A Foreigner at Home: When Your Accent Works Against You

Growing up in the American south, I was always acutely aware of accents. I can remember clearly my mother scolding me for adding extra syllables to words, an unmistakable twang that betrayed me as an Alabama girl. “The word is ‘bat’!” she would say. “Not ‘bah-yat’!”

I went to an expensive prep school, well known in part because of the eloquent, well-spoken young men and women it produces. I knew from a young age that the way I spoke sounded more like the people on CNN than the people down my street. I wore this as a badge of honor.

When I decided to come to England for university, it seemed like my accent would only prove to be an advantage. I assumed, somewhat correctly, that an American accent here has the same effect as a British one in the US. I assumed, completely falsely, that everyone in my university would be intelligent, well-spoken, and sound like a BBC News presenter. What I found, instead, that I was hit with a tidal wave of accents that I was in no way prepared to face, much less interpret. I had grown up with two accents: well-spoken and country. How, I asked myself, could there be so many accents in a country so small that it would fit easily inside Texas (with room to spare)? I was flooded with accents that somehow, were all British, and were all distinctly different from my own American-speak.

I believed, naively, that my accent would prove only as an advantage. After all, I hold dual citizenship, so my British passport would dispel any false impressions my accent gave, right? I found this immediately to be completely wrong. Before I even began my first year, I began receiving emails warning me that since I had missed my English Language Test I would not be able to start lectures, because they were unsure of my English abilities. I laughed this off, sending back a slightly sarcastic but good-humored email informing them that I thought the test slightly unnecessary. In my first week, I was consistently herded towards the international student gatherings and forwarded the international office for any concerns. Once there, they looked up my information and told me I needed to go to regular student services since I was listed as a home student. I told them, exasperated, that this is what I had been saying all along. They looked at me as if they didn’t really believe me, but sent me on my way.

At the bank on campus I was faced with a Kafka-esque battle with the customer service workers when I tried to open my bank account. They told me I could not have a regular account because I was an exchange student, and would have to open a special account with no overdraft and a monthly fee of 10 pounds. I told them i was a home student. They did not believe me. I brought in my letter of admission listing me as a home student. They told me it didn’t matter because I was a foreign citizen. I brought in my passport. They told me it didn’t count because I wasn’t a natural-born British citizen but had gained citizenship. I brought in my British birth certificate. It was no use.

Student Finance, the company in charge of student loans, was much the same. Before leaving for university I had been told I would receive a student loan as a home student, and this was a huge relief as my family didn’t really have the means to pay the fees. Once I arrived and sent of my application however, I was swiftly denied with no explanation. I was determined to fight this, so I began a two-year long battle trying to get something, anything, in the way of financial assistance from my university or the government. This fight culminated in me screaming at a terrified Scottish employee who made the mistake of saying “I’m sorry, but according to our system you just aren’t English.” This pushed me over the edge and I was directed to a manager after repeatedly shouting “You aren’t even English! YOU aren’t even ENGLISH!” at the poor girl. I almost feel bad about it now.

At one point, after months of exhausting phone conversations in which the person on the other end would seemingly dismiss me the minute they heard my voice, I had a friend of mine, a Londoner, call up and speak to them in her accent. Immediately, they explained to her that despite the fact she was ‘technically’ a British citizen, she did not meet another requirement that says you must reside in the UK for 3 years before starting University. This simple explanation of a loophole had been all they needed to say to me, but had been consistently denied to me simply because I was talking to them with the wrong accent.

As a naturally very shy person I struggled through going to coffee shops, grocery stores, cinemas, buses, and any other place I had to speak to the staff. Inevitably, one would stop what they were doing , hold up the queue, and exclaim “Wow! Are you American?”. The other customers would glare, the person would wait expectantly for my life story, and I would turn bright red and start to stutter.

In my third year, I had the misfortune of working in customer service. I managed to get a job at a large concert venue in my town, where I worked at the concessions stand selling Coke, hot dogs, and fries to ice hockey fans and people who came to see Strictly Come Dancing. The work shifts were short, but the sheer volume of customers was enormous. For our larger gigs, where everyone from Elton John to Ed Sheeran would play to a sold-out arena, we could have up to 4000 customers in 2 hours. Imagine my horror when, as I’m dashing about desperately trying to fill an order for six large diet cokes and 4 hot dogs with various toppings,  a customer stops me and asks with wide eyes “Where are you from?” or “What part of America are you from?” or, the worst, “Are you from Canada?”. Customers in the queue behind them would glare at me and roll their eyes as I spluttered a response while balancing multiple food items and trying to make change in my head.

