How does Italian language sound to your ears?
Thursday, September 2nd, 2010 at
8:21 pm
i'm a italian girl and I'm curious to know how to play my tongue, and what are the stereotypes of Italian for you, thanks and good night
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Tagged with: italian girl • stereotypes • tongue
Filed under: Italian Language
It sounds fast, confusing and abrupt. The town I live in was founded by Italian immigrants and I hear the language every day. They also seem to talk really loud as well.
Hahaha Italiano tickels my ears because of the rolling R. I love to hear Italianos speak, it’s like they are reciting a poem. I tried to study Italiano but I can’t express the "reciting poem" accent.
ciao, italo-americano qua… mio padre e nato nella campagna…
cosa vuoi dire da "play my tongue"?
american stereotypes of italians are that:
sono mafiosi, parlano stranamente a causa di vivere a new york (accento inglese strano, come la moglie kerry nel "king of queens"), sposano solo ad altri italiani, uomini col petto villoso, donne che parlano incessantamente e gridono, eccetera. anche, ricerchi "guido" e "guidette" sul google.com
EDIZIONE: non ho capito la domanda…. l’italiano e la pui bella lingua nel mondo, e questo e cio che pensa la maggior parte d’americani. vai nei bar d=nella citta, e dici che sei italiana, e gli uomini fonderano.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t30JzS0LHpk
It seems as if the person who speaks in italian is singing. Together with french it’s the most melodic language I have heard. I love italian music.
I think it sounds really good except when the speakers are really putting on the tonality, then it sounds a little like whining. That kind of exaggerated, way up and down pitch. Also when they’re really dragging out the vowels like they do sometimes with Portuguese it sounds kind of pretentious. Or if they’re speaking really fast it doesn’t sound as good. But then I can’t understand a word of it unless I hear something that sounds like a Latin word I know, so maybe all that stuff means something else to a native speaker. I always wanted to know what English sounds like to someone who doesn’t speak it. Probably closer to Dutch than anything.