If someone passes voice wise when speaking english, will it be harder to adjust when speaking a different language?
More clockable?
>>5561016
Practicing my voice made me realize it's much easier to speak femmy in english rather than in german, though the latter is my native language.
I find english pronounciation much more suited to sounding feminine. If I tried the same in german I just wanna slap myself for how ridiculous I sound.
>>5561025
Would you have to relearn and readjust to the new language's standards?
>>5561082
I'm so secluded, I barely speak german at all. When I do it's pretty damn monotone, so I probably would have to to some degree.
I have no damn clue why english comes to me more naturally.
>>5561025
It's the same for me but I have problems with swissgerman, while german is easy as hell. like it's because you've talked your native language 9000x more than other languages
>>5561025
I'm english and have the opposite. I can speak femmy in german much easier than i can in english.
My native is russian, so you decide whether it sounds different.
English:
https://clyp.it/ncjzelod?token=513a5c4dd627230098a25202a468519c
Russian:
https://clyp.it/v4cnbduo?token=61aa47e21b0347f1c8b4b095fdfc28f4
>tfw can only voice-pass when putting on an accent
>>5562322
Hnnng, I love your voice in Russian. It's the prettiest Slavic language, so soft and gentle.
>>5562335
The plus of speaking russian is that it has lots of softened sounds, knowing how to do them helps alot with doing fem voice.
>>5561016
Idk if this is true, but I feel like when I speak English it might be easier to pass, because that's not my native language, so people can expect me to have an accent etc.
And when I speak my native language (russian) then they expect me to speak normally and will easily spot any weird things in my voice
That's just my thoughts, I can be wrong on this one
>>5562330
I used to know this feel