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EntertainmentHow to Do an Accent

How to Do a Minnesota Accent

Transcript

So let’s work on a general Minnesota accent. We’re gonna go straight for the stereotype, and then you can kind of knock it back from there. Depending on what you’re going for. So let’s work on the oral posture of the Minnesota accent. Take a look at me saying this phrase. ‘Oh geez, I’ve known him for 20 years or so.’ So watch what’s happening with my mouth. ‘Oh geez, I’ve known him for 20 years or so.’ So there’s a lot of lip corner tension, and there’s not a lot of jaw movement. So you get kind of a little bit of a smile there. They call it the Minnesota friendly accent.

The diphthong O. The two elements O in your Minnesota accent become shorter, to a more of a pure sound. So, Minnesota becomes Minnesota. O, O, Minnesota. The diphthong I. Because the jaw tension in the Minnesota accent, it brings that sound very far forward to I, I. I becomes I. And also, because the jaw doesn’t move that much that R sound becomes kind of hard. So work and further are the R sounds in the words work and further. Work and further. So in this oral posture, the ah sound becomes more forward. So father becomes father. Gone becomes gone.

So what’s the musicality of this accent? Listen to this phrase, ‘Oh geez, I’ve known him for 20 years or so.’ There’s a lot of upward inflect. It’s a very friendly accent there. So that tells you a little bit about the people from Minnesota, possibly. But don’t take my word for it. Go listen to some native Minnesota speakers, and discover the accent for yourself. Take a look at the oral posture. Take a look at the sound changes, and the musicality. And it’ll give you a good idea of what the accent is like.


Lessons in this Guide

How to Do a Persian Accent

How to Do a Russian Accent

How to Do a Scottish Accent

How to Do a Long Island Accent

How to Do a Texas Accent

How to Do a Moroccan Accent

How to Do a Turkish Accent

How to Do a Queens Accent

How to Do a Norwegian Accent

How to Do a Philadelphia Accent

How to Do a Pittsburgh Accent

How to Do a Minnesota Accent

How to Do a Mississippi Southern Accent

How to Do a Polish Accent

How to Do a Mexican Accent

How to Do an Indian Accent

How to Do a Bronx Accent

How to Do a Cockney Accent

How to Do an Italian Accent

How to Do a French Accent

How to Do a German Accent

How to Do an Appalachian Accent

How to Do an Irish Accent aka Brogue

How to Do an Estuary Accent

How to Say “R” with an American Accent

How to Do an American Accent

How to Do a New Jersey Accent

How to Do a Brooklyn Accent

Dialect Training

How to Do a British Accent

Articulator Exercises for Accent Training

Accent Training Terms & Vocabulary

How to Do an Alabama Accent

How to Reduce Your Accent

How to Do an Accent with Andrea Caban

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