Boston Accent Quiz

The Boston accent is one of the most iconic urban dialects in America. This guide explains its features, from non-rhotic r-dropping to vocabulary like bubbler and rotary.

FreeNo signup15–20 questionsPersonal mapShareable result

Sample dialect map

Top matches
  1. Philadelphia94%
  2. Baltimore87%
  3. South Jersey81%

Most revealing word: bubbler

Boston Accent Quiz preview image for Dialect Quiz regional map results

Classic Boston Accent Features

Non-rhoticity or r-dropping is the most famous feature: car sounds like cah, Harvard sounds like Hahvahd. Other markers include the broad a in words like bath and laugh, distinct vowel patterns, and vocabulary like bubbler, rotary, package store, frappe, and tonic.

Boston vs Broader New England

Boston speech shares features with wider New England English — grinder for a long sandwich, tag sale for a yard sale — but has urban-specific patterns. Rhode Island, the North Shore, South Shore, and Western Massachusetts each differ from Boston proper.

The Changing Boston Accent

The classic broad Boston accent is declining among younger, college-educated speakers but remains strong in working-class neighborhoods and lifelong city residents. New immigrant communities are adding new layers to the city's speech landscape.

How the Quiz Detects Boston Patterns

The main quiz detects New England patterns through vocabulary: bubbler, grinder, tag sale, rotary, and sneakers. Multiple New England-weighted answers produce a New England or Northeast corridor result with Boston as a top matching city.