3:30 a.m.
(b)
I gotta sleep soon.
Uwin Waidyaratne, he lives in UK, NHS doctor, when we talk, he often uses British vocabulary.
I have lived in Sri Lanka, I lived in Singapore for 2 years, then UK for 3, but I usually watch American movies made in Hollywood, California.
My accent is unique.
When I speak to people in their countries, Brits, Americans, Singaporeans, Chinese, Indians, Australians, Dutch, Portuguese, Israelis, Arabs, Africans, South Americans, where ever,
I adjust my tone, vocal inflections, I try to sound like what they are used to, trying to be familiar, it helps them feel comfortable.
I do it pretty easily now. It's not that sophisticated. I also heavily dumb things down. I often do what Trump does; I repeat things, but use entirely different words, which mean the same thing, to simplify things.
I have a very big vocabulary, extensive, but I always try to use the simplest, smallest, easiest words.
Uwin, when he talks, he says, "Innit?" often.
Singaporeans say, "la" and "end questions, yeah?"
Sri Lankans often end questions with, "no?"
Interesting.