British English Accents | The Queen's English Part 1

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  • Опубликовано: 28 авг 2024

Комментарии • 890

  • @horrorhabit8421
    @horrorhabit8421 4 года назад +1022

    I bet this is the only time in the Queen's life that she's ever been interrupted.

  • @gegu8802
    @gegu8802 5 лет назад +1831

    I am German and lernt RP at school in Germany. When I was in my twenties, I worked as a foreign language assistant at a British high school, where one of the pupils asked me why I sounded like the Queen's best friend. I told him that was because I met her for tea every Sunday afternoon and he actually believed me...

  • @Cristinglish
    @Cristinglish 5 лет назад +769

    I'm Spanish and when I moved to England I thought most people would have RP accent. How wrong I was!!!

    • @nushar5366
      @nushar5366 5 лет назад +27

      Hi Cristinglish, but now it became easier for you as Spanish people, you can pronounce every (R).

    • @terrydawson1153
      @terrydawson1153 5 лет назад +25

      Y cuando fui a España (a Granada) , descubrí que la mayoría de la gente hablaba con un accento muy diferente del accento estándar de España que se oía en clase.

    • @sebastianalderete6978
      @sebastianalderete6978 5 лет назад +26

      Te escribo desde Argentina, yo opte por el RP y deje de lado excepciones localistas. Algunos de UK se sonrien y te dicen 'very British'. Lo importante es que te entienden.

    • @sebastianalderete6978
      @sebastianalderete6978 5 лет назад +5

      Terry Dawson es asi. Y lo mismo sucede en America Latina, lo bueno es que en el idioma escrito nos entendemos muy bien, gracias a la RAE. No baje los brazos vuelva España que con unos buenos vinos de por medio hablara como Cervantes Saavedra. Sdos

    • @terrydawson1153
      @terrydawson1153 5 лет назад +7

      @@sebastianalderete6978 : Lo interesante es que en España se dice "habláis" o "vivís", mientras que en America del Sur, nadie lo dice así.

  • @angelferrandis6089
    @angelferrandis6089 5 лет назад +677

    OMG, Queen's English is my favourite accent, more videos like this please, good job!

  • @YosepRA
    @YosepRA 3 года назад +79

    There is this charm in RP. People who speak RP are often "very clear" to listen to. And they also speak slowly (not too unbearably slow) with great intonation and rhythm. Rather than the accent itself, I'm trying to learn to speak more slowly and therefore more clearly. Whenever I speak too fast, my local accent will always pop up in the end.

  • @crackcompetativeexamswithm4824
    @crackcompetativeexamswithm4824 4 года назад +52

    I love queen's English. It is easily understandable by everyone and catchy.

  • @sargeanthrs
    @sargeanthrs 5 лет назад +276

    2:55 when you spill your tea and cucumber sandwiches all over the clean carpet of the palace

    • @iilluminumooconfirmed1676
      @iilluminumooconfirmed1676 4 года назад +20

      Gosh, you did humour me.

    • @katieperry3998
      @katieperry3998 4 года назад +8

      The carpets at the palace aren't clean! Quite the opposite, those yappy snappy mutts are allowed to shit all over them! Its disgusting!! And, god forbid you tell them off!

    • @pattywang4255
      @pattywang4255 4 года назад +3

      Katie Perry Are you really Katie Perry?

    • @panfriedsebas6275
      @panfriedsebas6275 4 года назад +5

      i blurted out an ugly audible laugh because of this

    • @nachoswithnyesha201
      @nachoswithnyesha201 4 года назад +4

      LMAO

  • @usctennisplayer
    @usctennisplayer 4 года назад +71

    I stumbled across this video after looking up Foreign Accent Syndrome (FAS) on RUclips. I was born and raised in America but I have recently been diagnosed with epilepsy and after suffering between 15 - 20 intense seizures in one night the next morning I woke up with a very pronounced British Accent. The strangest part is my accent sounds very much like the Queen's English. When I say words like Gratitude I have the 'J' sound between the U. I have never been to the UK and have now had a British accent for 7 weeks.

    • @pauljordan4452
      @pauljordan4452 4 года назад +6

      That's weird, and I have heard of Foreign Accent Syndrome. That gliding 'y' sound, as in 'tuna', is called a yod.
      I'm sorry about your epilepsy.

