You have to remember that these videos are made for people learning English and so the sub-titles are very useful for them. It is also why she speaks so clearly and slowly and seems to over-explain.
My daughter in law is Polish and she was taught English by an American. She landed in Newcastle pretty confident she knew English. At the train station a guy walked up to her and said eeee lass a thee gannin t toon? (Basically Are you going to the town) She stood wide eyed like a rabbit in headlights. She said she feels she’s had to learn a whole new language. 🤣😂
I'm from the NE and know a fair few Polish people, every time I hear one try to do the Geordie accent it cracks me up (in the nicest possible way). Hope she settled in though, we're a lovely bunch up here.
That's because your daughter-in-law was taught American by an American. Notice how the USA is stealing the English language. I have to click on an American flag now to select my language that is not American.
TBH most of those accents were NOT as 'broad' as many people would speak them and some are also spoken slower too! That could be because the featured people were already speaking on TV shows or during interviews and may have unconsciously used a more 'gentle' version (like a 'telephone voice', perhaps?). I'm quite confident if, for example, someone visits a Liverpool or Newcastle pub and had to join in with a group of locals, they would struggle 'big time' to keep up with the conversation... 😎
Yeah, as a Geordie I've got my normal accent where I talk with friends and locals which includes a load of dialect too, and then there's the accent I use with the rest of my family which is more toned down and ditches some dialect, and then there's the "phone accent" where all the slang goes and the accent is dialled back as much as possible. I did that talking to someone from Southampton and apparently I sounded like I was from Scotland so not sure how much that helped! Accents also vary widely within the city (you can narrow down the part of the city someone is from!) and if I come across someone from some areas which have a stronger accent or use more slang then even I can struggle a bit and I'm from here. The adding in extra vowel sounds isn't unique to the accents mentioned either. People say Geordie and Maccum (Sunderland - just a few miles down the coast) accents sound the same but they don't and one of the differences is once you get down there (my friend from County Durham does it too!) they add in extra vowels. At least my relatives and friends all do! So a film is a fil-um for example. I have an elderly relative from Sunderland and I struggle to understand her at times!
@@wirralnomad I had to re-read my comment and burst out laughing... You're right and rather than edit, I shall leave it. I have lived in London over 40 years but visit 'home' in Eastham a few times a year.
My thoughts entirely. As a cockney,I went to see Man Utd away at Newcastle and was in a pub near the ground right next to us were these local lads,and they were speaking so fast and with such thick geordie accents,I couldn’t understand anything they were saying. Then they noticed and spoke to us,but this time they toned it right down and we understood. Like my cockney accent,when I’m with old pals,it’s fast and full of slang,but talk to someone not from London and we make the adjustments. I love our huge variety of accents. I can tell if someone is from east or south London pretty easily.
Received Pronunciation definitely IS a regional accent, as spoken in more affluent areas of London and the Home Counties. It is not heard much outside there.
Thing is, it’s not just the accents, it’s the dialect. Towns 10 miles apart can have different words for the same thing. Makes life much more interesting 😄
I was chatting to a friend the other day when he said a word I'd never heard before; gennel. I looked at him blankly, so he tried an alternative, and that meant nothing either. He meant alleyway. So I searched regional words for alley and there are several, like gennel, ginnel, jitty, twitchel... There were others. It seems to vary from county to county. I've clearly been living under a rock!
@@WylderWytch I live in NE England. Parents born in Gateshead, (other side of the Tyne from Newcastle), I was born in Sunderland and moved to Durham when I was 4. No more than 20 miles between any of those places but accents & dialect so different. It’s crazy! But v interesting 😊
i have to say even in Yorkshire the accent differs within a few miles . Leeds (west yorkshire) is very different to South yorkshire (Sheffield, Doncaster etc) and East yorkshire (Hull) is different again
That's wild. I wonder how accents can change so much in a few miles. I wouldn't think that people are staying in one place for so long that they're not influenced by other accents, especially in current times. But maybe they are, I don't know. 🤷🏻
@@JJLAReactstime. They’re baked in by time. Consider how quickly the western US was settled with trains and cars and how little variety of accents there is in the west compared to the east (including the south) which had had more time for the accents to bake in - but still nowhere near as long as the UK has had. The lines are starting to blur now because of how instantaneous communication is via the internet and ease of movement but meaningfully that’s 20 years vs 1500 years just for English - and prior languages to English spoken here like Brythonic dialects will have influenced how various regions spoke English when they adopted it
People in and around Barnsley can tell what village you are from by listening to you speak. The accent has subtle variations in different parts of the borough.
I'm from Yorkshire and my wife is a Mackem (Sunderland). We went to the states earlier this year and were teaching friendly waiters and people we met how to say hello in our different accents. They found 'Ey up' really difficult to say. And then my wife said 'Yalreet pet' which blew their minds.
American minds generally do seem to be easily blown,.. although I am not sure if it's from... ...their stereotypical myopic lack of education outside of the USA & 'Americana',.. ...their larger populational effect, thus having a more noticeable percentage of meeting a stupid in person,.. ...or the amount of guns they have, overtime their brains reducing in size to try and escape potential future coming bullets (am joking very darkly upon that last one, if someone is toi stupid to read an contextual inference).
I'm going to type this out in both English, and my native Doric, which is the dialect from the northeast of Scotland--Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire and north to the Moray Coast. In so doing, I hope it becomes clear just how much the dialect can change over such a short distance, and stress just how different and unique an accent can be from region to region. My qualm is the mainstream media portraying the Scottish accent through Glaswegian (and occasionally Edinburgh, or West Coast accents, while overlooking the impenetrable brogue of Northern/Northeast Scots). This is naturally a video focusing on learning English. It is therefore understandable that The Glaswegian accent is used, since it is Scots English, rather than the Teutonic (roots in Germanic/Old English) of Aberdeen and its outlying areas. The spelling of Doric also varies from area to area, and is not an English dialect; rather, it is officially recognised as having independent language status, in the same way Gaelic might be for example. It is my hope to portray just how devolved and multitudinous dialects are around Britain, and how even a solid grasp of English across the Ilse's many thick accents may be frustrated should you visit rural areas, or the nation's extremities. I trust, if nothing else, you might take delight in the richly flavoured visualisation of my own mother tongue, however difficult and tiresome it may be to follow. :) [Doric transliteration] Ah'm gaan til scrieve ess oot in baith Inglis n ma native Doric, fit ist e dialeck fae e nor'east o Scotlaan'--Aiburdeen, e Shire an' noraard til e Moray Caist. Bi deein sic, Ah hope thon cams clear jist foo muckle e dialeck kin change ower siccan wee distance, an' stress jist foo different n unique an accent kin be fae region til region. Ma qualm ist e mainstream media portrayin e Scottish accent ben Glesga (n eft Embro or Teuchter accents, fyles owerlookin yon impenetrable brogue o Norlaan/Nor'east Scots). Ess is naityirally a video focusin on learnin Inglis. 'Tis as unnerstaunable at Weegie is eesed, syne ist Scots Inglis, rether an e Teutonic (roots in Germanic/Aul Inglis) o Aiburdeen n its ootleif areas. E scrievin o Doric ay varies fae area til area, an' isnae an Inglis dialeck; rether, ist officially kint as haein independent langyij status, in e sam wye Gaelic micht be. Ah hope til show jist foo devolved n mony dialecks are aroon Britain, n fit wye even gwid Inglis athwert thon Ilse's mony steepit accents maun gar yi grue gin ye visit rural areas, or e eyns o e laan. Ah trow, iffen ni'hin else, yi micht fyne yirsel affa tricket wi e scrievins o ma ain Mither Tongue, fyles teuch n puggilt yi micht fyne yon.
