Sentences with phrase «twang when»

Everybody comments on the twang when they first hear it.
I have a but of a twang when i've had a couple of drinks.
But the guys I go to football with are less fussed, and so when I'm with them, my language creeps in that direction in the same way that I develop a slight Brummie twang when I spend time with my pals from Birmingham.
Don't forget the sweet Southern twang when you finally do.
«Bo jer, Montreal,» Harrison twanged when first addressing CN shareholders at an annual meeting.

Not exact matches

We have an inner knowing that can not be denied without a twang of «I am doubting when I feel I should not!»
There is a southern twang in his voice which ratchets up into full - blooded gospel preacher mode when his sermons get animated (which is often).
Being new to Canada and rather homesick, we invited in two Mormon missionaries from Utah when they called on us in Montreal and spoke with their familiar Western twang.
Not Colorado's Helton — the first batting title is always the toughest — but Boston's Garciaparra, whose taut muscles seem to twang like guitar strings (and might be similarly prone to occasional snapping), can do it if he does what George Brett did when Brett hit.390 in 1980: miss 45 games.
Austin - born McClellan, who talks fast with a Texan twang in his voice, continues: «When you're going to war, the most consequential decision a president can make, you've got to be open and truthful about the situation as best you know it - about the consequences, the risk and the cost and we weren't.
In her Oklahoma twang, Ms. Warren said her rags - to - riches story reflected the promise of mid-century America, when post-New Deal governments invested heavily in higher education, scientific research and infrastructure.
«When Paul Cox came out with his paper saying that cyanobacteria produce BMAA,» he says with a lingering Texan twang, «I thought, whoa, we'd better look into this because here in Florida we get some really big blooms.»
Cranston brings Johnson to life with a bevy of Southern - twanged Big Statements (ex: «There's no place for «nice» in a knife fight») as his commander - in - chief berates his eventual VP Hubert Humphrey (Bradley Whitford), spars with beloved mentor - turned - Civil Rights opponent Senator Richard Russell, Jr. (Frank Langella), and works closely with advisor Walter Jenkins (Todd Weeks), the last of whom he loves «like a son» and yet abandons when the man's homosexuality is exposed late in his reelection run.
When asked on the red carpet about the origins of his onscreen Soviet twang, he said: «I watched Sesame Street.
Dern used to make comic hay out of his fascination with the sound of his own Midwestern twang, but Woody is all but mute much of the time — a boldly counterintuitive choice, making the few brief moments when Woody does speak up extremely moving.
It's undeniably slight and verges on being pointless, but who needs Shakespeare when you have Sharlto Copley shouting obscenities in a South African twang whilst on fire?
Technically, and as defined by every working dialect coach (I am one; I studied with folks who get called by Martin Scorsese on every one of his dialect movies and my mentor is a working VO talent and dialect coach from Denver who studied with Cicely Berry of the RSC; Kristen Linklater and even Edith Skinner) call these dialects: My folks have an Appalachian, WV dialect, when I have a Tennessee twang, southern dialect.
Your southern talk and «twang» make me miss it even more when I read your posts.
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