The presenter was no where near posh and questionable on even being London since he sounded like he was putting on some fake mockney accent.

Then, the Manic Street Preachers are a band from Wales. Which, isn't even England let alone London.

Probably took a totally bad example, checking it again, the presenter actually talks a pretty good British English, sorry for insulting 95 pct. of Britain :) What's funny is that it actually happened many times, that I was considered "British" in US

Quote:

Originally Posted by $5 submissions (Post 17195477)
Interestingly enough, according to the novelist Tom Wolfe, some ways men talk and sit may seem effeminate but it conveys so much confidence that it is actually the epitome of manliness. I suspect that there's class stratification in regards to accents--ie., working and middle class people might think a particular accent is "effeminate" or gay but those in the upper crust consider this the zenith of refinement. Example: John Malkovich's character in "Dangerous Liaisons"

I knew a dude from London - the most annoying person in the world, he had a way with words that you honestly wanted to kill him after every third line - that's closer to what I mean

Quote:

Originally Posted by ottopottomouse (Post 17195650)
The presenter sounds just like Guy Ritchie trying to sound like a geezer. :upsidedow

You don't normally notice your own accent but someone showed me a clip on their phone of me waffling about something and my South London accent is really noticable.

Women are quite cool to listen to, used to call frequently to a certain company in London, and she was totally sexy on the phone, although yeah she was rude as hell too :)))

Quote:

Originally Posted by Adultmix (Post 17195659)
i have couple guys from around London they speak like Jason Statham and all those folks in the Lock, Stock and 2 Smoking barrels, I personally find that accent a little hard to understand but sounds good to me. What i mean those are any near BBC and classic English I studied in the school.

Didn't had much problem with Scots, Irish, and after a day or two you can get into pretty much any sort of British Accent, according to my experience

The only accent I found really hard to get into was Australian.

Quote:

Originally Posted by ottopottomouse (Post 17195690)
It's not just the accent part of it is always the phrases too. I seem to have had a run of insulting people lately completely unintentionally sometimes even when i'm being polite :1orglaugh

Exactly my experience! :winkwink:

First time I was in touch with London I was like WTF woman you have a way with words, then I realized it's probably a standard around there :))

Seriously, as bad as it can sound, this is a hypothetical question - nothing directed towards Britain, I 'd never dare to bash any other country, ethnicity, age group or whatever apart from the Prague people, those are the only exception, and I only wait till a local chimes in and gives me a little bit of their trademark hysteria :)

DamianJ 06-01-2010 05:01 AM

Pointless thread cat says this thread is pointless.

And Gary fucking Crowley isn't posh.

CarlosTheGaucho 06-01-2010 05:07 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DamianJ (Post 17195727)
Pointless thread cat says this thread is pointless.

And Gary fucking Crowley isn't posh.

I gotta apologize - I picked an idiotic example - btw. I'm the biggest MSP fan around here since I was 14 years old

Sarah_Jayne 06-01-2010 06:39 AM

Either way..no, I don't think 'posh' British accents are gay (though, I would never use that term in such a way anyway) but the do bring up idea of class division.

As far as British accents in general (though I now know there to not be 'a' British accent but many) - back when I could still hear them I found them ultra sexy and that would be why I married two British men. However, the problem with that is that once you are surrounded by it then you stop hearing it.

rowan 06-01-2010 06:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CarlosTheGaucho (Post 17195739)
I gotta apologize - I picked an idiotic example - btw. I'm the biggest MSP fan around here since I was 14 years old

Bad example indeed. :) How about Prince Charles for posh?

CarlosTheGaucho 06-01-2010 07:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sarah_MaxCash (Post 17195992)
Either way..no, I don't think 'posh' British accents are gay (though, I would never use that term in such a way anyway) but the do bring up idea of class division.

I believe you totally nailed it - class division, that's the right word for the official British accent and that was the original meaning - Queen's English

I have to admit I always greatly enjoyed for example the "Prime Minister" series, simply because of the language used.