Still, four years after moving here, I face the same frustration almost daily. At a bar that I frequent, a man comes up and starts speaking to me. He asks me what part of America I’m from, and I tell him, quickly changing the subject to something about him. He proceeds to explain to me in a grandiose way how great my city is, talks to me about the nightlife, and tells me at length about where the best places to go are. I keep trying to change the subject, but am well aware that it is too late. After several minutes of listening to an explanation of why I should visit the English countryside before I leave, I give up and just excuse myself to the toilet. Even in my favorite bar, I am a tourist.

I have tried many times to explain this frustration to others, often with similar responses. They tell me I’m being over-dramatic, that I should be flattered, that people are only asking because they think I am interesting. I recognize that perhaps I am exaggerating, but that doesn’t make it any less irritating. To be constantly seen as an outsider, to be mistaken for a tourist in unfamiliar territory, is to be reminded that you don’t belong. For a person who grew up feeling that way, and came back to the country of my birth because I felt that I belonged here, this is a jarring and uncomfortable reminder. A reminder of outsider-ship, a reminder that I am and always will be a permanent foreigner in what ever country I visit. Some strive for this, and see it as exhilarating, declaring themselves to be ‘citizens of the world’. I understand the appeal, and I too feel liberated by my ability to be at home anywhere. However, ask a refugee or an asylum-seeker how they feel about it, and you will see a very different story.

None of this is to say that I am anywhere close to understanding the feeling of someone who is a refugee or has been forced to flee their own country. The only thing that forced me to flee my country was a fear of becoming stuck in one place, of never moving. I know I am lucky to have been able to make this escape.

I think often of people who don’t speak English as a first language. Imagine coming to England, or to America, from a country where there is no opportunity. You come here, seeking to make a life for yourself and your family. You learn English, but are unable to shake the accent. You may live here for 10 years, and speak perfect fluent English, but the second you open your mouth the only thing people hear is ‘foreigner’. You hear constantly in the news and the mouths of others that foreigners are bad, that immigrants are destroying the country. In your heart you belong here, but in their minds you are an outsider.

I have, indeed, been lucky in this. My skin color and my particular accent make me the ‘right’ kind of foreigner. It is interesting, in fact, that I am immediately identified as a ‘tourist’, while my darker-skinned accented friends are frequently deemed ‘immigrant’. Just as, when I lived in China I was an ‘expat’, while my Chinese friends here are ‘foreigners’. It is fascinating to me to hear people in my workplace rail against immigration, and then go silent when I raise my hand and point out myself. People, it seems, are often quick to point out differences, often to the detriment of the accused party, but frequently overlook the similarities that would allow them to understand one another.

Just like the guy in the bar: had he paid even the slightest bit of attention, he would have seen me get out my British passport when I paid for my drink. He would have seen me flash my university student card for the discount. He would have seen the way I dress, the slight English-isms in my speech, or the fact that all my friends are English, and realised that he wasn’t speaking to a tourist. Instead, he told me at length about the time he visited New York for a week, and I listened patiently. He told me he was trying to move permanently to Chicago, and I thought, with no small amount of satisfaction, that one day in the near future he will go to his favorite local bar, and someone will come up and ask him how long he is visiting, and he will not know what to say.


Cover photo by David Marcu for unsplash.com

198 thoughts on “A Foreigner at Home: When Your Accent Works Against You

  1. Really interesting article! =). I am french and when I go abroad, I am always told that “your english is very good for a french person”. It always sounds very wrong to me that english/american people assume that french citizens can’t speak english. I wish I had a very good english accent (it’s fine I’ll say) but it seems that everyone love the french accent. I guess I am lucky but I don’t know what to think about this really. I just go with the flow and ignore the “oh you actually CAN speak english”. I want to move abroad, maybe my experience and vision about this will change but that’s quite bad to be seen as a “foreigner” when you just want to be part of the world. I don’t know if this makes sense to you ^^. Anyway, I liked reading your article! Elvire

