Imitation of an English accent, or some of their more vibrant ones, i'd guess.Also obnoxiously stereotypical Australians.Do you say Whater? Wahter? W- Ah - Ter? IDK. Sounds silly to me. Every time you hear it commonly, War-ter sounds like the most common use. Not drifting too heavily toward Woor or Wah.
Voda Voda Voda
War-ter sounds like the way people talk in iowa.For example you say: "sure" they say: "shure" (sounds more like "shore"). Or Sara being spelled and pronounced Shara (texan)If you are hearing an "h" sound heavy pronunciation my guess is that you are in an area with a more relaxed vernacular, like the middle states but not a full-blow drawl like the south.
only raped, not quiet as bad as pikey but close.
Also Australia, ugh. Some people I know tell me they can't tell the difference between Australian and British accents. I can. Australian sounds to me like British, only raped, not quiet as bad as pikey but close.
The g'day mayte stuff and all that, sure, but day-to-day, sounds pretty average to me. :/the aa you have in Waa reminds me of Ahh. As in 'Ahh! Idea!". Waahter? It still sounds so weird. Noone else, not even on American tv, says that. :/
The people on TV are a bunch of philistines that California-ise English to a point that someday everyone in the united states will be speaking a bastardized version of Ebonics and valley girl. If I had my way, people would be publicly beaten for failing to enunciate.
I pronounce it as 'w-or-t-er'
i say it watt-er