Prague probably tried to do the same at the beginning, but during the devolution it just failed into the guido / gay category, as the most of its inhabitants :)

The Prague accent and slang is actually very far from the official language.

I would suspect the closeted vs. proud gays ratio is about 60 / 40 in Prague now, women will soon need to start unions to receive enough cock to get by :)

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sarah_MaxCash (Post 17195992)
As far as British accents in general (though I now know there to not be 'a' British accent but many) - back when I could still hear them I found them ultra sexy and that would be why I married two British men. However, the problem with that is that once you are surrounded by it then you stop hearing it.

I would suspect, as I said I was just asking a hypothetical question that I couldn't answer since I'm not native

Quote:

Originally Posted by rowan (Post 17196025)
Bad example indeed. :) How about Prince Charles for posh?

Have to admit I never heard him talking, it was always princess Diana :)

marcop 06-01-2010 07:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sarah_MaxCash (Post 17195667)
I live in South East London...that is very much its own accent. Often, I am not even sure it is actually English..lol

To me, a posh English accent sounds more annoying than gay.

I grew up in SE London, and have what I think is a very obvious London accent, but many Americans think I'm Australian.

rowan 06-01-2010 07:39 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CarlosTheGaucho (Post 17196059)
Have to admit I never heard him talking, it was always princess Diana :)



From 1969...

Sarah_Jayne 06-01-2010 07:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by marcop (Post 17196102)
To me, a posh English accent sounds more annoying than gay.

I grew up in SE London, and have what I think is a very obvious London accent, but many Americans think I'm Australian.

What part of South East London? It really isn't Australian in any possible way..lol. Though, a lot of American friends think I sound British now which is not even close to being the truth. It is just that I used British words. I wish I could get more of a British accent just to blend in more but I figure after all this time it just isn't going to happen.

Dirty Lord 06-01-2010 07:49 AM

i think that:


bye

CarlosTheGaucho 06-01-2010 08:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rowan (Post 17196147)


From 1969...

lol

I wonder how many times did he rehearsed that appearance

DVTimes 06-01-2010 08:14 AM

www.PoshWife.com

DVTimes 06-01-2010 08:23 AM

Tara Palmer-Tomkinson (man is she foxy)




VikingMan 06-01-2010 08:27 AM

that band is fucking gay, the the announcer is ok though

punkpred 06-01-2010 08:29 AM

cockney aint posh, but they have great pubs

marcop 06-01-2010 08:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sarah_MaxCash (Post 17196172)
What part of South East London? It really isn't Australian in any possible way..lol.

I lived in Blackheath, Greenwich, and Lee Green till about 8 years old, then we moved to a council estate in Croydon where there were a lot of cockney kids... and then I went to a public school at 11--so I'm bilingual :1orglaugh.

ottopottomouse 06-01-2010 09:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DVTimes (Post 17196318)

Someone must have just hit me over the head with a shovel because I quite like 2 of them :upsidedow
Quote:

Originally Posted by marcop (Post 17196476)
I lived in Blackheath, Greenwich, and Lee Green till about 8 years old, then we moved to a council estate in Croydon where there were a lot of cockney kids... and then I went to a public school at 11--so I'm bilingual :1orglaugh.

Bilingual :1orglaugh:1orglaugh

Paul Markham 06-01-2010 10:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by marcop (Post 17196102)
I grew up in SE London, and have what I think is a very obvious London accent, but many Americans think I'm Australian.

I grew up in East London and the Americans think I'm South African. :1orglaugh

O MARINA 06-01-2010 10:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Markham (Post 17197120)
South African.



South African accents are nice !

Sarah_Jayne 06-01-2010 11:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by marcop (Post 17196476)
I lived in Blackheath, Greenwich, and Lee Green till about 8 years old, then we moved to a council estate in Croydon where there were a lot of cockney kids... and then I went to a public school at 11--so I'm bilingual :1orglaugh.

I live in Thamesmead :) Blackheath is actually posh these day.


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