    Liked by 2 people

  2. I can relate, we moved to Copenhagen, Denmark and are currently living here now. While most Danes in Copenhagen speak English (I have yet to encounter someone in Copenhagen who does not speak English) in addition to Danish, Danish is typically the language of choice amongst people. Occasionally I will hear conversations in English, but not often. Because of the way I look, a lot of people assume I am Danish, and quite often I have Danes approaching me while speaking Danish. It is a little embarrassing sometimes to look at them in misunderstanding and say “I’m sorry, I speak English.” Sometimes, people look at me a little oddly because a)I guess it’s a little unexpected and b)I have an American-English accent which isn’t as common as a British-English accent here. But usually, they will convert their language to English so I can understand them, attempting very hard to make me understand them. I don’t necessarily take this positively or negatively, but rather as something I have started to try to embrace since it is a part of who I am. I also think going through this has made me much more aware of how I am perceived and how to perceive other people solely on accents-it is not the definition of a person but simply a part of who they are in addition to the languages they know and choose to speak (if they are bi- or trilingual). In addition to people approaching me, I do notice a few stares if I am talking and people overhear my accent, it does make me feel a like I am instantly identified as an outsider, although I am technically a Danish resident currently. All in all, great post and very relatable, I think we can all learn a little bit from this and sharing our personal experiences.

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  3. ” People, it seems, are often quick to point out differences, often to the detriment of the accused party, but frequently overlook the similarities that would allow them to understand one another.”

    Beautiful words. Keep writing!

    Liked by 2 people

  4. Hi Alex! You post title is similar to my blog subtitle! (A foreigner in Switzerland…which is my home now). Interesting post, blog, and of course, great idea for your post title! 🙂

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  5. 😊 I have been in the UK to visit and I’very also studied in Scotland . There are also different accents because people comes from all over the World. People that don’t speak English as a first language .

    Even if,at the age of 3 I knew the English ABC before what suppose to be my first language and even if I used to spent 3 or 4 months in the US every year before finally I made the decision to just live there…I still have an accent.
    It has been over 10 years since I decided to stay in US and my accent is still pretty strong

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  6. Very interesting, thanks for sharing! I happen to be the ‘wrong kind’ of foreigner, (for purposes of this conversation). Add that to my East African accent and voila! To make matters worse, I work in customer service and used to be appalled by how many times customers asked me if there was anyone else around who spoke ‘English’. I however find people’s eagerness to share their Safari adventures with me quite endearing…I mean compared to all the other stuff I would rather not hear from people 

    Liked by 3 people

    1. This made me laugh so much! Sharing their ‘Safari adventures’ with you haha. That’s just silly. It takes a strong willed person to put up with working in customer service, especially if you have to put up with ignorant comments from people like that. Good luck out there!

      Liked by 1 person

  7. Dare I say “spot on”! I’m a NYer in Miami an I can totally relate though it’s a national exchange vs international. In my case, I’ve headed up the fierce support group appropriately abbreviated IDGAF. Lol. I’m used to being a loner. So, I guess I engage when I feel like it, silencing the banshies and collaborating with the more cultured collective through shared interests. Best, Pal

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  8. Quite right mate. Welcome to Britain. I am here for over 20 years and the same experience applies. I could not even open a bank account at the Uni. It took me couple of months to do so. Getting a job is a painful experience as they usually employ thickoes and the brainwashed 😉 as standard. Anyway, good luck. Movies to watch: Brazil by Terry Gilliam. Great movie.

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  9. People will always identify you based on what they already know. There are a few of us who understand individuality than the close minded people who easily identify you as part of a social group and classify you as either a threat or trustworthy. Accents are the most common identifiers of social groups. Therefore, it’s human instinct to judge other people if you’re a part of the group or not.

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  10. I am reminded of the elderly women who so unexpectedly and so often reminded me that I was African-American with off topic conversation changers about how they had helped the black people when they were younger. I’m glad they did. It’s just that they often interrupted me from feeling just plain human, instead of, you know, being the one black guy. Do you relate to this?

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    1. Sadly, my mother did this when my friend, an accountant, came to our house to do my taxes. She started asking him if he liked “soul food” and announced that in her office they had “Soul Food Day” (said it slowly like he was deaf). Then told him she had okra, chitlins and corn bread and did he like that stuff? I was mortified but luckily he has a great sense of humor and played along, spoke slowly back to her and said he didn’t like oh-krah. I guess she made it better when she put a dish of Italian sauce in front of him with a hunk of bread but I still wished the earth would swallow me up. He wasn’t my show and tell project! He was a professional, who happened to be African-American. I don’t know why she felt the need to do that.