I live in moray, murry we call it. My english teacher in school spoke doric which made classes interesting. What catches me out is that the farmers and the fishermen seem to speak completely different languages from each other, even us locals have trouble sometimes
@tomgreen625 remember Rab Nesbit and Jamsie Cotter encountering a 'teuchtar' when they went to Loch Lomond for a holiday? Rab and Jamsie are walking along a track on their way to try and find a pub. They're lost.. they see a land rover approaching and decide to ask directions: " Hey teuchtar! Whur aboots thae pub?" Landrover driver is obviously in a Barbour jacket, has an upper class accent and can't understand them! 😁
I’m from North Wales. The North Walian accents are totally different from the South Walian and Mid Walian accents. The gutteral sounds in the Scouse accent come from the influence of the Welsh language.
Worth remembering that there is much greater diversity of accents than suggested in this. I'm from Yorkshire and there is a broad range of accents across this particularly large region (made up of multiple counties).
There was a TV comedy called " Auf wiedersehen Pet " in the 1970s which was about a gang of bricklayers from different parts of the UK, working in Germany. If you watch a clip on UA-cam you will hear strong authentic Geordie, scouse, Welsh ,Brummie, and Cockney accents. I'm from Yorkshire, but my favourite accents are Welsh, and Geordie, as they are quite melodic. Al Murray does a very extreme version of British accents in a comedy routine, which I recommend.
I’m from Manchester and about 30 miles to Burnley, 30 miles to Huddersfield, 15 miles to Bolton and 35 to Liverpool. The accents are so different, even I struggle a bit, especially if folk have had a couple of shandies
Bolton is v different to Manchester and sounds more like Yorks to me, but is prob just a strong Lancs accent which MCR doesn't have. Huddersfield are in Yorks so obvs diff accent
Read your comment before watching this didn’t think anything of it meant nothing! Having just witnessed what I have I must say I almost chocked to death on a chicken wing seeing it!!! This guy is Jason’s American Brother! ❤❤❤❤😂😂😂 love this channel
@@GormlyKeepI find it funny that Ozzy came up with the majority of the lyrical topics of early Black Sabbath, and they were some very deep and philosophical topics, but Geezer Butler was the one who had to write the lyrics because Ozzy wasn’t very articulate, just goes to show that great articulation isn’t the be and end all of determining intelligence.
I’m from Devon but if I go out in the sticks then even I struggle to understand what they’re saying, I’m surprised to see that no southwest accent even made it on the list!
Shocking that Glasgow wasnt #1 lol. She also found herself the most well-spoken Glaswegian ever haha. She needed to have a vid of a NED! The clip she had of a Geordie accent was also favorable. She couldve used a clip of Adam Pearson doing a Newcastle match review, or just a fan coming out of St. James Park after a match.
For sure, I doubt Franky is actually from Glasgow, and I base that on the fact I can easily understand him. As for us Geordies, you can tell how extreme the accent is by how we say the colour Purple.
Jason Statham, although he sounds like a "Cockney" isn't one. He was born up in Derbyshire then moved to Norfok as a kid. Maybe he gets the accent from his parents or he just adopted it for acting purposes? Anyone know?
I think he speaks 'Hollycockney' An accent invented by Guy Ritchie which sounds like Estuary English, but can be understood by Americans. Gor blimey faaack off you cheeky bleeder etc.
Post WW2 lots of bombed out Londoners were resettled in Norfolk, I worked up in Thetford when in the military and you hear the mixture of original "Oh ar" Norfolk accent and the London accent all being spoken up that way, but I suspect that as an Actor in the US, the London way of speaking is more understood and maybe helps get good movie roles? I like Jason Statham though and his best movie was Guy Ritchie's Lock Stock and 2 Smoking Barrels, again London based! 👍🏽🙏🏼😆🤣😂
Should have had Jasper Carrot. For Brummie, check him out and have a good laugh as well. Jimmy nail for Geordie. The Big Yin and where was Northampton? “Oim gewin dain tain me duck.(I’m going down town). And “Oi shallader be gewin. Tadar air kid.”
A lot of people in Portsmouth speak with a 'Cockney' accent as many people from there moved to Portsmouth during Victorian times to work in the dockyard. My schooldays involved many bits of Cockney rhyming slang, even though I didn't know that's what it was at the time.
I thought you did really well with this sample of accents. I'm very impressed that you were genuinely interested. This was a lot of fun to watch, thank you.
These examples are of people speaking to people outside of their region, so they tend to modify the way they speak. I didn't realise how lazy we speak in Yorkshire until I moved to the US in the late 90s and had to drastically change how I spoke because no one understood me.
The issue with many of these accents is that there are many variations, especially "Yorkshire" and "Welsh", given their historical splits, Doncaster and Leeds, despite only being 30 miles apart, and both in Yorkshire, have noticably different accents.
I'm a Geordie and Cheryl Cole's accent has been butchered with elocution lessons to make her sound more middle class, if you want to hear a true Geordie have a listen to AC/Dc's Brian Johnson been interviewed, that is a true Geordie accent or watch the first episode of "Auf Wiedersehen, Pet", especially the Geordie characters of Dennis, Oz & Neville, Neville has the softer Geordie accent of Cheryl Cole EDIT: Sick DOES NOT mean cool in the uk, it means disgusting, foul ie That is sick Frankie Boyle's accent is a mixture of Glaswegian & Irish Ps personally I think think those were a very poor selection of UK accents
I'm from London, and when I want to mimic a Geordie, I just do an Oz. I think a better Glaswegian would have been Alex Ferguson or Kenny Dalglish - I have real trouble understanding them.
Sam Fender is a good modern example of a young Geordie as well. He's from North Shields and accent is a lot stronger than Cheryl's and he uses a lot more dialect.
I'm a Scot myself, a weegie that moved to Edinburgh back in 2004. I love the scouse accent myself, closely followed by Geordie. Then I'd probably have to say the Irish accent in 3rd position.
I'm a Geordie, i moved to Somerset around 22yrs ago. When i first got here, i was broad and had to tone my accent down. They said i was rude and abrupt. But when i toned it down, i found they reacted positively. To me they have a sing song voice here, where Geordie isn't, it is quite flat. When i go home for a visit, i come back broad. But i do find if I'm relaxed, tired or with the grandbairns who've obviously been hearing me for years, i can geat really broad again 😆.
