Posh School

Anything that doesn't fit anywhere else, but that's still CH related.

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Ruthie-Baby(old a/c)
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Post by Ruthie-Baby(old a/c) »

of course Sussex has an accent...

ask Christian, he's from Faygate (see "Facebook" topic in "Non CH").
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Post by Great Plum »

Ruthie-Baby wrote:
J.R. wrote:I rapidly lost my public school accent after leaving, and after working for plod became more working class.
Sorry, CH gave you a public school accent??? Surely not. At CH I got the mickey taken out of me for starting with a posh accent. I soon lost it!
I think my posh accent was enhanced - I had gone to prep school before I had gone to CH.

Interestingly at uni, there were some very sloaney types who had been to Eton, Cranleigh et al - who thought I was from the 'paupers' school' and most others thought I had gone to a 'posh' school because it was a boarding school! I couldn't win!
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Post by blondie95 »

and then when you try to explain the principles of the school I got accused of taking a place off some other kid in need! I really couldnt win when taking about CH either i was some person who went to a pauper's boarding school or i was posh for not going to 6th form college!
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Post by Scone Lover »

I found that I had thre basic accents thanks to CH.

1. A posh accent to be used when mixing with people from the upper classes

2. My home town accent

3. The non-distinct accent that can mix with any regional dialect

That is the greatest lesson I ever learned at CH, the ability to mix with any social group in the country without feeling out of place.
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Post by Ruthie-Baby(old a/c) »

what's your home town accent?

I can do posh when needed and Sussex the rest of the time and London now I've been here a few years (yuck but useful for communicatin' wiv locawls)
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Post by Scone Lover »

Kitchen ofcourse
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Post by Ruthie-Baby(old a/c) »

how stupid, silly me

BTW do you smoke cigarettes?
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Post by Scone Lover »

Nah, its a filthy habit!
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Post by englishangel »

Scone Lover wrote:I found that I had thre basic accents thanks to CH.

1. A posh accent to be used when mixing with people from the upper classes

2. My home town accent

3. The non-distinct accent that can mix with any regional dialect

That is the greatest lesson I ever learned at CH, the ability to mix with any social group in the country without feeling out of place.
I think I am much the same.

As to whether there is a Sussex accent, my father has quite a strong one, the rest of the family have less of one because of course we had more exposure to other accents.
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Post by Katharine »

Passengers on the railway often ask my son what his accent is. I don't hear one - he loves confusing people by saying he comes from Islamabad - well he was born there!
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Post by FrogBoxed »

My Grandma has a thick Kentish accent. Some of my housemates at uni over the years accused her of being Australian!
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Post by Scone Lover »

Katharine wrote:Passengers on the railway often ask my son what his accent is. I don't hear one - he loves confusing people by saying he comes from Islamabad - well he was born there!
I can just see your son doing that Katharine, thanks for the laugh!
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Post by sejintenej »

Ruthie-Baby wrote:
J.R. wrote:I rapidly lost my public school accent after leaving, and after working for plod became more working class.
CH gave you a public school accent??? Surely not.
I've still got the posh one beaten into me at CH though apparently it has toned down a bit. (IMHO a tape recording of my voice is horrible)

I can also do a passable Belfast one - if there are people from Belfast for me to do a take-off.
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Post by cj »

I'm with Scone-boy on this one. I do develop a Kentish twang when I'm either drunk or very excited. But I can do a proper posh quite well when needs must.
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Post by Scone Lover »

My natural London accent comes out when the worse for wear as they say and when someone gets me angry. For some reason, everytime I have to do anything official/legal I do this imitation of a relief sergeant I knew at Bow Street nick in London.

The worst thing is that I pick up the accent of the area I live in.
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