@freemo well, think about yourself. Do you ever find yourself speaking a different way around certain people as a conscious or unconscious way of relating to them, especially as a positive way of matching them, showing kinship?
I think that happens to a lot or even most of us.
We codeswitch as a way of engaging with other humans.
@volkris I actually dont but i recognize myself as the exception. Adoping cultural expressions like slang, dialect, accents, fashion styles, or other expressions is something I am strongly averse to. I find it a failing of humans in the genrral sense and not something to adopt.
For example i am from philly and people ofte remark that i lack a philly accent. My accent is generic and as close to having no accent as one can reasonably get.
But to your point, i did figure at first it was an adaptation to the expression of the group they are in. But one thing pointed out is that people who express themselves in this way often begin at a youbg age before joining the gay community or even knowing they were gay.
@freemo sounds like you prefer to have a generic accent.
Which is itself the adoption of an accent--a generic one :)
@volkris sure ill tske that. I mean its not that ge eral. Id say its a generalized northen USA accent basically. Even by southern or UK standards its still an accent.