LooneyToonArmy Posted April 20, 2010 Share Posted April 20, 2010 A woman from Devon has begun speaking with a Chinese accent after suffering severe migraines. Thirty-five-year-old Sarah Colwill puts the startling change down to an extremely rare medical condition known as Foreign Accent Syndrome (FAS). "I knew I sounded different but I didn't know how much and people said I sounded a bit Chinese. "Then I had another attack and when the ambulance crew arrived they said I definitely sounded Chinese." The rare disorder is thought to be caused by strokes and brain injuries and causes sufferers to lose the ability to talk in their native accent. There have been an estimated 60 recorded cases of FAS since it was first identified in the 1940s. Mrs Colwill, who lives in St Budeaux in Plymouth, Devon, with her husband Patrick said her accent change had been startling. "I spoke to my stepdaughter on the phone from hospital and she didn't recognise who I was. "She said I sounded Chinese. Since then I have had my friends hanging up on me because they think I'm a hoax caller." After researching FAS on the internet Mrs Colwill has been in contact with doctors from Oxford University who are interested in studying her plight. She is undergoing speech therapy to try to revert to her West Country accent. "I am frustrated to sound like this. I just want my own voice back, but I don't know if I will get it back." John Coleman, a professor of phonetics at Oxford University, said: "FAS is extremely diverse, almost certainly not 'one thing', not a well-defined medical phenomenon. "It is not the kind of problem that there are any easy generalisations about." Sufferers can develop an accent without ever having been exposed to it as it is the change in speech patterns from a brain injury which causes the lengthening of syllables, change in pitch or mispronunciation of sounds. Experts believe FAS is triggered following a stroke or head injury, when tiny areas of the left side of the brain linked with language, pitch and speech patterns are damaged. The result is often a drawing out or clipping of the vowels that mimic the accent of a particular country, even though the sufferer may have had limited exposure to that accent. One of the first reported cases was in 1941 when a Norwegian woman developed a German accent after being hit by bomb shrapnel during an air raid. As a result, she was shunned by her community, who falsely believed she was a German spy. In 2006 Linda Walker, 60, woke from a stroke to find that her Geordie accent had been transformed into a Jamaican one. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Northerngimp Posted April 20, 2010 Share Posted April 20, 2010 Poor woman, all her pals thinking she is someone trying it on Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
nobby_solano Posted April 20, 2010 Share Posted April 20, 2010 i bet she daren't order a chinese takeaway Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
DJ_NUFC Posted April 20, 2010 Share Posted April 20, 2010 LOL. Link pls? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
pedro111 Posted April 20, 2010 Share Posted April 20, 2010 I heard her on the radio earlier. She does sound bloody ridiculous mind! Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
M4 Posted April 20, 2010 Share Posted April 20, 2010 She does sound bloody ridicurous mind! FYP Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
pedro111 Posted April 20, 2010 Share Posted April 20, 2010 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Neil Posted April 20, 2010 Share Posted April 20, 2010 'Foreign Accent Syndrome'. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
cp40 Posted April 20, 2010 Share Posted April 20, 2010 they were on about this on the Radio today. mentioned a geordie who got a Jamaican accent after a stroke. going around putting Man on the end of every sentence i assume. edit... as mentioned in op Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mr. Snrub Posted April 20, 2010 Share Posted April 20, 2010 'Foreign Accent Syndrome'. Like something out of theme hospital. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ronaldo Posted April 20, 2010 Share Posted April 20, 2010 'Foreign Accent Syndrome'. Like something out of theme hospital. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rob W Posted April 21, 2010 Share Posted April 21, 2010 could coem in usefull for doing GCSE's.............. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Liam Liam Liam O Posted April 21, 2010 Share Posted April 21, 2010 Be a shame to waste the opportunity. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
nobby_solano Posted April 22, 2010 Share Posted April 22, 2010 ^ i love that video, arssshhhenal, big team! how you say, underdog, massive underdog! as a side, i hope twente drop a bollock in the next match because ajax are only 1 point behind them now Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dr.Spaceman Posted April 22, 2010 Share Posted April 22, 2010 I remember that Jamaican one. Was on the news. Random as fuck but you've got to laugh. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Shearergol Posted April 22, 2010 Share Posted April 22, 2010 could coem in usefull for doing GCSE's.............. Like an English GCSE would for you? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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