    • @SchmulKrieger
      @SchmulKrieger 3 года назад

      @@pauljordan4452, a yod is usually spelled j. y would be oo (u) or ü or i.

  • @silvanodelazzari8522
    @silvanodelazzari8522 5 лет назад +209

    Well educated people in the UK speak the received pronunciation.
    It's so elegant and charming.
    I love it, therefore I try to improve my pronunciation every day.
    Thank you for those videos.

    • @Drobium77
      @Drobium77 5 лет назад +13

      no, people who want to get ahead, or have got ahead, speak RP. the rest of us recognise it as being a pseudo German twang, which queen victoria adopted, and is quite alien to the uk before 1850

    • @silvanodelazzari8522
      @silvanodelazzari8522 5 лет назад +7

      Drobium
      Maybe
      But then why if I look for a pronunciation in the Cambridge dictionary I get the received pronunciation?
      And then what did they use Laurence Olivier and all the other great Shakespearean actors?
      1850?
      Now we are in 2019
      Two centuries later...

    • @Drobium77
      @Drobium77 5 лет назад +4

      @@silvanodelazzari8522 being from Warwickshire , i know what Shakspear would have sounded like, and it ent lark you hear in stratfud. Thee ent gorr'oat saandin lark up ay'r, daan thee're

    • @silvanodelazzari8522
      @silvanodelazzari8522 5 лет назад +4

      Drobium
      Ok, but what about Laurence Olivier and others great actors who acted Shakespeare?
      Even Latin had a different sound those times, but now it sounds different...
      P.S. I tried to understand what you wrote
      I think I understood much of it.

    • @gabrieloleary-wachs3801
      @gabrieloleary-wachs3801 5 лет назад +11

      silvano de lazzari trust me, social class doesn’t always indicate intellect

  • @mikemelina7395
    @mikemelina7395 Год назад +42

    The Queens English, spoken by her, was delightful to hear. She was truly a national treasure.

  • @charli8893
    @charli8893 4 года назад +31

    I love how there are similarities between the Queen's English and ours here in South Africa

    • @lukealadeen7836
      @lukealadeen7836 4 года назад +7

      Yes I agree, we also emphasise every sound

    • @rominaarend9576
      @rominaarend9576 3 года назад +6

      Yes, I did not realise that until now. Must be the influence of British Colonisation. I am trying to improve on my Queen's English!

    • @readingwithauntyife
      @readingwithauntyife 3 года назад

      I was going to say the Queen's English is still active in Africa.
      I'm Nigerian and this is what I hear around me of course with Nigerian accent which itself isn't bad

    • @sampuatisamuel9785
      @sampuatisamuel9785 3 месяца назад

      South African accent had distinct Dutch pronunciation 😮

  • @lovelyworld5244
    @lovelyworld5244 5 лет назад +180

    as a foreigner, what we learn is RP accent. and then find out people not really talk like this way. I thought we learned the wrong accent........ turn out is the most standard accent just not everyone uses it.

    • @YangSing1
      @YangSing1 4 года назад +8

      Well because it's an accent so everyone in the UK can understand it on the tv

  • @NurulSyifa67
    @NurulSyifa67 4 года назад +50

    i love british accents and how it differs every parts of the UK

  • @lechat8736
    @lechat8736 5 лет назад +97

    I wish everyone would speak English like the Queen. She makes it sound very natural. Many "wannabes" sound theatrical and unnatural but her English is a treat (at least for me...LOL). Thank you.

    • @readingwithauntyife
      @readingwithauntyife 3 года назад +1

      😂😂😂😂

    • @Blitzy279
      @Blitzy279 2 года назад +1

      I just wish to find a really good teacher here in Amsterdam to make me speak like at least, almost like a native. Her accent is delightful. The British English language and French language are like a bouquet of roses wrapped in silk. You can say like all the shitty words that you want and still sound high class.

  • @jurii_vladimirovich
    @jurii_vladimirovich 5 лет назад +140

    Thank You for this video! I love the British English and the way the Queen speaks it. It is amazing, the foreigner who hasn't got much experience in listening English can understand everything what the Queen says. Her accent is really very well articulate.

    • @marcmarc8524
      @marcmarc8524 5 лет назад +26

      Jerzy Odolski. You’re right. The Queen speaks very clearly. It’s easy to understand her. She doesn’t grumble.

