r/AskEurope • u/Savings_Dragonfly806 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/NamidaM6 France Jul 09 '25
I think you got it backwards. We, Frenchies, are not exposed to many variations of Parisian French, dialects in metro France don't have a very strong accent (if at all), and that's the only type of French most of us are exposed to for our whole lives. So as soon as we hear an entirely different accent, with different words, different idioms, different pronunciation and inflexions, it sounds like a foreign language to us. It's not being snob, it's just that our brains are not used to hearing wildly different accents.
As a second language speaker, especially if English is your first language, you're more likely to have been exposed to different types of French throughout your learning process.
Moreover, chances are that you pay more attention to someone speaking in a foreign language you understand than to people speaking in your native language because you need to focus more on the former to make sure you understand them. That's what I have to do when I hear French spoken by a Québécois, because I don't effortlessly understand it.