
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Why do some people pick up accents without even trying, while others can live in another country for decades without ever losing the sound of their mother tongue?
It’s a question that's been bothering CrowdScience listener Monica who, despite 45 years of living in the US, is still answering questions about where her accent is from. Presenter Marnie Chesterton sets off to discover why learning a new language is possible but perfecting the accent is so much harder.
Marnie speaks to a linguist about how we learn language and develop our first accent, and what we can - and can't change - about our accents. A phonetician explains to Marnie the difficulty of even hearing sounds that are not from our mother tongue, let alone replicating them. And Marnie enlists some expert help to learn some of the pitch sounds of Japanese – with mixed success.
Finally Marnie asks why people so dearly want to change their accents when doing so is such hard work. She hears from a sociolinguist about stereotypes and the impact of accent bias, and Shalu Yadav reports from the front line of Delhi call centres where workers experience prejudice about their accents regularly.
Presented by Marnie Chesterton
Contributors:
[Image: woman with written words coming out of mouth. Credit: Getty images]
4.7
418418 ratings
Why do some people pick up accents without even trying, while others can live in another country for decades without ever losing the sound of their mother tongue?
It’s a question that's been bothering CrowdScience listener Monica who, despite 45 years of living in the US, is still answering questions about where her accent is from. Presenter Marnie Chesterton sets off to discover why learning a new language is possible but perfecting the accent is so much harder.
Marnie speaks to a linguist about how we learn language and develop our first accent, and what we can - and can't change - about our accents. A phonetician explains to Marnie the difficulty of even hearing sounds that are not from our mother tongue, let alone replicating them. And Marnie enlists some expert help to learn some of the pitch sounds of Japanese – with mixed success.
Finally Marnie asks why people so dearly want to change their accents when doing so is such hard work. She hears from a sociolinguist about stereotypes and the impact of accent bias, and Shalu Yadav reports from the front line of Delhi call centres where workers experience prejudice about their accents regularly.
Presented by Marnie Chesterton
Contributors:
[Image: woman with written words coming out of mouth. Credit: Getty images]
5,412 Listeners
1,855 Listeners
606 Listeners
7,812 Listeners
411 Listeners
108 Listeners
84 Listeners
1,779 Listeners
1,079 Listeners
341 Listeners
904 Listeners
960 Listeners
306 Listeners
2,070 Listeners
1,054 Listeners
245 Listeners
358 Listeners
397 Listeners
755 Listeners
771 Listeners
245 Listeners
763 Listeners
3,034 Listeners
101 Listeners
113 Listeners