I'm so jealous you have an accent. I lived in Dorset for 40 years. I have no accent. I now live in the West Midlands and only one person mentioned my accent when I said I was from Dorchester. But on the plus side I can translate drunk Glaswegian which is more useful than I would ever thought.
3rd comment here but man, your efforts at doing these accents is really good. A great addition for the video for comedy purposes but a fantastic effort. I don't know if I could do better than you for some of them, and I know the difference between most of their accents quite well. I can't wait until they get to Scouse and they have Jamie Carragher up there. Good luck lol
I'm a Brummie, born and bred. I lived in London for 5 years and Durham for 15 years. So my accent has changed, strangely closer to RP now. I do get funny looks from fellow Brummies when they hear me speak.
You did that outro in what I call "Scirish", which is the closest most Americans (with he notable exception of the late great Robin Williams) manage get to the Scottish accent, mostly sounding Irish.
Yeah, totally. Another example of that would be Mel Gibson when he played the part of William Wallace in Braveheart. Fuckin butchered the accent and wasn't anywhere near a Scottish accent really. Lol.
In Ireland the Northern Ireland accent is very different to the South. There is parts of the North and the south that wouldn't have a clue what each other is saying.
Accents are Such Fun 😁 I just adore all our differences…..how boring would it be if we all had the same accent😳! Thanks for sharing…and trying some of them out 🤗👍
We have so many accents over here, and then so many dialects on top of that. These people are using their "tv voices" though and slower/clearer than most speaking naturally. Takes the fun out of it haha.
I love the way you present your videos in that your approach is calm, sensible and non-hysterical. As for accents, I'm a Brit with what they nowadays call an 'Estuary accent' Like yourself, the accent I find hardest to understand is Derry, but my favourite accent in the whole of the British Isles as opposed to just the UK, is a Dublin one (as spoken on the sitcom Mrs Brown's Boys, which if you don't have in the USA, there are plenty of clips from it available on UA-cam, although some, shall we say, colourful language is used at times).
Some of the "country bumpkin?" accents in Hot Fuzz are fairly challenging, some of it may be exaggerated but there are people whose accents are similar to those used in the film
This is very true. I'm from Gloucestershire where the film's set and my accent's more like Nick Frost's, but my mates at school would tell you I sounded more like the old cop with the dog, or more likely the farmer with the barn full of guns.
The regional accents used here are nowhere near as broad as they really are in those areas. The only naturally spoken accent was Louis Tomlinson's. That really is how people speak in Doncaster (Yorkshire). But Jason Stathom isn't even a cockney! Born in the North Midlands. Then he moved to Norfolk as a kid. To my ears, he does sound like a cockney. I'd be curious to know how a Londoner views his accent.
'Peterheed' (Peterhead) would have been the one to beat. I'm from Inverness but one time (years ago) visiting friends in Peterhead, we went to the cinema and to this day I've no idea what the guy at the sweetie counter said to me, when I asked how much the Opal Fruits where. In the end I held out my cash and he took the coins he needed. I have no trouble with any other Scottish dialect.
Your impression of the Stath had me LOL'ing hard. Can't believe you think Welsh sounds Irish, tho! Ozzy's hard to understand, not just because of the accent, it's also because he mumbles a lot. Remember, there's more than one Irish accent, as much as multiple Welsh, English and Scots accents. I remember that thing with Cheryl and the US talent show, they did a thing on the news talking to Geordies about it and there was a guy on there who's accent was so thick I could barely understand it, but I never have trouble getting Cheryl's.
I grew up in Somerset lived in London for a few months Earls Court (lots of Aussies and Kiwis) spent a bit of time in Scotland and now live in Wales so I've got used to a lot of accents 😊
Bit pointless having personalites illustrate different accents. Stagecraft has forced them to tone down to be accepted on the national stage. Geordie, deffo my fave; sorry, but Brummie always makes me inwardley giggle. Love All!
Lucy picked some easy examples of these regional accents to understand. The Cardiff accent is common I'm from South Wales and it's normalish to me. Further nothing our accent is much stronger.
You made a fairly good job of replicating some of those accents, certainly much better than I could, I have a Glaswegian accent, possibly not as strong as Frankie Boyle as I lived 40 years in London.
~7:00 she sounds slightly Irish because Irish and welsh are Celtic. A lot of the pronunciation for the welsh accent is because of how words are pronounced in welsh
If an Aberdeen accent had featured, we would have probably topped the list - it's only because more people are familiar with Glaswegian that it became the token Scottish accent featured. Similarly some accents in the Welsh valleys would be much trickier to understand than Cardiff.
Her video is not for people who speaks english is for people who doesn’t. I don't really see why you criticize her so much. You are an english speaker of course you can understand everything.
I’m a Geordie and when I visited New York last year I had to speak posh for people to understand me. Although I had a few Americans praising and loving my accent.
A lot of these accents are watered down from what you'd hear in the actual areas they're from. Probably because they're celebrities, so they're used to having to talk with a lot of different people from different places, so you have to learn to communicate in a way that let's you get your point across. In the actual areas, they can be a *lot* stronger. Mine is Geordie, and I've watched people from the south of England smile and nod at a conversation between north easterners, because they couldn't understand a word (especially when dialect enters the chat). I've also been made fun of or treated as though I was stupid because of my accent. Meanwhile, living in Yorkshire (which is only 100 miles or so from where I grew up), there are accents so strong I can only get every second or third word, and I'm the one smiling and nodding.
I've had that too. The being made to feel stupid/less because of my accent or have it made fun of. I also seem to absorb bits of accents after living somewhere for a while so both times I lived away from the area for a number of years my family made fun of me because I'd say some words with a different accent. I think the accent I struggled with the most to understand in the last few years was a lady from Edinburgh who'd lived in Newcastle for 5 years. She had what sounded like the strongest version of both put together and spoken at a rapid pace! I had to really concentrate. Apart from that the most I've struggled is a relative from Sunderland which is hilarious as I'm only from up the road in Newcastle so what, 10 miles or so?
Loved your attempt at the Welsh accent LOL. Wasn't offended at all don't worry. Top tip when trying to do a Welsh accent is to try and do a stereotypical Indian accent but dial it back a bit :')
I've only been to the West Country twice and as a Londoner was quite taken aback that only a couple of hundred miles away, the accent was so different not to mention the cashier in a supermarket calling me 'my lover!',
The default for English speaking accents that Americans aren’t familiar with seems to be default to Irish, Scottish or Australian - have had it a lot in the US. Even Canadian or ‘out of state’ occasionally. My accent is northern east midlands of England
I'm a Geordie and when people even in the UK can't understand me well/place the accent they default to Wales/Scotland or N Ireland (in that order). Someone in Canada asked me if I spoke English. My friends from elsewhere in Europe have had no (unless I use slang) problem understanding me though.
