A language is like a big group of friends who all speak the same way, some might talk faster or slower, but they still understand each other.
What’s A Dialect?
A dialect is like a smaller group within that big group of friends, maybe they use different words for the same things, like saying “soda” instead of “pop.” They still understand each other, but it's like having a secret code.
What’s An Accent?
An accent is like how someone speaks with a special sound or rhythm, maybe they make their “r” sound more like a “w,” or say “butter” like “budder.” It's not about the words, just how they're said.
So, a language is the whole big group, a dialect is a little group inside that big one, and an accent is how someone speaks with a special sound, all part of the fun ways people talk! A language is like a big group of friends who all speak the same way, some might talk faster or slower, but they still understand each other.
What’s A Dialect?
A dialect is like a smaller group within that big group of friends, maybe they use different words for the same things, like saying “soda” instead of “pop.” They still understand each other, but it's like having a secret code.
What’s An Accent?
An accent is like how someone speaks with a special sound or rhythm, maybe they make their “r” sound more like a “w,” or say “butter” like “budder.” It's not about the words, just how they're said.
So, a language is the whole big group, a dialect is a little group inside that big one, and an accent is how someone speaks with a special sound, all part of the fun ways people talk!
Examples
- A child speaks with a British accent but understands English, that's still the same language.
- A person from New York is hard to understand at first, that's an accent.
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See also
- What’s the difference between a Dialect and a Language?
- What is A language is alive when people use it every day?
- Where's the line between a dialect and a language? -- Linguistics 101?
- What is Linguistic distance?
- How Does I'm NOT Broken! (Why Autism Language Matters) Work?