    • @ingriddubbel8468
      @ingriddubbel8468 5 лет назад +5

      Really very well articulate.
      You need to drop the "well"
      it makes little sense. "Very articulate" would be the most appropriate use of language. I wouldn't be so pedantic in general but this video is about language and you were abusing said language.

    • @AcesGaruda
      @AcesGaruda 4 года назад +3

      Ingrid Dubbel or just add a d to make it articulated and then that sentence makes perfect sense.

  • @lucindawinehouse2002
    @lucindawinehouse2002 2 года назад +8

    Rest In Peace Your Majesty Queen Elizabeth

  • @gavinreid2741
    @gavinreid2741 2 года назад +25

    Throughout her reign the Queen's accent has changed. She has recorded 66 Christmas messages and the gradual change is clear over the years.

  • @tommoncrieff1154
    @tommoncrieff1154 4 года назад +141

    You're not going to hear this accent when you're walking around London? I hear it all the time!! I speak with the more contemporary RP. I'm 60. I was raised in Scotland and in state primary school we learned RP, not to force us to speak differently, but to be able to get on in life around the UK and the world, because our local accents and dialects were much thicker then. In the 1960s aspirational working class mothers still sent their children to elocution lessons. Later, I went on to university with many privately educated students and then moved to London and lived among the professional and media classes, so contemporary PR is the voice I hear most, although I know many who still speak with the upper version. Lots of us who speak in large meetings or in public heighten our RP at work: it allows you to be heard at the back of a hall, foreigners understand you much more clearly and it gives you authority. To me, speaking well is like writing well or singing well or playing an instrument well. Once you learn to do it, it's automatic and it can be a joy.

    • @nachoswithnyesha201
      @nachoswithnyesha201 4 года назад +1

      Ikr

    • @DevJonathanRamos
      @DevJonathanRamos 4 года назад +8

      Tom Moncrieff you are correct. Clear words sound so much better for my Mexican Spanish ear. RP sounds elegant and you can understand it. Pronunciation also makes more sense

    • @elisabethdakak878
      @elisabethdakak878 4 года назад +4

      What is English in England now, with so many people coming from various places of the world English changes.
      Be happy to speak in correct sentences. A good structure, and speak in an understandable way. Be yourself

    • @lucindawinehouse2002
      @lucindawinehouse2002 3 года назад

      I speak with Contemporary RP because that’s how my mom and Stepdad speak
      My grandma and grandpa spoke with Conservative R.P

    • @rominaarend9576
      @rominaarend9576 3 года назад

      Yes, Contemporary RP sounds much easier to pronounce and sounds more universal for everyone to understand.

  • @robertbushee
    @robertbushee 5 лет назад +66

    Tom, I'm 75 and find your présentations truly delightful. I'm also American and would give anything to sound like Jeremy Irons when IQQ speak. There, I've confessed.

    • @0xVENx0
      @0xVENx0 5 лет назад

      Robert Bushee 75 what? 75 millions in debt? im sry for ur company, or 75 kg? thats not really bad

    • @robertbushee
      @robertbushee 5 лет назад +20

      For some Reason beyond my abilities to understand my comment seemed worthy of making fun of me. For that Reason, in part, we have many people in our society who are completely fake and insincere because people in general sense that the world out there is not inoffensive. People do not mention their debts or weight, but will sometimes share their age in hopes that the information will be useful to the one reading it. Think about it for a minute and perhaps you'll understand what I'm Driving at. And how old are you?

    • @Ynysmydwr
      @Ynysmydwr 4 года назад +8

      @@robertbushee You can safely ignore any comment as stupid as that made above by 0xVENx0, someone who clearly has a very weak grasp of English and furthermore cannot even spell correctly such simple words and expressions as "I'm sorry", "your", and "that's".

    • @robertbushee
      @robertbushee 4 года назад +7

      @@Ynysmydwr Thank you for taking the time to say kind words. The world needs more people like you. Continue enjoying life the way you do. Rob

    • @robertbushee3519
      @robertbushee3519 4 года назад +4

      @Madame Coeur de Montespan Many thanks for your uplifting words which brighten even a dark day like today. Having all sorts of people really can give us a means to compare and appreciate in ife. Keep sending encouragement at a time in history where it is so lacking and needed.

  • @gloriasangermano3687
    @gloriasangermano3687 4 года назад +8

    The Queen"s english is so clear and easy to understand. W posh english!