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    2. Well, as a white person I wouldn’t claim to know how you feel, but that actually sounds terrible. I’ve seen what you’re describing happening to friends and i always feel really embarrassed for the people asking. I don’t think they realize how ignorant they’re being, if it helps at all. I do know what you mean about wanting to be seen as the person you are rather than the token. I often get introduced as ‘the American one’ and I find that pretty annoying because, you know, I have a name! I like that you said they’re interrupting you, because that definitely describes the feeling. Here you are just living your life, doing your thing, and then it’s like someone stops the conversation and yells ‘THIS PERSON IS DIFFERENT! LOOK!’

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  11. I am saddened that you feel so strongly about others taking an interest in you. I love talking to people from different places. The truth is that you are Americanised and it shows in what you write. Maybe a little patience would go a long way. Talk to people about America but in a way that indicates you travelled there. I agree that beaurocracy is annoying, it is for anyone when you cannot be understood. Having an accent doesn’t change that, it is just another variation of things that officials do not listen to.
    England is accepting of people from all over the world. Don’t try to be ‘English’ just be you, an individual. Enjoy being ‘different’. After all, some people have differences that are far more difficult to deal with. You are not blind, crippled, etc. Embrace your rich life and the enjoy the experience of have lived in places that many less fortunate people can only dream of.

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    1. I didn’t really intend the article to be anything but my own experience, I’m well aware that people have their own struggles and would never claim to have as much difficulty as someone blind or crippled. I do enjoy my difference, and I don’t really want to try and be English. Most of the time, I’m really polite to people because I know that they are just taking an interest, my intention here was just to explain some of the difficulties I have.

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  12. I am a world languages teacher and am fascinated by accents, so this post intrigued me! Sorry for your frustration. I have a knack for accents- foreign and “domestic” so I would have put on my best British accent while serving the sodas and let them wonder where I was from- I’m devilish like that. 🙂 Keep blogging!

    -Claudia
    http://www.ourgussie.com
    LIfe lessons from my father

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  13. As an African American, it startled me when my European then-boyfriend (now husband)spoke of Americans meaning WHITE Americans. It then occurred to me that people do not automatically think of me as an American despite my family’s being here since the 17th century, provided free labor and many (including me) having served in the US military. He’s treated like a prince at our local convenience stores and department stores while I’m treated with suspicion and derision in my own country. He is baffled by this and has reacted very angrily on several occasion to startled clerks.

    *sigh*

    Conclusion: People are dumb.

    Liked by 4 people

    1. It’s freeing to express yourself about race. But in America and many parts of the world this kind of talk is avoided or is a done in secret. The solution, is to truly accept that “all men are created equal.” Only Then will we comfortably appreciate our differences.

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  14. My mom is British, and I’m in the process of applying for a British passport as I’m a subject. I grew up in Florida, and have a southern accent. I completely agree with everything you’ve stated. I hope to one day move to England, and everytime we visit I’m always thinking people don’t think I belong there. Then, everytime I talk I’m concious of people’s reactions assuming I’m a tourist (which is kind of true, but I do have roots in england, all my relatives live there.) They don’t know that though.

    Good read. Totally relatable.

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  15. I come from Southern France, and live in Paris now. I have the same “problem”, except it’s not a problem, it just shows a part of your identity you live with everyday. That’s what makes you you, and no one else. I don’t believe in norms as concerning accents. I think we all have an accent if we compare ourselves. I am very sorry a lot of people STILL think some accents are superior to others… I think we should embrace our differences, not apologize for it. We are all from different parts of the world and it’s better this way. 🙂

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  16. Very well written! have had similar experiences, to be honest I am from the UK and live in the South yet I’m a born and bred northerner(boy do I get the stick and the really stupid question of the day is.. do you prefer Man U or City??? erm none…..its a small country my friend.

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  17. I really like how you bring your own experiences in context to the experience of many Americans with different accents. (And I totally relate with you, trying to learn all the variations of British accents!) But identity is such a complex matter that distilling it with pointed questions from strangers can be really tiring and frustrating. As an Asian-American adoptee that visited Taiwan and moved to London – I definitely relate to this!