Now we have just got to talk about the brits that have a mixture of accent into something incredibly unique since you moved around lots as a kid and your parents have different accents Can’t wait for that 😂😂
I'm a Geordie, I moved to Somerset 22yrs ago. My granddaughter is nine, and she's been to Newcastle once. But has obviously heard my accent her whole life. I picked her and her brother up from school once, and I was taking them to a cafe. We were walking along the road, and this car who was quite far from us, beeped their horn. The bairn turned around and shouted, yeah we can see you, you doilum (idiot). I didn't know whether to laugh, or tell her off 😆. But it just shows you, that they pick lots of words up. My late husband used to say aye all the time too 😆.
This is me lol. People always ask me where my accent's from and I'm just like 🤷♀️ it's just kind of a generic one I think, but with short As (grah-ss, bah-th). My dad uses long though.
The Northern Irish accents tend to be harsher that accents from the Republic. A great example of a "Norn" accent is Liam Neeson's. For a strong Geordie accent, have a listen to stand-up comics Ross Noble and Sarah Millican, both of whom are from Newcastle. And yup - both John Lennon and Paul McCartney have (had) strong Scouse accents.
I love your efforts of our very strange, up and down accents 😂👍, I'm from Sheffield in England which is in the region of Yorkshire which does hold very weird accents 😂
None of rhese were true broad examples. I guarantee, if you walked into a pub in northern England where i live, and heard all the locals in full flow. You would think you were in a foreign country. 😂😂
The problem with all these examples is that they are all performers/singers/presenters, and while they may have an accent they need to be understood by an audience, so the accent is toned down, real life examples of these accents would be much much harder to understand, it does show the variety of accents across the UK and it doesn't even touch on the different native languages spoken Cornish, Welsh, Irish Gaelic, Ulster Scots, Doric, Scots and Scottish Gaelic.
Yeah we have a ton of accents here. I'm closest to Wolverhampton out of cities. Which has a similar, but not the same, accent to Birmingham. However I live west of Wolverhampton approx 10 miles just into the rural county shropshire. Here we're sandwiched between Cheshire and then Liverpool to the North, the more "farmer" type accents South of us, Welsh to the west and the west Midlands to the east of us. And that makes the accent round here almost a hybrid of all those places.
I came to a conclusion even before I listened to these accents! They are analysing CELEBRITY accents! Therefore, by definition, they need to be generally understood! Therefore, they are obviously watered down and not really representative of the TRUE speakers of the accents.
In most towns, (I know for a fact in Preston) the accent and dialect differs from one area of the town to the next. I can tell an east Preston accent from a west for example. Im sure this is the case accross the nation.
I dont think you understand - she is a well known professor of English for foreign students NOW. She's not there for the likes of you and me just wanting advice for some future tourist travel, with a slant toward comedy.
If Charlotte Church has a Cardiff accent, then her parents wasted a lot of money sending her to expensive schools. Thats a Cardiff accent from one of the more affluent areas.
Her accent has changed. When she was younger ,she spoke with a very English accent - this due to the fact the she rubbed shoulders with her mates at Howells girls school; a private school in Cardiff where most of the pupils come from very affluent ( and Anglicised) homes
The Essex accent has changed so much due to London overspill. When my parents were young and even when I visited my relations there in the early sixties, many still sounded like rural agricultural people?
do you remember Peter Seabrook off the telly? He had a nice mid Essex voice. You still meet the occasional old boy who has the twang, but it's definitely heading for extinction.
You can tell the difference, between early Londoners and later arrivals in Essex, I came from London and grew up in Essex and I miss out my 'H's and pronounce things more in line with the original rural Essex people (even though I am from South London), than the later arrivals who sound more 'posh'.
Northern Ireland accent is quite distinct from the accents in Ireland. There're certainly similarities between the different Gaelic derived dialects though, as noted by your associating the Welsh accent with Irish.
You have to remember that these videos are made for people learning English and so the sub-titles are very useful for them. It is also why she speaks so clearly and slowly and seems to over-explain.
My daughter in law is Polish and she was taught English by an American. She landed in Newcastle pretty confident she knew English. At the train station a guy walked up to her and said eeee lass a thee gannin t toon? (Basically Are you going to the town) She stood wide eyed like a rabbit in headlights. She said she feels she’s had to learn a whole new language. 🤣😂
I'm from the NE and know a fair few Polish people, every time I hear one try to do the Geordie accent it cracks me up (in the nicest possible way). Hope she settled in though, we're a lovely bunch up here.
That's because your daughter-in-law was taught American by an American. Notice how the USA is stealing the English language. I have to click on an American flag now to select my language that is not American.
I know a Polish woman married to a Scouser who has a genuine Polish/Scouse accent. It's freaky!
We don’t say “thee” in Newcastle.
I'm American English is my first language but I still consider myself bilingual 😂
TBH most of those accents were NOT as 'broad' as many people would speak them and some are also spoken slower too! That could be because the featured people were already speaking on TV shows or during interviews and may have unconsciously used a more 'gentle' version (like a 'telephone voice', perhaps?). I'm quite confident if, for example, someone visits a Liverpool or Newcastle pub and had to join in with a group of locals, they would struggle 'big time' to keep up with the conversation... 😎
You mean subconsciously lol.
Yeah, as a Geordie I've got my normal accent where I talk with friends and locals which includes a load of dialect too, and then there's the accent I use with the rest of my family which is more toned down and ditches some dialect, and then there's the "phone accent" where all the slang goes and the accent is dialled back as much as possible. I did that talking to someone from Southampton and apparently I sounded like I was from Scotland so not sure how much that helped!
Accents also vary widely within the city (you can narrow down the part of the city someone is from!) and if I come across someone from some areas which have a stronger accent or use more slang then even I can struggle a bit and I'm from here.
The adding in extra vowel sounds isn't unique to the accents mentioned either. People say Geordie and Maccum (Sunderland - just a few miles down the coast) accents sound the same but they don't and one of the differences is once you get down there (my friend from County Durham does it too!) they add in extra vowels. At least my relatives and friends all do! So a film is a fil-um for example. I have an elderly relative from Sunderland and I struggle to understand her at times!
@@wirralnomad
I had to re-read my comment and burst out laughing... You're right and rather than edit, I shall leave it. I have lived in London over 40 years but visit 'home' in Eastham a few times a year.
My thoughts entirely.
As a cockney,I went to see Man Utd away at Newcastle and was in a pub near the ground right next to us were these local lads,and they were speaking so fast and with such thick geordie accents,I couldn’t understand anything they were saying.
Then they noticed and spoke to us,but this time they toned it right down and we understood.
Like my cockney accent,when I’m with old pals,it’s fast and full of slang,but talk to someone not from London and we make the adjustments.
I love our huge variety of accents.
I can tell if someone is from east or south London pretty easily.
Received Pronunciation definitely IS a regional accent, as spoken in more affluent areas of London and the Home Counties.
It is not heard much outside there.
Thing is, it’s not just the accents, it’s the dialect. Towns 10 miles apart can have different words for the same thing. Makes life much more interesting 😄
I was chatting to a friend the other day when he said a word I'd never heard before; gennel. I looked at him blankly, so he tried an alternative, and that meant nothing either. He meant alleyway. So I searched regional words for alley and there are several, like gennel, ginnel, jitty, twitchel... There were others. It seems to vary from county to county. I've clearly been living under a rock!
