Do people in generals ever speak in their own dialect?

Do people in generals ever speak in their own dialect?
Can other people understand them?

Attached: 1586630187658.jpg (599x449, 30.08K)

In /luso/ brazilians speak in PT/BR and portuguese in PT/PT

Some do

Attached: 1586390580051.png (274x258, 45.66K)

maybe

>Do people in generals ever speak in their own dialect?
My dialect is considered the ugliest one in all of Sweden :(
And no, people don't write in their dialect because it makes you seem like an idiot who doesn't know how to spell properly. Why would you want to be judged on the basis of your dialect anyway? It's what you're saying that matters.

All dialects are dying out anyway. Kind of sad but also inevitable and not that big of a loss.

Attached: hug feels.jpg (259x194, 10.41K)

Wrong feels, I was thinking of posting this :/

Attached: svensk pepe.jpg (250x242, 8.22K)

No. French killed them all.

>French killed them all.
Which is your dialect?

I don't have one. But in my region it would be some form of Occitan.
But speaking a dialect id a sure way to have nobody understand you here. The distance between Breton and Occitan is the same as the one between Welsh and Italian.

Polish general is some gibberish 6 year olds would say. Almost all things said there are retarded memes.

Do any of your grandparents still speak Occitan or is it already dead in your region?

german general is low iq edgy meme german that makes me want to kill them all

My family isn't from the South so no. Even old people don't speak it anymore tho.
The IIIrd Republic actively killed regional languages during the late 19th and early 20th.

>The IIIrd Republic actively killed regional languages during the late 19th and early 20th.
That's sad. Pretty much the same thing happened in Sweden too. Now there's only a few areas were people speak dialect and even there it's much more similar to standard swedish than it used to.

Although to be fair, I won't pretend that most dialects were that different to begin with. We all understand Norwegians perfectly so of course very few of the regional dialects were actually that special to begin with. Nowadays people might have a regional accent, but that's it.

Were did your family come from? A langue d'oïl region?

nah but a lot of scottish people do on the internet

>Were did your family come from? A langue d'oïl region?
Family is from the North, but without accent. The ch'ti sub-language is just stupid and has no real writen form.

>no
>no

/lat/ is basically /arg/. So, you can guess. If you don't speak Argentinian, you don't belong on /lat/.

Upper Carniolan used to be the big meme back when the Slovene clique was strong on here, but people generally use(d) standard or colloquial Slovene

do you even know how astonished i was upon discovering that there are tons of accents and dialects in almost every language? here you wouldn't ever for the life of you guess where a person you are speaking to from since he's speaking in exacly the same way as other hundred million people, but there are people in other countries having a hard time comprehending their own native language.
mind-blowing

I speak standard Serbo-Croatian because I'm not an illiterate peasant.

I hardly see someone write in their dialect on our general, if not for short sentences/idioms that can easily be understood
Personally I'm terrible at reading other people's dialect, mainly because I talk in my dialect daily at home, so my brain isn't flexible enough to pick the others I think lol
I'm a bit better understanding foreign dialects if people speak slowly and pronounce each word clearly

Are you trying to tell me there are no particular accent in Russia?
I thought that distance between places would inevitably cause different pronunciations, like the many accents of English

there's no regional slang or anything?

I was surprised when I heard that Russian and Polish weren't like that. It seems so weird that you couldn't tell what region, or even what area of a region, a person is from from his dialect, truth be told.

>and not that big of a loss.
That's not true, fuck you faggot.

sometimes in /brit/ they say 'peng'

Attached: 1585159532181.png (645x773, 10.77K)

no, there aren't.
there is some "regional" slang, namely prison slang, kek.

>there's no difference between how people from Moscow and Vladivostok talk
That's interesting
Was it always like or was it something the communists pushed for?
Here during fascism dialects were massively discouraged

dunno, who knows how those rural kholops spoke.
if there were something significant, it would have survived.

When I was a teenager and learning Norwegian, it was kind of popular for Norwegians to use their dialects online. I don't think it lasted very long, but it was interesting to see.

Really? A girl from St Petersburg once expressed to me her distaste for the Moscow accent and explained some differences. Maybe the accent differences are minor. Here in the US, some cities have different accents for different parts of the city, but it's usually a major difference of region for difficulty understanding.