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How to speak with a "British" accent
I never knew there was such a thing as a "British" accent, so what does that make me then?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=drKtozox34M& ( I REALLY hate the fact that some americans think we only have 1 accent/dialect, come to derbyshire and i'll show you different) |
how do you mean? maybe you have to watch it agane, you clearly have to proh-cess a little better what she's telling you:hmmm:
Or have you simply bean too much in your garridge:06: |
Last december i had a brilliant tutorial in proper yorkshire style... compared to my american friend from Boston... it was a longer "proooh-cess" understanding that :haha:
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Hehe, every country has their dialects/accents. But when you've heard them on the television, you try imitate them, without really knowing what dialect it is. :O:
I've tried talking with a "English" accent, however my Swedish accent ruins it. :haha: But when I'm speaking English in a conversation with another person it's just pure Swedish accented English. :) |
LOL dont worry, it will never sound as funny to me as a German speaking English with an ENGLISH sub accent lol. I mean it made me smile everytime i heard it lol.
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One of my favorite subjects! I love accents, words and everything linguistic. One of my personal weird hobbies is to imitate foreign dialects, syntax, sentence structure, and any verbal peculiarities. I can do pretty much any accent in the world, but my American accent comes out by making the vowels sound a little flat when pronouncing a word I haven't heard spoken before.
British accents are among my favorites because of the tremendous variety within a comparitively small space. Cockney English is probably the most fun to do, but I also love many Scottish accents for the way they flow. And then you get to Nairn and you have to speak out of your nose:nope: My all-time favorite is Caucus Russian. For some reason, just speaking it makes you feel like you have a glass of vodka, especially when you use the syntax in English. I also like German, but I don't know all the regional accents that well. I mostly just imitate German war vets on documentaries. Oddly enough, the accents I have the most trouble with are American accents, probably because of my own slight drawl. I'll often slip in an exaggerated vowel or a ya'll or fixin' to when I try to emulate Yankee accents. |
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I'm not laughing just because that was funny, but also because I didn't even know Hugh Laurie was British. His accent on House is almost perfect. |
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He was born in Oxford in 1959 which makes him 'almost' English :DL http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Laurie |
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MT52HhtJ6kU [edit] One of my all-time favorites: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IwbB6B0cQs4 |
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My favourite has always been the accent of the Scottish Northwest coast and the islands which has a very soft, lilting sing song quality. Elements of it can sound like a very soft Irish brogue. As to the number of accents in Britain, I was always intrigued by the fact that in Aberdeen, a city of about 250 000 people, Aberdonians could tell what part of the city other Aberdonian's came from by the difference in their accents. Accents are one of the things I love the most about Britain. The sheer number of them make the place feel much larger than it is. |
Ever since I spent a few weeks with my cousins in London, I've always thought British accents were awesome. And Russian. And Jamaican. :yeah:
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But you can aye tell a weegie when ye hear one - "There's been a murrderrr!":03: Taggert and Rab C have a lot to answer for. Though I did find it funny that they put subtitles on the latter when they screened it south of the border!:har: Shetlanders have an interesting accent as well - fower, not four, for example. Mike.:DL |
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eu7aj...eature=related
This scene always makes me laugh. Contains strong language and cockney rhyming slang. :salute: |
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