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Posts Tagged ‘Southern accents’

I have a love-hate relationship with voice recognition technology.

I love that it is, in theory, an easy and convenient way to avoid having to use the keypad or talk to a human should you actually have the misfortune to reach one. I hate that while it recognizes that I do indeed have a voice, it does not recognize that my particular voice has a particular accent.

My first encounter with the technology that has since become my nemesis was at the Birmingham Airport. Brother was flying home from Rome (Italy, not Georgia), and his plane did not arrive at the appointed hour nor was there an updated arrival time. I marched over to the airline’s desk to find out what was going on, but since it was after dark, the desk was unmanned and dark. There was, however, a sign taped to the desk with the 800 number for the airline.

So I pulled out my cell phone and called.

“Thank you for calling our airline,” answered a nice robotic lady voice.

“You are most welcome,” I thought to myself.

The nice lady instructed me to speak the flight number about which I wished to inquire.

“4965,” says I.

“I’m sorry. I didn’t quite get that. Please repeat your flight number,” says she.

“4965,” I repeated.

“I’m sorry. I didn’t quite get that. Please repeat your flight number,” says she.

4965,” I said a little slower and a little louder, because we all know that you are vastly more understandable if you just slow down and holler.

“I’m sorry. I didn’t quite get that. Please repeat your flight number,” says she.

“4965,” I holler into the phone again, a little louder and a lot emphatically.

“I’m sorry. I didn’t…” I hung up in frustration. And let me add that it is not at all satisfying to hang up on someone, even a robot lady, when you have no receiver to slam down.

As I was trying not to have a hissy fit right in the middle of the airport, it dawned on me. What I was saying was “4965″ but what the robot lady was hearing was “foe-wer neye-un see-ux fahv.”

Damn you, robot lady and your emotionless pleasantries! Damn you, for not recognizing the Southern accent!

From then on I was all keypad all the time.

From time to time, I think that maybe I should pull a Don Williams and learn to talk like the man on the six o’clock news (if you don’t get the reference, watch this). I mainly have this thought on weekday mornings a little after 7. Why on particular days at a particular time, you might ask.

The answer is number one in my heart and number one on my dial: public radio. Every morning I listen to my local station, and hear the morning news delivered by a nice lady voice. She always says in a very soothing way, “It’s 7:10. Thank you for listening to WBHM.” Except what she really says is “It’s sehvehn tehn. Thank you for listening to double-ewe be aych ehm.”

Every morning I look in the mirror and say “Tehn. Ehm. Tehn. Ehm. Tehn. Ehm.”

What I hear is “Tay-un. Ay-um. Tay-un. Ay-um. Tay-un. Ay-um.”

I just can’t make my mouth say those two words. And I wouldn’t sound like me if I did.

So at seven tee-uhn tomorrow, instead of “Tay-un. Ay-um. Tay-un. Ay-um. Tay-un. Ay-um,” I plan to say “You are most welcome.”

After all, it’s our differences that make us who we are – unique and beautiful, intriguing and special. You just got to recognize it.

p.s. My beloved husband just asked me if I had finished my blog post. “I did,” I answered. At which point he mimicked me with a loud “Ah DEEEEEE-UUUUHHHDDD.” Please note that he lives in a house of North Georgia hillbilly glass and should not be throwing dirt clods.

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I was recently invited by a former college classmate to attend a Free Accent Reduction Seminar she was teaching for “people with heavy regional dialects that they would like to tone down.” Well, thanks, but no thanks.

Many of you, dear readers, have heard me speak live and in person and know that I do indeed have the aforementioned “heavy regional dialect.” It’s because I’m FROM THE SOUTH, the deep South, just about as deep as you can get and not fall off into the water. I’m not from the mid-West or California, and furthermore, I do not wish to sound like I came from anywhere else except for my beloved birthplace, Alabama. You might as well ask me to make my heart beat differently.

I realize that I can’t say “sill” without making it sound like a marine mammal, that most of my words have two syllables whether they are intended to or not, that I occasionally leave off a concluding “r,” and that I probably commit about a thousand more crimes against phonology on a daily, if not hourly, basis. But let’s just get down where the goats eat – I don’t care.

In fact, I like it. I relish it. I wallow in it. But even more, I enjoy listening to other people who speak with their own unique regional accents. I have family in North Georgia who sound very different from my South Alabama kin. I have friends from the far Northeast to the desert Southwest, from Spain, Belgium, and Newfoundland, and I love to listen to each and every one of them, their peculiar phraseology, their unique intonations and inflections.

Should we feel obligated to shed our native dialects? Should we be ashamed because we don’t blend into a homogenous, linguistically colorless blur? Well, I shan’t. And neither should anyone else.

So, if you think I sound ignorant, go ahead and underestimate me. That’s fine. If you think I sound “cute,” I think you sound condescending. And if you think I should change to sound like you, too damn bad.

My accent is what makes me special, what sets me apart from the monotone masses, what makes me ME. Why in the world would I want to tone that down?

p.s. If you feel the rumbling of another earthquake, not to worry. That’s only Granny turning over in her grave because I just said “damn” in public.

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