Corylea
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Jun 25, 2008
- Posts
- 885
A friend of mine is a non-native English speaker who's writing a story in English. The story is hers, but she wants me to collaborate with her to polish up the nuances in language that non-native speakers might not get.
One of her characters is supposed to be very drunk, and she has what she wants him to say in standard English, and she wants me to change the language so that he sounds drunk.
Er, I've never been drunk, myself, and I've almost never been around people who are drunk. I can handle the other nuances she needs, but the whole drunk thing is stumping me.
So, dear authors, what do you do to make a character sound drunk? I have the vague sense that his words should be slurred a bit, but I'm not sure which sounds are most likely to be slurred by a drunk person or how to make the sentence readable if some of the usual letters are elided so as to reproduce the drunken sound. For example, the "th" sound is a hard one for many people to make, and I was thinking that "Thanks for coming" might be "Shanks for comin'," but is this readable?
Help?
Thanks!
One of her characters is supposed to be very drunk, and she has what she wants him to say in standard English, and she wants me to change the language so that he sounds drunk.
Er, I've never been drunk, myself, and I've almost never been around people who are drunk. I can handle the other nuances she needs, but the whole drunk thing is stumping me.
So, dear authors, what do you do to make a character sound drunk? I have the vague sense that his words should be slurred a bit, but I'm not sure which sounds are most likely to be slurred by a drunk person or how to make the sentence readable if some of the usual letters are elided so as to reproduce the drunken sound. For example, the "th" sound is a hard one for many people to make, and I was thinking that "Thanks for coming" might be "Shanks for comin'," but is this readable?
Help?
Thanks!