Monday 17 March 2025 09:29 GMT

Donald Trump Thinks Some Accents Are 'Beautiful,' But What Makes Them So?


(MENAFN- The Conversation) United States President Donald trump has recently been commenting on accents while meeting foreign leaders and taking questions from foreign journalists. Trump praised British Prime Minister Keir Starmer's“beautiful” accent , saying he would have been president 20 years ago if he'd had that accent.

He didn't answer an Afghan journalist's question, saying her accent was“beautiful” but that he didn't understand it , and he completely dismissed the question of a journalist from India during a joint news conference with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, saying he didn't understand his accent before abruptly moving on.

What is a“beautiful” accent, and what makes one hard to understand? There is much evidence showing that opinions on language are not based in any objective standards of beauty or aesthetics, but rather on our attitudes about the people speaking them.

Accent attitudes reflect our biases

Consider long-standing attitudes regarding the southern American accent. Some might automatically assess an accent from Tennessee or Kentucky as sounding less smart than one from Michigan or California. However, there is no scientific relationship between accent and intelligence; these stereotypes are learned behaviour.

Research shows young children of about five or six, for example, do not discriminate between U.S. northern and southern accents. As they get older, they start to develop the same attitudes of the adults around them, and by age 10 they start to find that northern-accented speakers sound“smarter” and more“in charge” than southern-accented speakers.

Many negative stereotypes about accents and the people who have them are often based in racism or classism. Take, for example, the following quote from American writer Edward Larocque Tinker's 1935 essay on“Gombo,” the dialect of French spoken by the Black population in Louisiana:

It is quite clear this judgment is not based in scientific fact, but rather on racist attitudes toward Black people. Today, language attitudes may be more subtle in their racism or classism, but they persist, using our biases about a group of people to affect how we feel about their way of speaking.

How people judge accents

Studies show that speakers tend to rate their own dialects as very pleasant. Research also shows that when people are unfamiliar with accents, they tend to not discriminate between them . In other words, when unfamiliar listeners have no knowledge about an accent or its place of origin, they rate accents equally.

When speakers are familiar with an accent or dialect, however, they use their social knowledge to make judgments about the esthetics , determining which is more pleasing than another. This means that it's not always the actual phonetic aspects of the language that drive our preferences, but rather social knowledge about the people who speak with that accent that we are assessing.

In terms of foreign accents in particular, our native language shapes the way we categorize the sounds of other languages. When languages have unfamiliar sounds, our brains need a little more time to process the correspondences between the foreign accent and our own so we can accurately categorize the sounds in the foreign-accented speech. Understanding different accents is a skill that develops over time, and greater exposure to speakers with a particular accent helps us understand that accent more easily .

Processing accents is more demanding for the brain. For example, in a noisy room, our brains might have to work more than usual to separate out the sounds in order to hear. On the telephone or when the speaker is wearing a mask, the listener doesn't have access to cues such as lip movements. Older adults with hearing loss also have a harder time understanding foreign accents , as do people with dementia .

The attitude we have about foreign accents is affected by our social knowledge of a person, their accent and where they come from. Having more frequent and positive associations with people from a particular region will make us more likely to find the accent pleasing and worth deciphering. Our ability to understand reflects the cognitive load that our brain is put through in order to categorize the different sounds that we are hearing.

Putting these two together, it is easy to see how the historical prestige associated with European accents, as well as the political power of leaders like Emmanuel Macron of France, Starmer from the United Kingdom or Modi of India would be reflected in Trump's positive attitude towards them.

Similarly, he might consider a foreign journalist's position on the world stage to be far less worth doing the cognitive work necessary to understand them.

Fundamentally, there is no objective criteria for determining the“beauty” of someone's accent. Our attitudes towards particular accents are often much more rooted in our biases and how we see others in our world.


The Conversation

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