  • @DReed1945
    @DReed1945 4 года назад +20

    I applaud you. This was very much like a classroom setting in a way and helpful.

  • @kukithegood
    @kukithegood 4 года назад +33

    This is the first time I have heard the queen's voice.

  • @muthuhari4284
    @muthuhari4284 4 года назад +15

    Wonderful lesson😊 I love this accent. By the way, you teach with an enthusiastic passion that shows how you truly love the language.

  • @Juliita65
    @Juliita65 5 лет назад +15

    Amazing video. Thank you Tom!!!! Queen’s English pronunciation is music to my ears!!!! I’ll share this fantastic video with my students!!!! Looking forward to watching part II.

  • @ericamagi7285
    @ericamagi7285 5 лет назад +72

    Thank you for the lesson! I think that Portuguese speakers tend to pronounce each letter, each syllabus of words. So, for me, the Queen's English accent is easier to understand.

    • @marceloesteves3601
      @marceloesteves3601 5 лет назад +3

      É verdade Érica

    • @user-wt5if6rx8m
      @user-wt5if6rx8m 5 лет назад +3

      Infelizmente não aqui em Minas Gerais KKKKKKKKK

    • @dudanunesbleff
      @dudanunesbleff 4 года назад +2

      @@user-wt5if6rx8m É verdade! O sotaque mineiro é um mundo à parte.

    • @belenhernandezbenavente3420
      @belenhernandezbenavente3420 4 года назад +1

      So do Spanish, Erica. I am Spanish myself 😉

    • @ozodbodshamol-shimoli5937
      @ozodbodshamol-shimoli5937 4 года назад +2

      :-):-):-) you are absolutely right! I'm not European, but I endorse every your word! The Queen's English is easy to understand and pleasant to hear!

  • @rtab722
    @rtab722 5 лет назад +17

    This is fabulous. Looking forward to more parts of this Queen's English series❤️

  • @rami-sep
    @rami-sep 5 лет назад +80

    I wish if all English speakers use the RP accent. It sounds so respectful to me

    • @Nathan-Croft
      @Nathan-Croft 5 лет назад +3

      The new RP is even better

    • @mysaviourjesus4134
      @mysaviourjesus4134 5 лет назад +5

      Dávid Holczer Whatever it is: I‘ll learn English with RP, no matter if it is traditional RP or Modern RP. I‘ll not learn any other accent then RP.

    • @Nathan-Croft
      @Nathan-Croft 5 лет назад +9

      Most of the english guys did not care that i spoke with a modern RP.Some ppl said though that "you don't have to posh it" who gives a damn that some ppl don't like it.

    • @YangSing1
      @YangSing1 5 лет назад +6

      People are happy with their own accents

    • @Nathan-Croft
      @Nathan-Croft 5 лет назад +1

      @@YangSing1 But why you lads don't like when sy tries to speak with a more British accent?For me its's not that hard to imitate a modern posh kind of accent but to squeeze the words together, that's a tougher thing to do and the "Th" letter when I try to pronounce them after each other is hard.And I know cockney accent replace them with "v" and "f" letters

  • @heidiferrazzifarnkopf7373
    @heidiferrazzifarnkopf7373 4 года назад +11

    You cannot imagine how I did enjoy this video. Loved it indeed! I got mostly asked if I am British because of my accent. Feel proud of it, must confess!

  • @jwb52z9
    @jwb52z9 5 лет назад +43

    The vowel elements of RP are interesting. I hear some Americans who have that. I love the linguistic aspects of your videos, even though I'm a native English speaker, because I don't see people talking about this kind of thing anywhere else, for the most part. I think you'd be really good for a lecture series somewhere with the way you do your videos. You have a way of explaining that makes it interesting for everyone, not just English learning students. :)

  • @michellec3349
    @michellec3349 4 года назад +4

    I’m an American so I speak English but I’ve always loved the way the English speak it.

  • @iTechSavvyOfficial
    @iTechSavvyOfficial 5 лет назад +21

    Love your channel! I’m American, and I love your comparison videos!

  • @FabiWe91
    @FabiWe91 5 лет назад +13

    Thank you so much! I suggested to do a video on the queen's Christmas speech last year and you actually did! Upper rp is my favourite English accent by far, maybe because we traditionally watch a sketch called "Dinner for one" on new year's eve in Germany. Miss Sophie (May Warden) speaks with perfect upper rp in it and I mimicked her way of speaking when I was a child.
    Looking forward to part two!

