Thandi................She did this well and I think this is quite old. Around 10 years ago,a young lad(then) did 67 Accents,many of them British so far more than this video. "The English Language in 38 Accents and 29 Random Voices"....he is sweary but very good:)
I'm from Glasgow and there are plenty of variations in our accent, like between posher West End and broader East End, or between older and more traditional Glasgow speakers and the younger generation who have been influenced by English and American phrasing, expressions and intonation. I think it's the only part of the UK where "I am" comes out as "Am ur" (a sort of "am-are" Glasgow-ified). "Aye am ur" means "Oh yes I am" and "Naw yer no" means "Oh no, you're not" and the fight can then begin. I defy anyone from south of the border to understand that particular little conversational interchange, and as for Aussies, Canadians and Americans... good luck! Thandi, your knowledge and appreciation of English accents and geography is better than most Brits.
there is no East Anglian accent, there is Suffolk, Norfolk, Cambridge and Essex accents and are the counties that make up East Anglia, i think she was terrible at all the accents
I love the Liverpool accent as well
Thandi................She did this well and I think this is quite old. Around 10 years ago,a young lad(then) did 67 Accents,many of them British so far more than this video.
"The English Language in 38 Accents and 29 Random Voices"....he is sweary but very good:)
I was always very good at doing accents and capital cities when I was at school. Didn't get me very far in life
I'm from Glasgow and there are plenty of variations in our accent, like between posher West End and broader East End, or between older and more traditional Glasgow speakers and the younger generation who have been influenced by English and American phrasing, expressions and intonation. I think it's the only part of the UK where "I am" comes out as "Am ur" (a sort of "am-are" Glasgow-ified). "Aye am ur" means "Oh yes I am" and "Naw yer no" means "Oh no, you're not" and the fight can then begin. I defy anyone from south of the border to understand that particular little conversational interchange, and as for Aussies, Canadians and Americans... good luck! Thandi, your knowledge and appreciation of English accents and geography is better than most Brits.
Yes, she is very talented.
See *The Irish Jockey* by Lee Mack for Northern Irish:
ua-cam.com/video/LUE3IiYyJSs/v-deo.html
I thought she did pretty good. Let’s hear your Yorkshire accent Thandi!😁
I wouldn’t dare try 😂😂 it’s too difficult
I'm Somerset born n bred, and I personally find the Sam Gamgee accent quite offensive...
It's cultural appropriation I tell you (!)
😂
there is no East Anglian accent, there is Suffolk, Norfolk, Cambridge and Essex accents and are the counties that make up East Anglia, i think she was terrible at all the accents