constant noise..murmurs, multiple languages, horns, whistles, people yelling.
Sounds like you don't have one It's like telling someone who traveled to Chicago who is in New York with a New York accent telling them "You have a New York accent. Cool" They will be like "What? New York accent?" Then they will say "Well, you have a Chicago accent." Thats me! 👍🏼(me) I will say "What? Chicago accent? Accents? I don't have an accent at all" The people in New York will say "Me neither!"
Like they're from the "Upper State" of New York. New York state has many many different accents. There is no one "New York accent". I have family from Poughkeepsie New York and they say things like "Tawk" instead of "talk"...."cawfee"/coffee...."Dawg"/dog........but again it all depends on what part of New York you're from. Don't be fooled by the stereotypical "How you doin" New Yorker stuff.
If you had like a New York accent, ulcer would.
Every English-speaker in the world has an accent of some kind, be it that of New York, Boston, Edinburgh, London, Dublin or Cape Town. Lady Gaga's accent is a fairly neutral New York when she speaks but when she's singing she does affect another way of pronouncing various words to create her own signature sound.
Who are you to judge whether this person is a loser or not. Just because they try to talk with a New York accent doesn't mean they are a loser, but they just want to fit in. Sometimes when you visit a certain city where the accent is stronger it is quite easy to pick up that accent or the slang that goes with it. Often people from the U.S. or Canada may visit Australia and come home with a bit of an Aussie accent and a few of their sayings and they certainly aren't losers. Accept your friend for who they are and not where they come from.
The New Zealand accent is generally characterized by the pronunciation of certain vowels and words, such as the short "i" sound turning into a short "u" sound. It can sound similar to the Australian accent to some ears, but with distinct differences in intonation and pronunciation.
yes
The Vatican is its own nation, but wholly inside Italy (the nation itself is about the size of New York's Central Park). Local residents generally speak Italian and therefore have the same accent. Church officials, of course, will have an accent that corresponds to their nation of origin, which could be anywhere in Christendom.
New Jersey people don't have a change of accent, it's a regular American accent. And yes i know this because i live in New Jersey.
It takes alot of practice.
I have worked offshore with Norwegians and Scottsmen. Norwegian accent sounds very similar to a brogue Scottish accent.
Just like any country, the USA has many regional dialects. Our language sounds different in Georgia than in Maine than in New York than in Minnesota than in Texas than in California than in Louisiana.