DP Daily Prompts: Ready,Set,Done

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Our ten-minute free write is back for another round! Tap away on whatever comes to mind, no filters attached.( Feel free to edit later, or just publish as-is).

Today is November thirteen,2014, it’s the third time time my favorite tennis player Roger will play against Andy Murray, Roger must win this one to get the semi-final spot. I know he plays well, but sometimes his mind is not focused on the game but his four kids, it’s normal, but I want him to play well.

I’m telling his racket to help him play well. It should try to keep the maestro awake even if it is for an hour,’ come on racket do your job,’I’ll say.’

The racket if it understands my command may say,’it’s not all up to me dear fan, Roger must do his job too.’

As I’m thinking all this in my mind I’m worried whether the racket realizes how much is at stake, I have to remind him,’the number one rank at the end of the year, you weird one, sorry I don’t mean to make you angry.’

I’m praying ,’please God let Roger win, he’s my favorite player!”

: https://sabethville.wordpress.com/2014/11/13/dp-daily-prompts-2/

365 Writing Prompts: Non-regional diction

Write about whatever you’d like, but write using regional slang, your dialect or your accent.

This one is tough, since I have not learned to record my voice on this machine i.e my computer. I thought about this prompt all evening unfortunately came up with no solution.

It’s morning I haven’t figured out yet how I’m going to enunciate words without sound. My mind tells me to write a story of how I learned some of the languages I know.

My first language is my mother tongue Bengali, my mother always used dialectal Bengali which everyone thought did not sound like the original language.

My Dad spoke perfect Bengali, the language you read in books, between my Mom and my Dad there were no issues which one we the kids should speak.

We picked the dialect and not the proper Bengali my Dad spoke.

Moving on to my next language it was Urdu, the language our neighbors and my friends spoke, it came to us quite naturally, I do not recall having any difficulty speaking it. This one like other languages must have dialects too, but I wasn’t aware of it. I know the kind that sounds better, it has to be the one written in books.

My third language is English, I learned in school, in my earlier stages I learned it from a British teacher, she had the perfect British accent.

Change of school put me in a place where English was spoken with an Irish accent, we were taught by Irish nuns, so my pronunciation changed, I was always keen to learn to speak like the teacher. The British accent I believe changed to Irish.

To me I didn’t recognize the change because “ha:f was always that, there was no change.”

If the accent remained the same it would be superb but it took a hit when I had to change all the long a– sound to short to conform with the rest of the population in North America, the kids I taught thought I had a strange accent.

I pronounced ‘half’ like ‘man’, from then on kids had nothing to say about how I pronounced the words.

Lately I’m forced to change the spelling, whenever I spell ‘labour’ the Brit way, it is underlined in red, to make it easy I drop the ‘U’ reluctantly.

This is my story of how I learned the languages I know and the changes I had to make to avoid being called “Weird!”

: https://sabethville.wordpress.com/2014/11/13/365-writing-pr…gional-diction/