Yeah I don't get the reference, but still found it very funny, I do like seeing this kind of thing. Kind like the blooper of a movie, something funny about seeing someone break character.
Yeah I don't get the reference, but still found it very funny, I do like seeing this kind of thing.
Left the 'aina six years ago to live in the mainland XD you just made my day by bringing back memories of home and how loud the locals can get, no shame :P. Even if dakine not canon, still funny especially the subtle reference to eating saimin dry for a snack. 808 represent!
Left the 'aina six years ago to live in the mainland XD you just made my day by bringing back memori
Can I ask what she's saying in the last panel? Is she saying fakers or another, similar-sounding, word? In other words is fakas pronounced fay-kurs. fah-kahs, fay-kahs, or fah-kurs?
Can I ask what she's saying in the last panel? Is she saying fakers or another, similar-sounding, w
Normally, I can figure out accents well enough to know what the speaker is saying. I used to be a stage actor who got several roles simply because I could do an accent that was needed in the play. However, I don't think I've ever heard Hawaiian pidgin before seeing it here.
Normally, I can figure out accents well enough to know what the speaker is saying. I used to be a s
Ahh understandable, yes you'd need to hear some to get a good grasp of the flow and feel of it. And to be fair, as one born and raised here in Hawaii, there is more than one way of sounding off your pidgin, as the Tongans, Samoans, and the Marshall islanders all mix their own languages and dialects into da kine pidgin talk. xD
Ahh understandable, yes you'd need to hear some to get a good grasp of the flow and feel of it. And
I used to be a BIG fan of Justin Wilson. In case you don't know, he was a Cajun cook from south Louisiana (sowd Loozyana) who had a cooking show on PBS for years. I first found out about him back in 1974 or '75 when I found WWL on my radio. I bought several of his record albums and learned how to speak Cajun by listening to him. I got so good with my Cajun accent that I fooled a Cajun from Lake Charles, LA, into thinking I was Cajun. I'm sure I could do the same thing with Hawaiian if I heard the accent long enough.
I used to be a BIG fan of Justin Wilson. In case you don't know, he was a Cajun cook from south Lou
Ugh, it's just like how my dad and his friends talk to each other. I swear people do speak actual English here in Hawaii, there's just a lot of people who talk like this in casual conversation for some reason.
Ugh, it's just like how my dad and his friends talk to each other. I swear people do speak actual En