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    1. “Identity is such a complex matter that distilling it with pointed questions from strangers can be really tiring and frustrating”

      I love the way you put this, it really sums up everything I was trying to express. Very well put. Thank you.

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  18. Very relatable post. I’m a Canadian who emigrated from Romania 15 years ago. I took a Master’s in English literature, but I still have an accent. Fortunately, Canada is pretty diverse and most of the time people are genuinely interested where I am from. I like to hope few pass judgement, but I do wonder how many jobs I have been screened out from based solely on my unusual obviously-non-English name or accent.

    I thought of changing my name to an English one. I know Romanians who have. But that illusion would only last until I open my mouth. As Emil Cioran, a Romanian philosopher wrote, “One does not inhabit a country; one inhabits a language.” And yet even within the same language, as your article describes, there are so many divisions. Might as well embrace the otherness.

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  19. I love your post! I can definitely relate to it- although on a much lesser level. I am studying in France for a few months and although I can speak French and I’ve been here for three months, the second people hear my accent, they automatically speak to me in English. This is one of the things that’s stood out to me as being the largest hindrance to assimilating.

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  20. Really interesting perspective- I would never thought an American raised would have this much trouble in UK!!! I’m a Zimbabwean in US and also lived in South Africa and Austria. In all cases I’ve never been considered a tourist. Or noticed. I have a British influenced English accent but after living in America, I am considered an American outside of US because of my “accent” but in US – I get asked where I’m from with the assumption I’m an immigrant.

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  21. What a nice post. I haven’t gotten the chance to go to another country, but sometimes I don’t even want to imagine how hard it might be for me as a Mexican to go to the UK, or worse, to America, and face all those things you said, just because I’m not white, despite my accentuated English. :/

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  22. A fascinating piece to read as a native Brit. As a tourist in the US, my Scottish accent is often mistaken for an Irish accent! I’m sure there are equivalent issues across the globe.

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  23. Amazing! I guess it is rather easier (from a tourist point of view) when someone comes to America. Yes, you’d be recognized as a foreigner but not necessarily. I was mistaken for an Englishman, later for an Australian, then for someone from somewhere in the Mid-West and it all happened in the South. But taken how many immigrants or former immigrants are there in the USA, plus the “wow, interesting but that’s your business” attitude you feel like your accent (whatever it is at the moment) is just your individual trait that does not make your life harder.

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  24. You don’t realize how your strong your accent affects you when until you met someone else and actually try to have a conversation. Not just where are you from, and the pros and cons of your respectives country.

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  25. A very thoughtful post and while I can understand where you’re coming from, I feel that I fall in the camp of “That’s life.” Be proud of who you are, of the accent you have, of your background and the various experiences that have led you to where you are today. Don’t dwell on what others think, do and say because it will consume you. You have some valid complaints, some of which are typical frustrations for anyone who travels. This world is bureaucracy. For years, I traveled for work. It took me all over the States and in my free time I loved to travel different parts of the world. My accent was ALWAYS picked out, always poked and always discussed at length even if I was among fellow Americans… And never more than when I would visit south. But I embrace it. I own it. I love it. And whether the comments or questions are in kind or ignorant, I choose to steer the direction of the conversation so that I’m comfortable to brave the situation. It’s people being people and that doesn’t make it right, but I certainly feel it’s time for people’s hyper sensitivity to rest. Enjoy life.

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    1. Agree wholeheartedly. All problems, by definition, have solutions. A “problem” without a solution is a fact of life. Conduct yourself with dignity and never mind what people ask about your origin. It helps me to have a witty response to others’ curious questions to show that they can’t upset me.

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      1. This is not going to sound professional of me, but people suck. Seriously, they do. They’re obnoxious and nosy and self-centered. And it’s tough feeling like the outsider when you’re surrounded by ignorance. By the tone of your beautiful post, I get the feeling you’ll always take the high road and rise above the things and people we can’t change.

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  26. Ha! Been living in the UK since 2002 and I’ve never really gotten rid of my accent (born in the Philippines; learnt American English). Until now, I am asked where in America I’m from. Heehee can’t blame them.

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  27. Once foreign, always Foreign! Looks like the world is not yet prepared for what is in fact happen in the world. World is smaller over the time and we’re moving from one country to another every time faster and easier and for multiple reason.
    Hope people realize and accept that sooner than later.

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