When linguist Andrew Bray was working on a study about slang used by hockey players, he got hung up on an odd question posed to him: "Are you trying to figure out why the Americans sound like fake Canadians?" That led him down a whole new avenue of study, explains a post at Phys.org. He discovered that American players do indeed shift their speech in subtle ways, but not because they're trying to sound Canadian—it's because they're trying to sound like hockey players. The distinction takes a little unpacking:
- Canadian dialect: Stereotypical traits of Canadian speech include pronouncing "out" as "oot" and tagging questions with "eh?" notes Ars Technica. The post explains in detail how authentic Canadian speakers sound, well, Canadian, through their tongue configurations. (You will be educated on "monophthongal" vs. "diphthongal" pronunciations.)