  • @alyoshkanyanyan
    @alyoshkanyanyan 2 года назад +2

    This video has made me realize that as a turkish native speaker, they have taught us the Queen’s English at the school, and even though I could make all those sounds perfectly, I believed I was wrong because normal people didnt speak like that and struggled for several years to change that sounds to American accent…. Im gonna cry.

  • @gregct7280
    @gregct7280 4 года назад +5

    Great video !
    Sir David Attenborough has got the traditionnal RP accent, or Queen's accent as well ! And it's delicious to hear !

  • @easii229
    @easii229 5 лет назад +81

    Toms voice reminds me of daniel radcliff🤔

  • @7Nachy
    @7Nachy 5 лет назад +11

    Love your videos! I found them very interesting and useful. Nothing an ordinary teacher would teach. Looking forward to seeing part 2 👍👍👍

  • @Sanvero33
    @Sanvero33 Год назад +1

    OMG So many years trying to "sound British"... Taking Cambridge examinations and now I realize I speak like the queen??? I want to cry...😞😭😭😭

  • @natalia_juniper
    @natalia_juniper 5 лет назад +85

    The Queen pronounces "very" using the Russian "r".
    Love all British accents 😍
    Thanks Tom.

    • @marceloesteves3601
      @marceloesteves3601 5 лет назад +8

      Yeah, that "r" pronunciation is brazilian too....cheers!!!

    • @gingteng9803
      @gingteng9803 5 лет назад +6

      In Indonesian language too

    • @VVShaden
      @VVShaden 5 лет назад +4

      Very similar to russian "r", but our "r" is a little bit stronger). It's my native language). Thanx.

    • @umot6277
      @umot6277 5 лет назад +1

      No, in Russian we form the "r" in a different place

    • @davidlewis5681
      @davidlewis5681 5 лет назад +8

      You could say it's a Celtic 'r' - Irish, Scots and Welsh use it.

  • @sheilajacksonart3655
    @sheilajacksonart3655 3 года назад +2

    I went to a State school in the 1950s and 60s and we were taught to speak in a very similar way to the Queen, with vowel sounds being emphasised. We had to articulate every word and we were not allowed to mis-pronounce words. If a child said, for example, “I fink”, instead of ‘I think”, the teacher would keep correcting them until they got it right. We were ‘drilled’ in English every day because, the better you spoke, the better job you would get. A lot of time was spent on learning English grammar too and I notice many changes in people’s grammar today. My speaking voice probably sounds very old fashioned now but I suppose we continue on in the way we were taught.

  • @IreneMy
    @IreneMy 4 года назад +13

    Yessssss.... I speak the Queen's English 😄😁.... That was how I was taught by the Convent nuns at school and by Dad at home 👍👍

  • @cynhwon
    @cynhwon 5 лет назад +7

    RP sounds very respectful to me. I wonder how it sounds like in arguments or sarcasm.😂😂

  • @lucindawinehouse2002
    @lucindawinehouse2002 5 лет назад +3

    TRUE STORY
    I am nearly at the end of my schooldays and when I was at Secondary-School I was taught by a teacher who didn’t teach English class this teacher was a Technology-Teacher and she spoke in a similar style to The Queen Of England and even though I was taught at a School called Hazel Grove High School which is in Stockport North Of England . Despite that most of my teachers spoke with EXTREMELY POSH-ACCENTS .
    I went there from 2014 i will be leaving in July 2019 and I have to say that I LOVED the fact that I could teach my teachers to speak the Queen’s English it was great !

  • @alya6183
    @alya6183 5 лет назад +8

    Oh gosh thank you SO much Tom! I LOVE RP ! Especially number 1 ( the queen's English )
    I appreciate your work 💗

  • @ctrlesc1
    @ctrlesc1 4 года назад +9

    Dear Tom, you´re doing an amazing job! One huge "Thank You!" on behalf of all of us - english language learners. Could you, please, do any Lyam Gallaghers deep and comprehensive analysis as one of your next posts? He´s still a really hard one for me to get even after more than two years in the UK. Thank you so much, mate. Take care!

  • @micaelamorales9127
    @micaelamorales9127 5 лет назад +8

    Wow!! What a great video! Thank you so much! I am doing a dissertation about English phonetics, and this was utterly helpful! Cheers!!