@@WylderWytch I live in NE England. Parents born in Gateshead, (other side of the Tyne from Newcastle), I was born in Sunderland and moved to Durham when I was 4. No more than 20 miles between any of those places but accents & dialect so different. It’s crazy! But v interesting 😊
@@karengray662 Living in Washington I am in the middle of Newcastle, Gateshead and Sunderland and we get a right mix here because of it
Correct! I know places 2 miles apart who talk slightly diferently
Don't start on what is a bap, barm, roll saga
She's chosen people with the softest accents even if you were from another planet you would understand everyone
She's teaching students who's first language isn't English.
However Lucy does sound like she was head girl, at her public school..
That is interesting. English is not my first language and Iam struggling to understand the last 5 accents. I guess I will not survive in the UK.
was thinking the same. should have been an average person on the street
@@AdeHidait would be a little more difficult for sure
i have to say even in Yorkshire the accent differs within a few miles . Leeds (west yorkshire) is very different to South yorkshire (Sheffield, Doncaster etc) and East yorkshire (Hull) is different again
That's wild. I wonder how accents can change so much in a few miles. I wouldn't think that people are staying in one place for so long that they're not influenced by other accents, especially in current times. But maybe they are, I don't know. 🤷🏻
@@JJLAReactstime. They’re baked in by time. Consider how quickly the western US was settled with trains and cars and how little variety of accents there is in the west compared to the east (including the south) which had had more time for the accents to bake in - but still nowhere near as long as the UK has had. The lines are starting to blur now because of how instantaneous communication is via the internet and ease of movement but meaningfully that’s 20 years vs 1500 years just for English - and prior languages to English spoken here like Brythonic dialects will have influenced how various regions spoke English when they adopted it
I'm leeds and struggle with other yorkshire accents 😂
Yep deffo (a Yorkshire saying!). Me and my hubbie are Barnsley and he used to work in Leeds and they didn't know what pehs (peas) were!
People in and around Barnsley can tell what village you are from by listening to you speak. The accent has subtle variations in different parts of the borough.
I'm from Yorkshire and my wife is a Mackem (Sunderland). We went to the states earlier this year and were teaching friendly waiters and people we met how to say hello in our different accents. They found 'Ey up' really difficult to say. And then my wife said 'Yalreet pet' which blew their minds.
😂 love it
American minds generally do seem to be easily blown,.. although I am not sure if it's from...
...their stereotypical myopic lack of education outside of the USA & 'Americana',..
...their larger populational effect, thus having a more noticeable percentage of meeting a stupid in person,..
...or the amount of guns they have, overtime their brains reducing in size to try and escape potential future coming bullets (am joking very darkly upon that last one, if someone is toi stupid to read an contextual inference).
I love this
I'm going to type this out in both English, and my native Doric, which is the dialect from the northeast of Scotland--Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire and north to the Moray Coast. In so doing, I hope it becomes clear just how much the dialect can change over such a short distance, and stress just how different and unique an accent can be from region to region. My qualm is the mainstream media portraying the Scottish accent through Glaswegian (and occasionally Edinburgh, or West Coast accents, while overlooking the impenetrable brogue of Northern/Northeast Scots).
This is naturally a video focusing on learning English. It is therefore understandable that The Glaswegian accent is used, since it is Scots English, rather than the Teutonic (roots in Germanic/Old English) of Aberdeen and its outlying areas. The spelling of Doric also varies from area to area, and is not an English dialect; rather, it is officially recognised as having independent language status, in the same way Gaelic might be for example. It is my hope to portray just how devolved and multitudinous dialects are around Britain, and how even a solid grasp of English across the Ilse's many thick accents may be frustrated should you visit rural areas, or the nation's extremities. I trust, if nothing else, you might take delight in the richly flavoured visualisation of my own mother tongue, however difficult and tiresome it may be to follow. :)
[Doric transliteration]
Ah'm gaan til scrieve ess oot in baith Inglis n ma native Doric, fit ist e dialeck fae e nor'east o Scotlaan'--Aiburdeen, e Shire an' noraard til e Moray Caist. Bi deein sic, Ah hope thon cams clear jist foo muckle e dialeck kin change ower siccan wee distance, an' stress jist foo different n unique an accent kin be fae region til region. Ma qualm ist e mainstream media portrayin e Scottish accent ben Glesga (n eft Embro or Teuchter accents, fyles owerlookin yon impenetrable brogue o Norlaan/Nor'east Scots).
Ess is naityirally a video focusin on learnin Inglis. 'Tis as unnerstaunable at Weegie is eesed, syne ist Scots Inglis, rether an e Teutonic (roots in Germanic/Aul Inglis) o Aiburdeen n its ootleif areas. E scrievin o Doric ay varies fae area til area, an' isnae an Inglis dialeck; rether, ist officially kint as haein independent langyij status, in e sam wye Gaelic micht be. Ah hope til show jist foo devolved n mony dialecks are aroon Britain, n fit wye even gwid Inglis athwert thon Ilse's mony steepit accents maun gar yi grue gin ye visit rural areas, or e eyns o e laan. Ah trow, iffen ni'hin else, yi micht fyne yirsel affa tricket wi e scrievins o ma ain Mither Tongue, fyles teuch n puggilt yi micht fyne yon.
I live in moray, murry we call it. My english teacher in school spoke doric which made classes interesting. What catches me out is that the farmers and the fishermen seem to speak completely different languages from each other, even us locals have trouble sometimes
Fit ye daen
A just read that in big Roisin fae river citys voice 😂😂😂😂😂
Who you calling a teuchtar ya eejit
@tomgreen625 remember Rab Nesbit and Jamsie Cotter encountering a 'teuchtar' when they went to Loch Lomond for a holiday?
Rab and Jamsie are walking along a track on their way to try and find a pub. They're lost.. they see a land rover approaching and decide to ask directions:
" Hey teuchtar! Whur aboots thae pub?"
Landrover driver is obviously in a Barbour jacket, has an upper class accent and can't understand them! 😁
If you want to hear a more authentic Geordie accent, it’s the 40th anniversary of Auf Wiedersehen Pet. It’s on the tube and well worth a watch
I am from the West Country and my favourite accent is by far the Geordie accent.
@@sp4rtavus244I’m from Manchester and my favourite accent is scouse, i feel like a traitor every time I tell another Mancunian lol
I’m from North Wales. The North Walian accents are totally different from the South Walian and Mid Walian accents. The gutteral sounds in the Scouse accent come from the influence of the Welsh language.
Worth remembering that there is much greater diversity of accents than suggested in this. I'm from Yorkshire and there is a broad range of accents across this particularly large region (made up of multiple counties).
There was a TV comedy called " Auf wiedersehen Pet " in the 1970s which was about a gang of bricklayers from different parts of the UK, working in Germany.
If you watch a clip on UA-cam you will hear strong authentic Geordie, scouse, Welsh ,Brummie, and Cockney accents.
