Melting pot.This has has puzzled me. If our ancestors came here from Europe, how come we have flat American accents, and not British accents?
Melting pot.This has has puzzled me. If our ancestors came here from Europe, how come we have flat American accents, and not British accents?
There are many different accents in Northern England. Just the broadly recognised ones, there's Yorkshire, Lincolnshire, Lancashire, Geordie, Scouse, and within Yorkshire, Lincolnshire and Lancashire there are a wide variety, there are even variances in Geordie and Scouse and they're just associated with a single city. So you can't really generalise like that.Whatever they speak in Northern England is completely incomprehensible to me.
There are many different accents in Northern England. Just the broadly recognised ones, there's Yorkshire, Lincolnshire, Lancashire, Geordie, Scouse, and within Yorkshire, Lincolnshire and Lancashire there are a wide variety, there are even variances in Geordie and Scouse and they're just associated with a single city. So you can't really generalise like that.Whatever they speak in Northern England is completely incomprehensible to me.
The Irish. Always the Irish!linguistic drift.
Plus an influx of Irish, German, Polish, Swedish, and a myriad of other European immigrants from the 1900's through the early 20th Century.
GO BACK TO AFRICA! Wait.Not all of our ancestors came here from Europe.This has has puzzled me. If our ancestors came here from Europe, how come we have flat American accents, and not British accents?
Indeed. My family came here from Mexico.
It's called "Scottish".Whatever they speak in Northern England is completely incomprehensible to me.
The Irish. Always the Irish!linguistic drift.
Plus an influx of Irish, German, Polish, Swedish, and a myriad of other European immigrants from the 1900's through the early 20th Century.
GO BACK TO AFRICA! Wait.Indeed. My family came here from Mexico.
It's called "Scottish".Whatever they speak in Northern England is completely incomprehensible to me.
Now, on a more serious note. There's an island in the southern Chesepeake Bay whose inhabitants still have faint Cornish accents. People in-the-know think they still have this trait even after 400 years because the island is pretty isolated and never had many immigrants from continental Europe or elsewhere. Pretty much what John Picard said.
CThere was a philosophical change related to a belief that a pure English language should pronounce Rs. It's significant that only the mid-atlantic pronounces them on the east coast.
Are you sure about that? I didn't think I had a Boston accent, but people keep telling me I do.
Now, on a more serious note. There's an island in the southern Chesepeake Bay whose inhabitants still have faint Cornish accents. People in-the-know think they still have this trait even after 400 years because the island is pretty isolated and never had many immigrants from continental Europe or elsewhere. Pretty much what John Picard said.
There are several distinct Northern English accents. As a Yank, I find the accents of the North rather charming. Like this girl hawking sex toys (this particular video is fairly clean):Whatever they speak in Northern England is completely incomprehensible to me.
I've often wondered myself how appreciable the difference in English accents are to non-native speakers and people who don't speak English at all. The Beeb's OmniEnglish is certainly widespread enough, I'd think, to suss out the difference between it and American/Canadian NewsAnchorEnglish. But I cannot for the life of me pick up the differences between a Taipei and Shanghai Mandarin speaker, even though they're said to sound as different as the above two examples. So who knows?
As a Southern California native, I'm pretty well aware of the differences between the accents of Mexicans, Cubans and Puerto Ricans -- when they're speaking English. Spanish is a different matter altogether.. . . I do notice differences in Spanish from one country to the next. But not so much the accent- it's the difference in the language itself that I notice.
Well, one difference is that Americans hardly ever use the word "suss"!The Beeb's OmniEnglish is certainly widespread enough, I'd think, to suss out the difference between it and American/Canadian NewsAnchorEnglish.
Certain places in England sound very similar to Boston accents.
I know many Brits compare the scouse (Liverpudlian) accent to nails scraping on a blackboard. But I think it sounds cute. Especially when it comes out of the mouth of Jennifer Ellison.
I know many Brits compare the scouse (Liverpudlian) accent to nails scraping on a blackboard. But I think it sounds cute. Especially when it comes out of the mouth of Jennifer Ellison.
When I lived in Liverpool I was surprised at how many variations of the Scousse accent I could hear.
I'm sure that Americans and Canadians are aware that the British find it difficult to tell their accents apart, right? And I've noticed that sometimes when American actors try to do a British accent it often sounds Australian to me.![]()
She sounds pretty much Generic Northern with a Lancashire flavour.
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