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Julia Gray's avatar

I beg to differ that there is no such thing as a Durham accent. Although it may be disappearing, there is definitely an upper class Durham accent as well as an upper class Charlotte accent and both sound very similar. And it is distinctive among people who have lived there all of their lives. Allow me a story: My husband and I were having dinner several years ago in the back room of a restaurant in a small town in France. From the front room came the sound of a table of folks speaking English. We listened for a while. "Those people in the next room are from Durham or, possibly, Charlotte," I told my husband. "How can you tell?" he asked. "The accent. Definitely patrician Durham or possibly Charlotte," I said. We met the folks and guess what - Charlotte! Old Raleigh has a similar accent. Of course as more and more people move into both areas, the accent is disappearing as natives mingle with newcomers much like on Ocracoke Island. Northeastern North Carolina and Tidewater Virginia are the same way - very distinctive accents.

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James Curle's avatar

Great work as always, Jeremy. In typical surface-level knowledge of our state, they incorporate a Duke-UNC storyline but didn’t bother to reach out to the N.C. State professor who actually knows his shit about N.C. accents. Much respect to the great Wolf Wolfram.

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