I'm from Yorkshire, but my favourite accents are Welsh, and Geordie, as they are quite melodic.
Al Murray does a very extreme version of British accents in a comedy routine, which I recommend.
I’m from Manchester and about 30 miles to Burnley, 30 miles to Huddersfield, 15 miles to Bolton and 35 to Liverpool. The accents are so different, even I struggle a bit, especially if folk have had a couple of shandies
You are so right, accents and alcohol often don't mix well... 😅 😂 🤣
Bolton is v different to Manchester and sounds more like Yorks to me, but is prob just a strong Lancs accent which MCR doesn't have. Huddersfield are in Yorks so obvs diff accent
Horrible cockney accent JJ
I swear you're one of the best reactors. Your comments and facial expressions are gold, and I love how you look stuff up too.
I thought a clip of Liam Gallagher speaking in a Mancunian accent would be one of the top 3 lol
I love seeing americans struggling to understand the scouse accent, its too funny
Big road accident, young woman trapped in her car.
The paramedic asked, "What is your name?"
"Tracy"
"Where are you bleeding from, Tracy?
"Romford".
Your Statham impression had me rolling mate 😂
LOL Thanks!!!!😂
Read your comment before watching this didn’t think anything of it meant nothing! Having just witnessed what I have I must say I almost chocked to death on a chicken wing seeing it!!! This guy is Jason’s American Brother! ❤❤❤❤😂😂😂 love this channel
@@JJLAReactsthat was quality mate, had me in stitches ❤❤😂
I couldn’t stop laughing at your “Welsh” accent. It was so funny. But you did good with many of them fair play. 😂
Are you Welsh? Im from Cardiff and i am crying at how he pronounced my accent
"Ozzy osbourne speaks with a birmingham accent and I could barely understand him"
yes but a lot of that is to do with the decades of drugs and alcohol
I think the years of copious amounts of drugs are more relevant than the accent in respect if understanding Ozzy
@@GormlyKeepI find it funny that Ozzy came up with the majority of the lyrical topics of early Black Sabbath, and they were some very deep and philosophical topics, but Geezer Butler was the one who had to write the lyrics because Ozzy wasn’t very articulate, just goes to show that great articulation isn’t the be and end all of determining intelligence.
The Devon accent is something else - I'm from Wales but it always makes me smile
I grew up in a farming area in Devon so my accent can be strong. I live in SW Hampshire now and still use the Devon dialect.
I’m from Devon but if I go out in the sticks then even I struggle to understand what they’re saying, I’m surprised to see that no southwest accent even made it on the list!
Shocking that Glasgow wasnt #1 lol. She also found herself the most well-spoken Glaswegian ever haha. She needed to have a vid of a NED! The clip she had of a Geordie accent was also favorable. She couldve used a clip of Adam Pearson doing a Newcastle match review, or just a fan coming out of St. James Park after a match.
For sure, I doubt Franky is actually from Glasgow, and I base that on the fact I can easily understand him. As for us Geordies, you can tell how extreme the accent is by how we say the colour Purple.
Jason Statham, although he sounds like a "Cockney" isn't one. He was born up in Derbyshire then moved to Norfok as a kid. Maybe he gets the accent from his parents or he just adopted it for acting purposes? Anyone know?
I think he speaks 'Hollycockney' An accent invented by Guy Ritchie which sounds like Estuary English, but can be understood by Americans. Gor blimey faaack off you cheeky bleeder etc.
He picked up his accent from selling at Gt Yarmouth market.. Pand a pand a pand... etc..
Post WW2 lots of bombed out Londoners were resettled in Norfolk, I worked up in Thetford when in the military and you hear the mixture of original "Oh ar" Norfolk accent and the London accent all being spoken up that way, but I suspect that as an Actor in the US, the London way of speaking is more understood and maybe helps get good movie roles? I like Jason Statham though and his best movie was Guy Ritchie's Lock Stock and 2 Smoking Barrels, again London based! 👍🏽🙏🏼😆🤣😂
I really enjoy your reactions as you're genuinely interested and actually take time to think about what you're watching. Good stuff!
Should have had Jasper Carrot. For Brummie, check him out and have a good laugh as well. Jimmy nail for Geordie. The Big Yin and where was Northampton? “Oim gewin dain tain me duck.(I’m going down town). And “Oi shallader be gewin. Tadar air kid.”
I'll check those out! I appreciate the phonetic spelling 😂
There are many accents within a regions accent. For instance the yorkshire accent changes in different parts of the county.
A lot of people in Portsmouth speak with a 'Cockney' accent as many people from there moved to Portsmouth during Victorian times to work in the dockyard. My schooldays involved many bits of Cockney rhyming slang, even though I didn't know that's what it was at the time.
I thought you did really well with this sample of accents. I'm very impressed that you were genuinely interested. This was a lot of fun to watch, thank you.
These examples are of people speaking to people outside of their region, so they tend to modify the way they speak. I didn't realise how lazy we speak in Yorkshire until I moved to the US in the late 90s and had to drastically change how I spoke because no one understood me.
The issue with many of these accents is that there are many variations, especially "Yorkshire" and "Welsh", given their historical splits, Doncaster and Leeds, despite only being 30 miles apart, and both in Yorkshire, have noticably different accents.
I'm a Geordie and Cheryl Cole's accent has been butchered with elocution lessons to make her sound more middle class, if you want to hear a true Geordie have a listen to AC/Dc's Brian Johnson been interviewed, that is a true Geordie accent or watch the first episode of "Auf Wiedersehen, Pet", especially the Geordie characters of Dennis, Oz & Neville, Neville has the softer Geordie accent of Cheryl Cole
EDIT: Sick DOES NOT mean cool in the uk, it means disgusting, foul ie That is sick
Frankie Boyle's accent is a mixture of Glaswegian & Irish
Ps personally I think think those were a very poor selection of UK accents
I'm from London, and when I want to mimic a Geordie, I just do an Oz.
I think a better Glaswegian would have been Alex Ferguson or Kenny Dalglish - I have real trouble understanding them.
Sam Fender is a good modern example of a young Geordie as well. He's from North Shields and accent is a lot stronger than Cheryl's and he uses a lot more dialect.
This was so much fun to watch. Not a bad attempt at all at some of these accents
I loved your cockney JJ, the gurning was hysterical 😂
I’m Scottish but I love a Geordie accent.It’s so comforting.
Cheers pet
I'm a Scot who lives in Northumberland. There are a LOT of common words between Lallans Scots and Geordie..Champion!
Bearn, wee and canny and aye for sure!@@HarryFlashmanVC
I'm a Scot myself, a weegie that moved to Edinburgh back in 2004. I love the scouse accent myself, closely followed by Geordie. Then I'd probably have to say the Irish accent in 3rd position.
I'm a Geordie, i moved to Somerset around 22yrs ago. When i first got here, i was broad and had to tone my accent down. They said i was rude and abrupt. But when i toned it down, i found they reacted positively. To me they have a sing song voice here, where Geordie isn't, it is quite flat. When i go home for a visit, i come back broad. But i do find if I'm relaxed, tired or with the grandbairns who've obviously been hearing me for years, i can geat really broad again 😆.
