It’s actually very accurate.
So, you know the way there’s a life long battle with how to pronounce scone? Some people say it like ‘on‘ and other people say it like ‘own‘ (it’s the latter, btw).
We all know that no matter where you come from in Ireland, we all say things differently. Whether you’re from a small village or big town, we have idiosyncrasies that are unique to each other, and we suppose that’s what makes Ireland so special.
My favourite part of the @nytimes dialect quiz. Asking Irish people if they have (any) words to use for heavy rainfall. pic.twitter.com/YG49sFIyEq
— Paddy McKenna (@PaddyMcKenna) February 15, 2019
We also have unique slang words that you wouldn’t hear anywhere else, and someone hailing from Dublin will have no clue what someone from Donegal is speaking about.
The New York Times has decided to created an Ireland and England dialect quiz and everyone has gone mad for it today.
Depending on what answers you give, the quiz will determine where you’re from, and so far from trying it in the office, it seems to be pretty accurate.
You can take the quiz on The New York Times website here, but make sure to let us know how you got on.
That New York Times Irish dialect quiz is so bizarrely specific that I can only construe it as a vast data mining plan that will end up with the US invasion of Ireland and mass Internment
— Rubber Bandits (@Rubberbandits) February 15, 2019