Quote from: FriendsCallMeChris on May 10, 2015, 05:16:39 AM
Now to increase my working vocabulary with flowy words
. Interesting!
Haha! Actually, the first second language I learned was Spanish. I grew up in my young years in San Pedro California, so I was a gringo, (white bread). I'm functional in Spanish even now.
However, I studied both French and Japanese. French is very guttural. They have hard sounds and phrases, but it was good for my vocal development. Nothing like a French 'n' to work those kinks out.
Japanese is flowy but it really depends on the region. I speak both Tokyoben and Osakaben. Tokyo dialect is more flowing. Osaka dialect is rough.
For anyone thinking about voice development I would recommend thinking about singing. Even if they can't sing, it stretches the vocal cords differently. Then find a voice that you identify with and practice. I practiced using Takei. I'm white but I love his voice.
Americans speaking with a downward inflection I would disagree with. I teach English for a living and even when talking to European speakers (Germans, Swedes, Finns, and Russians) they have mentioned that we turn our inflection up on questions.
But that's just my experience. Every man has his own voice.