  • @KevinKosmoArt
    @KevinKosmoArt 4 года назад +12

    I love these accent break down videos. Would you do an episode for Mr. Bean's accent please?

    • @JulieWallis1963
      @JulieWallis1963 4 года назад

      Kevin Kosmo I thought Mr. Bean was silent! I don’t think I’ve heard him speak.

  • @denisesousa5153
    @denisesousa5153 4 года назад +5

    Brilliant class, as always!... Helping me a lot during these troubled times. Social distancing is not that easy! Thanks to you I have been facing all this much better!... Stay safe! Happy Easter, Tom!

  • @COSMOPOLINerd
    @COSMOPOLINerd 4 года назад +4

    I've just discovered your channel and I must say it's absolutely brilliant!! Thanks!!

  • @cocamila
    @cocamila 5 лет назад +9

    I just realised my accent is mixture of conservative and contemporary and I speak all the words the way queen uses in this vid.. to be fair my English teacher was quite old, proper woman who drilled into my head about proper way of saying it. I didn’t know I spoke that way until some people kept asking where I was from because I used quite archaic pronunciation of words..

    • @jackbunton6388
      @jackbunton6388 Год назад

      Same here, had my grandma drilling it into my head since young, not that I'm complaining now 😂

  • @blueboy0525
    @blueboy0525 4 года назад +1

    Excellent. As a teacher once told me, awareness of language brings wakefulness.

  • @walterwhite5578
    @walterwhite5578 5 лет назад +2

    Awesome video. Simply amazing by changing the "y" found at the end of words to "i" sound, the "o" vowel you can really begin to speak like the queen.

  • @ulavere
    @ulavere 5 лет назад +14

    In Ukraine, if you are the lucky one, who had a good teacher of English, you have been learning the Queen's English. And as a result - a huge problem - how to understand the common part of Englishmen )))))))))) Don't know why, but American English is much easier for listening in this case.
    Regarding your videos, they are really useful.Thanks for such a good work!

    • @moraes3765
      @moraes3765 4 года назад +4

      Юлия Веретельник American is much easer because we have a lot of contact with It on movies and songs since we were child

  • @ChiMasterMedia
    @ChiMasterMedia 5 лет назад +13

    Yes! Take my English to the next level.
    I love the Queen's RP❤

  • @RosssRoyce
    @RosssRoyce 4 года назад +5

    "all our gratitude" - this accent you describe does something to the "L" sound too, almost like with a mute "R" before it.

  • @tanjawinter6492
    @tanjawinter6492 5 лет назад +2

    This video was suggested by RUclips, so I took a look.
    And I was very surprised when I read some of the comments.
    I'm German, and English was taught in school. I really liked my teacher since she always tried to tell us about England (where she had spent some time) and what she has learnt there.
    I loved the language as well and tried to learn more. That's more than 30 years ago, and there wasn't internet, DVDs or so.
    But I started listening to English news and music programmes on the radio, later on it was the news on TV and the original versions of British movies.
    This is probably where my accent comes from.
    After seeing this video I realised that I speak a bit of Queen's English. The way I say words like ago or two Ts is the same.
    I didn't even know what QE sounds like.
    And when I went to London and talked to people, they kept on telling me "you don't sound German at all, you sound as if you were true English".
    I can't judge that myself. I just try to do my best, I listen to people and ask them to correct my pronunciation when I make mistakes.
    Thanks for this video, I'll watch the other ones as well! 👍

  • @seth8158
    @seth8158 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you so much, Tom! I was waiting for this video for quite a while. I hope you will make more videos about the British Royals ‘ English. And, God Save the Queen! 🇬🇧 👑

  • @LodiJP
    @LodiJP 4 года назад +11

    IPA, explanations, real sound files.. this video is perfect! I wish someone would do this with the Transatlantic accent!

  • @doreenfogarty2664
    @doreenfogarty2664 Год назад +1

    I love the way she spoke. Miss her. 🌹

  • @zuleykakel356
    @zuleykakel356 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you so much, Tom. I am very fascinated by your language and the queen's accent. Great video indeed.

