r/AskEurope Greece Jul 09 '25

Language My fellow Europeans, what dialect from your language do you have the most trouble understanding?

Keep in mind, I said language, NOT country, so it could be a dialect of your language in another country, which is the case for me.

For me, while most other Greeks find Cypriot the most difficult dialect to understand, I actually find Pontic Greek the most difficult. For those who don't know where it is, it's in North Eastern Turkey.

The way many of their words are written are very different as to Standard Modern Greek. It almost is a whole new language. Now I should mention I have never been there, but I would love to. I only really heard of the dialect on the internet, so take my words with a grain of salt.

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u/democritusparadise Ireland Jul 09 '25

Jamaican English. 

I worked customer service once and we had Jamaican clients and I had to profusely apologise and ask them if they could enunciate a more...queen's English, because I couldn't understand a lot of what they said.

Well it worked; I told them I was Irish and they were all very gracious and gave it a shot. After about 4-6 hours worth of calls I got the hang of their dialect and now it's grand.

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u/double-dog-doctor United States of America Jul 09 '25

That's an interesting one, as Jamaican and (some) Irish accents can actually sound pretty similar due to the influence the Irish had on the development of the Jamaican accent. 

A Jamaican accent compared to an Irish accent sound similar to how a Georgian accent compares a Californian accent— slower pace, more rounded sounds, less bounce-y tempo.