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What Is It Called When You Sound Out The Way A Person Speaks

What do you call the person who speaks in the films, documentaries or programs in Discovery animal planet ngc

The Person speaking in the background of the documentry is called a NARRATOR.
To find this job I think it'll b good if u approach these particular channels that u've mentioned in ur question details or any audio station but to do so maybe u can do one more thing before just approaching these channels why don't u make a sound portfolio narrate something and cut the cd outta this and then take it to the channel so that they can evaluate u on ur voice skills.
Best Luck :)

What is it called when you sound out the way a person speaks?

Like when you are writing a story and a character is Italian. The character pronounces English differently than British or American people. They annunciate certain parts of the word. For instance, when they say "Mamma Mia, I have to go to the pizza parlor-a" or "let's go see Celine Dion-a at her Las Vegas concert-a". What is this called when they put an extra 'a' sound to words when they speak?

What is the way someone TALKS/SPEAKS called? (not accent or language)?

I've noticed that is someone if someone hangs out with another person who has a distinct way of speaking enough they actually start taking on the same speaking style.

Like emphasizing certain parts of a sentence and the raising and lowering of tone, for example the "valley girl ____________"

What does it mean when someone calls you sound?

In this context it means reliable and trustworthy.
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What does the English accent sound like when speaking foreign languages?

An English accent in French sounds rather "choppy". French blends its words together much more, so an English speaker seems to be adding "spaces" unnecessarily. They (ok we) also pronounce some sounds wrong, especially the "u" sound in "tu" as if it was the same as the "ous" sound in "tous". And maybe "é" too long (like "ay") and "p" aspirated (really the French "p" is halfway between English "p" and "b").

Does it sound condescending when people say "dear" and "hon/honey"?

I am an older man. Sometimes this has really bothered me. When it does I say honey back to the woman To let her know I think it’s opportunistic and inappropriate. I know if I said honey to her first it would be considered sexual harassment. To me the jury is out on this one. Sometimes I think it’s a passive aggressive thing that people do because they really have contempt for you but they don’t want you to know so they call you honey or dear instead. It can be very insulting to some people. But then sometimes I think maybe I’m being stuck up about it maybe they’re just trying to be friendly and that’s what they were taught? I have no idea. I actually think it’s a damn good question

Where does our sound go after we speak?

Technically, sound does not need to wait till after you speak to go anywhere. The sound waves made by your vocal cords travel in all directions at the speed of sound in a straight line until they meet an obstacle. It the obstacle is soft (carpet or curtain), they are absorbed by it and vanish. If the obstacle is hard (hardwood or tile floor) they bounce off with little loss of power like a soft elastic ball bouncing off the floor. They may even transfer some of their power to the obstacles and make them vibrate and create sounds on their own. On their journey across space, the sound waves generated by your speech will blend with other sound waves created by other noisy things like cars, wind, other people talking, music. So as you can see, the sound of our voice goes pretty much everywhere, but it gets pretty much distorted, blended, reflected, and absorbed along the way.

What do you call a person who uses big words to sound smart?

potentially on the spectrum…I’m on the spectrum, people think I’m full of shit, but my accomplishments speak for themselves. I have little to no social skill, and with that; I have to sell “what I can do” and “the things I know”, rather than my “social skills”, in order to get the job, or girlfriend. Employers seem to want social butterflies, rather than an average worker, but I have nothing to offer socially, because that’s the part of me that is fake, synthetic, simulated.According to one, big words are “pats on the back”, from myself. When you’re socially awkward, those “back pats” aren’t coming from hands that don’t belong to you.Oftentimes, my technical writing is critiqued as “too much” and/or “too advanced”, when my audience is people within my career field. It’s said that the writing turns their brains off, as if I had control of some kind of light between the readers’ ears. I really don’t like talking, and I know that DDOS works in machine as well as Human hardware, I shoot for information overload. In my writing or my speaking, I really do not care how advanced you may be. Information that you don’t want, you don’t have to keep. If you tell me the words are too big, you should probably look those words up, to tell me how wrong I am (if that is the case).Information waayyyy outside my formal training/education: I don’t pay attention in class. When I hear something said, read something written, that fascinates me, because I see a practical application somewhere else; I dig, and I don’t stop digging until I’m satisfied with a level of expertise. “Outside my realm” doesn’t exist, since I live outside the box, outside my own realm, in all aspects, not counting the physical ones.“Pretentious” implies inflation, or exaggeration of one’s skill(s). I’ve been where I’ve been, done what I’ve done, am what I am. “SS” (Submarine Service) to me, was probably my greatest achievement, considering my social setbacks. If I say “I’ve done that”, I actually have. If I say “I can do that”, I actually can. If I say “I can learn any programming language”, well… I know a lot of different languages, that all happen to be in English (just to minimize your value). I can meet a level of “Guru” in approximately 3 +/- 1 months. My work, for me, is every waking moment. I can’t turn it off. This is one of the very few times I’ll say “I can’t”.So, before you have your preconceived notions about why I speak the way I speak, or write the way I write, this is, in part, why I am.

How does an Australian speaking swedish sound?

I love the sound of Australian English, I think y'all sound very happy and positive all the time :) I have never heard an Australian speaking Swedish, but I know that when an American speak it, the accent sounds almost like the person is from Asia or Russia, not like you'd expect an American accent to sound like :P But going to Sweden is the best way to improve your accent in. Just keep insisting that people should speak Swedish with you, a good way is to pretend that you're from like Russia, if a swede gets to choose between Russian and Swedish I think most will choose Swedish. If we meat a person from an English speaking country we're very eager to try out our English and to practise it since we don't get that many chances otherwise. Anyways, you'll do fine. We swedes are all nice when you get to know us. Always remember to never talk to people at bus stops or any place like that though, or you'll be considered a bit soft in the head :P Good Luck! :)

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