- (AFP) -- To the untutored ear it might just sound like
a load of quacking, but British researchers have discovered that the country's
ducks, much like its people, have distinct regional accents.
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- Ducks from London make a rougher sound which resembles
shouting so that fellow birds can hear them above the hubbub of city life,
whereas their country cousins make a softer sound, the study found.
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- The differences were uncovered after academics at London's
Middlesex University recorded the calls of ducks at a city farm in the
capital and at a tranquil location in Cornwall, southwest England, the
Guardian newspaper said.
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- There was a clear difference in sound, English language
lecturer Victoria de Rijke told the paper, with the London ducks "much
louder and (more) vocally excitable".
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- "The Cornish ducks made longer and more relaxed
sounds, much more chilled out. The cockney [London] quack is like a shout
and a laugh, whereas the Cornish ducks sound more like they are giggling,"
she said.
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- "London ducks have the stress of city life and a
lot of noise to compete with, like sirens, horns, planes and trains."
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- The result was that the ducks' "accents" mimicked
those of the humans in their home region, de Rijke added, noting that the
London accent tends to use short, more gutteral vowel sounds whereas those
in Cornwall are open and drawn-out.
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- Copyright © 2004 The Sydney Morning Herald. http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2004/06/04/1086203606507.html
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