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Juniors

14th Feb 2019

US parents say their kids are picking up English accents from Peppa Pig

Something lots of Irish parents will relate to.

Anna O'Rourke

Do you kids bark at you in accents that make them sound like members of the royal family?

You’re not alone. The ‘Peppa effect’ is real – and has gone transatlantic.

Peppa Pig was created in the UK but has become a global phenomenon, delighting preschoolers as far afield as China and South Africa.

As most people with toddlers at home will know, Peppa, her brother George, their parents Mummy Pig and Daddy Pig and all the show’s characters speak the Queen’s English.

Parents in the US are now saying that their little ones are mimicking the accent.

A straw poll of the parents we know indicates that many of them can’t stand it – but it turns out that lots of mums and dads stateside find it gas.

US site Romper has dubbed the phenomenon the ‘Peppa effect’ after American writer Janet Manley revealed that her child has started calling her ‘Mummy’.

“Two years later, she still oinks in conversation. Call it the Peppa effect.”