I'm so jealous you have an accent. I lived in Dorset for 40 years. I have no accent. I now live in the West Midlands and only one person mentioned my accent when I said I was from Dorchester. But on the plus side I can translate drunk Glaswegian which is more useful than I would ever thought.
I am from Aberdeen, and moved down near Reading many years ago, they could barely understand a word I said, even my name! 😂
3rd comment here but man, your efforts at doing these accents is really good. A great addition for the video for comedy purposes but a fantastic effort. I don't know if I could do better than you for some of them, and I know the difference between most of their accents quite well.
I can't wait until they get to Scouse and they have Jamie Carragher up there. Good luck lol
I'm a Brummie, born and bred. I lived in London for 5 years and Durham for 15 years. So my accent has changed, strangely closer to RP now. I do get funny looks from fellow Brummies when they hear me speak.
You did that outro in what I call "Scirish", which is the closest most Americans (with he notable exception of the late great Robin Williams) manage get to the Scottish accent, mostly sounding Irish.
Yeah, totally. Another example of that would be Mel Gibson when he played the part of William Wallace in Braveheart. Fuckin butchered the accent and wasn't anywhere near a Scottish accent really. Lol.
In Ireland the Northern Ireland accent is very different to the South. There is parts of the North and the south that wouldn't have a clue what each other is saying.
Accents are Such Fun 😁 I just adore all our differences…..how boring would it be if we all had the same accent😳! Thanks for sharing…and trying some of them out 🤗👍
True! It would suck if every accent was the same, that distinction make's all the difference ✊
We have so many accents over here, and then so many dialects on top of that. These people are using their "tv voices" though and slower/clearer than most speaking naturally. Takes the fun out of it haha.
God she loves the sound of her own voice. I wouldn't want her teaching me because a great deal is irrelevant.
I love the way you present your videos in that your approach is calm, sensible and non-hysterical. As for accents, I'm a Brit with what they nowadays call an 'Estuary accent' Like yourself, the accent I find hardest to understand is Derry, but my favourite accent in the whole of the British Isles as opposed to just the UK, is a Dublin one (as spoken on the sitcom Mrs Brown's Boys, which if you don't have in the USA, there are plenty of clips from it available on UA-cam, although some, shall we say, colourful language is used at times).
D'oirish would have it Britain AND Ireland, 7970. Maybe small beer to us, but not to the sons of Erin.
Jason statham isn't cockney, he's from derbyshire and moved to norfolk whenhe was in his teens
Some of the "country bumpkin?" accents in Hot Fuzz are fairly challenging, some of it may be exaggerated but there are people whose accents are similar to those used in the film
This is very true. I'm from Gloucestershire where the film's set and my accent's more like Nick Frost's, but my mates at school would tell you I sounded more like the old cop with the dog, or more likely the farmer with the barn full of guns.
Yurp! 😉😁
The regional accents used here are nowhere near as broad as they really are in those areas.
The only naturally spoken accent was Louis Tomlinson's. That really is how people speak in Doncaster (Yorkshire).
But Jason Stathom isn't even a cockney! Born in the North Midlands. Then he moved to Norfolk as a kid. To my ears, he does sound like a cockney. I'd be curious to know how a Londoner views his accent.
She should have had an Aberdonian fisherman!!!!
Wow, found it! What in the world?! ua-cam.com/video/J7sy10rV-IQ/v-deo.html
'Peterheed' (Peterhead) would have been the one to beat. I'm from Inverness but one time (years ago) visiting friends in Peterhead, we went to the cinema and to this day I've no idea what the guy at the sweetie counter said to me, when I asked how much the Opal Fruits where. In the end I held out my cash and he took the coins he needed. I have no trouble with any other Scottish dialect.
@@JJLAReacts on of my friends married a guy from Aberdeen .. she had to translate what he said all the time lol ….
Fit like are ye, loon?!
@@JJLAReactsyou do realise she teaches English to foreigners not Americans, subtitles aren't for your benefit 😅.
Your impression of the Stath had me LOL'ing hard. Can't believe you think Welsh sounds Irish, tho! Ozzy's hard to understand, not just because of the accent, it's also because he mumbles a lot. Remember, there's more than one Irish accent, as much as multiple Welsh, English and Scots accents. I remember that thing with Cheryl and the US talent show, they did a thing on the news talking to Geordies about it and there was a guy on there who's accent was so thick I could barely understand it, but I never have trouble getting Cheryl's.
Jason statham isnt a cockney, hes from the midlands
I grew up in Somerset lived in London for a few months Earls Court (lots of Aussies and Kiwis) spent a bit of time in Scotland and now live in Wales so I've got used to a lot of accents 😊
The part where you impersonated Jason Statham was hilarious! 😂😂
I would like to see what people make of a group of excited people from the Rhonda Valley talking very fast.
Bit pointless having personalites illustrate different accents. Stagecraft has forced them to tone down to be accepted on the national stage. Geordie, deffo my fave; sorry, but Brummie always makes me inwardley giggle. Love All!
She managed to pick ten very "soft" examples of the accents.
Lucy picked some easy examples of these regional accents to understand.
The Cardiff accent is common I'm from South Wales and it's normalish to me. Further nothing our accent is much stronger.
You are a superb mimic!
Frankie Boyle is really quite posh Glaswegian.
Loved JJ doing Welsh via Scotland, Ireland and India.
You made a fairly good job of replicating some of those accents, certainly much better than I could, I have a Glaswegian accent, possibly not as strong as Frankie Boyle as I lived 40 years in London.
The impersonations were so funny, well done. I think the lady from Northern Ireland was exaggerating her pronunciation of flour
Geordie is my fave accent.
google "Rab C Nesbitt" for Glaswegian lol
There is more than one f&€king accent in Scotland
~7:00 she sounds slightly Irish because Irish and welsh are Celtic. A lot of the pronunciation for the welsh accent is because of how words are pronounced in welsh
If an Aberdeen accent had featured, we would have probably topped the list - it's only because more people are familiar with Glaswegian that it became the token Scottish accent featured.
Similarly some accents in the Welsh valleys would be much trickier to understand than Cardiff.
Your Welsh accent! 😂 That was brill! You managed to do every British accent in one sentence lol
Her video is not for people who speaks english is for people who doesn’t. I don't really see why you criticize her so much. You are an english speaker of course you can understand everything.
I’m a Geordie and when I visited New York last year I had to speak posh for people to understand me. Although I had a few Americans praising and loving my accent.
As an Australian, none of these accents are hard to understand.
Because most of us Australians watch lots of pommy shows mate.
I speak RP. Just a natural upper middle class accent.
I speak with a RP accent as I am upper middle class.
The Brummie accent is black country (Adrian Chiles) , quite different to Brummie.
A lot of these accents are watered down from what you'd hear in the actual areas they're from. Probably because they're celebrities, so they're used to having to talk with a lot of different people from different places, so you have to learn to communicate in a way that let's you get your point across.
