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But in New Zealand where they mostly sound Orse-try-lian there is a weird accent glitch by which the locals are unable to pronounce the letter 'e' and pronounce it a an 'i'.
Fascinating responses. I'm going to google all the examples like brummie and Geordie etc. LOL. Had no idea. What's really fascinating is how you can have accents only a few miles away and so many in a small area!?!?!?
For example where I'm from Maryland, no accent, Virginia next door no accent, as soon as you go into the Carolina's boom southern chicks with cute accents.
And they al have blond hair. LOL. And friendly.
Also there are too subsets of southern that I can tell. Appalachian. Aka as hillbilly. West Virginia, Tennessee mountains etc. and the Texas cowboy accent.
Expanding a bit on English accents. Worldwide. English, American, Aussie, south African, any more?
Also for you Aussies-is there a discernible new Zealand accent?
I was thinking about our international audience, Graham. To attempt a more authentic Brummie accent - in writing! - would have been far too confusing. My primary aim was to use just enough of a hint of Brummie so that folks got the "whale/wheel" joke
"Or roight? Av yer caught ennythink ter-die?"
"Ar, Oi corta way-ul Oi did, orl roight?"
"Yer wot? Yer corta way-ul? Yer daint, did-ja? Gud bloimey! Wotcher do wivvit?"
"Throwed it back in, Oi did, orl roight?"
"Woi-ja throw it back? Wornt it no good, loike?"
"Wuz orl roight, loike, but arf the spowkes wuz missin".
Ive always been fascinated with accents. Here in the US I can distinguish between about a half dozen:
1. Of course the Southern accent-probably most pronounced
2. NYC/Brooklyn accent
3. Boston accent-think JFK speaking
4. North/Great lakes accent-like in the movie Fargo
5. New Orleans/Cajun-if you've ever heard musician Dr. John speak
6. and then plain old American-everywhere else. west coast, mid west and mid atlantic I cant really ascertain any real accent.
British accents the ones I know for sure-Cockney, and royal and "common" English accent . Are there any others in England proper? I know the Scottish Brogue and Irish lilt, but what about wales? Is there a discernable welsh accent? any others?
Great list for U.S accents... but I have to add mine... I am from Western NY, right on the Canadian border...we here have what is called "Buffalo English" by linguist Wolfgang W lck ...it is a strange mix of NY accent and a Canadian accent.. we even use Canadian and NY expressions... yes. we do say Eh? here, but also words like "What" sound like "Whaa?"... we have a harsh Flat A----for instance a great example is a word like "Amherst" sounds like "Aymherst.".... people here don't realize how strong an accent we have, but everywhere I have traveled in country and over seas, people all guess where I am from by it
I recently visited a hairdresser in Ashington (North of Newcastle) and asked if they did 'perms' she replied yes of course... 'I wandered lonely as a cloud....'
In like vein, two Brummie anglers are talking to one another:
"Yaw cawt anytheeng todaay?"
"Yes, I cawt a whale, but I threw eet back een the water"
"Yaw cawt a whale and yaw threw eet back een! Why?"
So many accents in England alone. I'm from the North East and everyone thinks I'm a Geordie which of course I'm not. I could travel 15 miles from here North through Newcastle and hear at least five or six completely different accents and dialects. A broad Sunderland (Makem) accent is so different from mine even though I live only 8 or so miles away. Then you go South via Teeside and it changes a few time as well.
I was always taken a back when the 'Yorkshire Ripper' tape was played and they claimed he was a Geordie but then said Castletown in Sunderland which is narrowing it down a lot. You tell anyone in Castletown they are a Geordie and they would go ape ****. Saying that when Humble was caught he was from Ford estate which is just across the water so not bad by the experts but certainly not a Geordie.
One of my faev Geordie jokes to illustrate how it sounds.....
I recently visited a hairdresser in Ashington (North of Newcastle) and asked if they did 'perms' she replied yes of course... 'I wandered lonely as a cloud....'
There are many Welsh accents, Abby, and they can vary considerably between geographically close regions. Indeed, I'm always amazed that my accent and those of my more "western" colleagues are quite different, even though we only live some 20 miles apart.
Edit: This guy does a pretty good job; all but the last accent he does can be heard within 50 miles of me.
British accents the ones I know for sure-Cockney, and royal and "common" English accent . Are there any others in England proper? I know the Scottish Brogue and Irish lilt, but what about wales? Is there a discernable welsh accent? any others?
Oh for sure the Welsh accent is just as distinct, and in England up around Newcastle, Sunderland - the Geordie accent. Where I'm from in Yorkshire is different again. My wife's homeland in Lancashire is different. "Scouser's" from around Liverpool are as different again.
Birmingham & the midlands - "Brummies", are another example.
Down in Somerset, Devon, is another example. You could line us all up and any Brit could tell us apart blindfolded.
No such thing as a "British" accent, Abby. English, Scottish, Welsh, all of which have many of their own regional accents. In England, the most recognizable ones would be Cockney, Scouse, Yorkshire, Brummie, Mancunian and Geordie.
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