+500 When people type "ya" instead of "yea"/"yes", the voice in your head goes Swedish for a second, amirite?

by Anonymous 13 years ago

Mine goes Afrikaans. (Ja is afr. for yes, and it sounds the same as ya)

by Anonymous 13 years ago

Mine says that in a Russian accent O.O

by Anonymous 13 years ago

I think of German, "Ja" (pronounced ya) which is yes in German.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

I do the same thing.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

When I see "yea" I think of it pronounced as "yay" not yeah. As in the bible

by Anonymous 13 years ago

I go valley girl.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

I don't know why this made me laugh so hard, but it really did.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

Me too.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

I actually laughed out loud at this. Scratch that, I giggled like a little school girl. But I am a school girl so it's not a big deal, needless to say this is some FUNNY stuff.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

I didn't read it in a Swedish accent. The best part of it? I'm Swedish... xD

by Anonymous 13 years ago

this is not mlia.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

i will now.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

lol dude that's not how it works. "ya" in russian accent and in british accent sounds exactly the same; it's ONE SOUND accents only work on words with more than one sound

by Anonymous 13 years ago

Not necessarily; for example, the Spanish "no" sounds slightly different from the English.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

"No" is three sounds. It can be spoken different ways because the English "o" is made of two different sounds: "o" as in "octopus" and "u" as in "pub". In the Russian alphabet, each letter is one sound exactly, and "ya" is one letter. To write the English word "no", three letters are needed.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

I read yea as yee... and ya definitely in a swedish fashion.

by Anonymous 11 years ago