In the actual areas, they can be a *lot* stronger. Mine is Geordie, and I've watched people from the south of England smile and nod at a conversation between north easterners, because they couldn't understand a word (especially when dialect enters the chat). I've also been made fun of or treated as though I was stupid because of my accent.
Meanwhile, living in Yorkshire (which is only 100 miles or so from where I grew up), there are accents so strong I can only get every second or third word, and I'm the one smiling and nodding.
I've had that too. The being made to feel stupid/less because of my accent or have it made fun of. I also seem to absorb bits of accents after living somewhere for a while so both times I lived away from the area for a number of years my family made fun of me because I'd say some words with a different accent.
I think the accent I struggled with the most to understand in the last few years was a lady from Edinburgh who'd lived in Newcastle for 5 years. She had what sounded like the strongest version of both put together and spoken at a rapid pace! I had to really concentrate. Apart from that the most I've struggled is a relative from Sunderland which is hilarious as I'm only from up the road in Newcastle so what, 10 miles or so?
Loved your attempt at the Welsh accent LOL. Wasn't offended at all don't worry. Top tip when trying to do a Welsh accent is to try and do a stereotypical Indian accent but dial it back a bit :')
Oooooo, that’s a good tip. Interesting. The Welsh language might be my new obsession!
which accents are used in famous tv radio movies ?
Ha ha! Where’s the one doing a Somerset accent? That one got me during my first day in Bath when I moved to the UK.😂
I've only been to the West Country twice and as a Londoner was quite taken aback that only a couple of hundred miles away, the accent was so different not to mention the cashier in a supermarket calling me 'my lover!',
The default for English speaking accents that Americans aren’t familiar with seems to be default to Irish, Scottish or Australian - have had it a lot in the US. Even Canadian or ‘out of state’ occasionally. My accent is northern east midlands of England
I'm a Geordie and when people even in the UK can't understand me well/place the accent they default to Wales/Scotland or N Ireland (in that order). Someone in Canada asked me if I spoke English. My friends from elsewhere in Europe have had no (unless I use slang) problem understanding me though.
16:40 - that's not an Irish accent - it's an accent from Northern Ireland, there is a distinct difference...
You are doing a pretty good job with the accents and i notice your voice is louder when you try it😊
Hah, great attempt on these accents! And hey, us balding guys need to hear these things! :)
I'm balding and it's never held me back... The pug ugly face is a different matter though.
Now we have just got to talk about the brits that have a mixture of accent into something incredibly unique since you moved around lots as a kid and your parents have different accents
Can’t wait for that 😂😂
I'm a Geordie, I moved to Somerset 22yrs ago. My granddaughter is nine, and she's been to Newcastle once. But has obviously heard my accent her whole life. I picked her and her brother up from school once, and I was taking them to a cafe. We were walking along the road, and this car who was quite far from us, beeped their horn. The bairn turned around and shouted, yeah we can see you, you doilum (idiot). I didn't know whether to laugh, or tell her off 😆. But it just shows you, that they pick lots of words up. My late husband used to say aye all the time too 😆.
This is me lol. People always ask me where my accent's from and I'm just like 🤷♀️ it's just kind of a generic one I think, but with short As (grah-ss, bah-th). My dad uses long though.
The Northern Irish accents tend to be harsher that accents from the Republic. A great example of a "Norn" accent is Liam Neeson's. For a strong Geordie accent, have a listen to stand-up comics Ross Noble and Sarah Millican, both of whom are from Newcastle. And yup - both John Lennon and Paul McCartney have (had) strong Scouse accents.
You do a great Essex and Cockney accent.
I love your efforts of our very strange, up and down accents 😂👍, I'm from Sheffield in England which is in the region of Yorkshire which does hold very weird accents 😂
None of rhese were true broad examples. I guarantee, if you walked into a pub in northern England where i live, and heard all the locals in full flow. You would think you were in a foreign country. 😂😂
The problem with all these examples is that they are all performers/singers/presenters, and while they may have an accent they need to be understood by an audience, so the accent is toned down, real life examples of these accents would be much much harder to understand, it does show the variety of accents across the UK and it doesn't even touch on the different native languages spoken Cornish, Welsh, Irish Gaelic, Ulster Scots, Doric, Scots and Scottish Gaelic.
Yeah we have a ton of accents here. I'm closest to Wolverhampton out of cities. Which has a similar, but not the same, accent to Birmingham. However I live west of Wolverhampton approx 10 miles just into the rural county shropshire. Here we're sandwiched between Cheshire and then Liverpool to the North, the more "farmer" type accents South of us, Welsh to the west and the west Midlands to the east of us. And that makes the accent round here almost a hybrid of all those places.
Absolutely cracked me up with that Statham riff dude!
Haha! thanks!!
I came to a conclusion even before I listened to these accents! They are analysing CELEBRITY accents! Therefore, by definition, they need to be generally understood! Therefore, they are obviously watered down and not really representative of the TRUE speakers of the accents.
I’m from Yorkshire and I love my accent, my mum is ‘my mam’ and it’s pronounced ‘Yorksha’
I love all the variations within a geographical area, such as Brian Glover, who I think was from Barnsley.
@pauldurkee4764 I'm sure he was sheffield ?
Not proper Yorkshire then... should be "me mam"
In most towns, (I know for a fact in Preston) the accent and dialect differs from one area of the town to the next. I can tell an east Preston accent from a west for example. Im sure this is the case accross the nation.
Mate u are bloody good at accents !!
I dont think you understand - she is a well known professor of English for foreign students NOW.
She's not there for the likes of you and me just wanting advice for some future tourist travel, with a slant toward comedy.
I'm from Yorkshire, my husband is a Brummie. We have lived in both Birmingham & Yorkshire... So our accents are somewhere in between...
I'm from Lancashire north west England and have the similar accent to Yorkshire for example I say mi instead of me it's a down, to earth accent
Northern Ireland back to school please.
If Charlotte Church has a Cardiff accent, then her parents wasted a lot of money sending her to expensive schools.
Thats a Cardiff accent from one of the more affluent areas.
Her accent has changed. When she was younger ,she spoke with a very English accent - this due to the fact the she rubbed shoulders with her mates at Howells girls school; a private school in Cardiff where most of the pupils come from very affluent ( and Anglicised) homes
The Essex accent has changed so much due to London overspill. When my parents were young and even when I visited my relations there in the early sixties, many still sounded like rural agricultural people?
do you remember Peter Seabrook off the telly? He had a nice mid Essex voice. You still meet the occasional old boy who has the twang, but it's definitely heading for extinction.
You can tell the difference, between early Londoners and later arrivals in Essex, I came from London and grew up in Essex and I miss out my 'H's and pronounce things more in line with the original rural Essex people (even though I am from South London), than the later arrivals who sound more 'posh'.
Northern Ireland accent is quite distinct from the accents in Ireland. There're certainly similarities between the different Gaelic derived dialects though, as noted by your associating the Welsh accent with Irish.
As an english man. I can categorically confirm that her voice is amazing.