  • @Inthraavia
    @Inthraavia 4 года назад +2

    I don't know why or how YT suggested this video to me but I'm glad it did.
    I'm french, I know my accent sucks when I speak English but it's very interesting to hear and know how and why there are differences in the pronunciation.
    I must say that I love hearing the British accent which is very classy. I could hear it all day long. :)
    And it's even better when the teacher is absolutely charming. :)

  • @KennethBackpacks
    @KennethBackpacks 5 лет назад +5

    Very interesting video!!! Have only heard of the English mentioning the “posh” accent but never knew what it’s really like. Now I do and I’ll keep my eyes open for part 2 👀

  • @yoon9521
    @yoon9521 5 лет назад +37

    May I ask for part 2, please?

  • @jean-yvesdesldec6511
    @jean-yvesdesldec6511 5 лет назад +4

    thank you so much for this brilliant video,I have- for many years- been fascinated by the so called "Queen's English "many thanks for sharing your tips .I shall try to polish up my accent .RP is the best especially for French people ,we need a strong model to correct our French intonations

  • @nerdshala2997
    @nerdshala2997 4 года назад

    The most pleasing form of English!

  • @k.s.9561
    @k.s.9561 4 года назад +2

    Highly useful and detailled video, thank you!
    Greetings from Belgium :)

  • @kiranabbasiii
    @kiranabbasiii 5 лет назад +2

    As a foreigner I found queen's english accent is more easy and understandable as compare to contemporary british accent

  • @alicerossi_ap
    @alicerossi_ap 5 лет назад +5

    Her Majesty 👑, my respects 👰. Tom, thank you so much!! I love this video and how She speaks 😍Please, don't think that I'm a snob 😳 (I am not at all)...it's that the precise and clear sounds are perfectly suited to the articulated phonetics of my language.

  • @soundhealingsessions1416
    @soundhealingsessions1416 3 года назад +3

    Please can you do a video on Joanna Lumley’s accent - I love her voice and accent so much 😍

  • @itnaklipse1669
    @itnaklipse1669 4 года назад

    Interesting - i've always liked the way posh English sounds. Whatever else can be said about the Queen, her speech is very pleasant to listen to.

  • @ontariofirs7347
    @ontariofirs7347 7 месяцев назад

    As a Filipino in Canada 🇨🇦 I love hearing Her Late Majesty talk. God save the Queen and the maple leaf forever!!

  • @1cazuza
    @1cazuza 5 лет назад +3

    One of your best lessons! Congrats!!!!

  • @russbear31
    @russbear31 5 лет назад

    I like the accent the Queen uses today. A British linguist several years ago collected recordings of the Queen's speeches over the past 65+ years and analyzed them. His conclusion: The Queen's English is actually becoming more informal. Her speeches from the 1950's and 1960's were VERY stiff and formal. Her pronunciations decades ago were so precise and exacting that they were almost ludicrous. Over the past 20 years the Queen has learned to relax and has taken her accent down to Earth.

  • @kristiLB93
    @kristiLB93 4 года назад

    Excellent post! Anything that breaks down the English accent is fascinating to me!

  • @alejandraferreyra3681
    @alejandraferreyra3681 5 лет назад +2

    Hi Tom! Thanks so much for this video and for all of your work. You know, I teach English and as part of my training when I was in teacher training college, I had to learn to speak RP. So, this video took me back to my training years. Thanks.

  • @R3tr0humppa
    @R3tr0humppa 4 года назад +15

    This video confuses my RP.. (In school it was called Oxford English - I'm from Germany.)

    • @patu2175
      @patu2175 3 года назад

      Totally! It is called Oxford English also in Finland.

  • @MMmk1
    @MMmk1 5 лет назад +3

    I'm really looking forward to next episodes, as I am really interested in UK's accents!

  • @Alusnovalotus
    @Alusnovalotus 4 года назад +37

    Noooooooo!!!!!
    Bring back the Queen’s English!!!
    Where is Mr. Henry Higgins?!?!

    • @mumstheword8851
      @mumstheword8851 4 года назад +2

      In Hertford? Hereford? Or Hampshire? 😁

  • @EastMontana1
    @EastMontana1 4 года назад +1

    You mean. Speak PERFECT ENGLISH! Indeed.

  • @rachelamesastro
    @rachelamesastro 3 года назад +1

    Thank you so much Tom! This really helped me a lot to record a voice for one of my characters. Cheers! Xo

  • @verymozart
    @verymozart 4 года назад +7

    Actually l like this Queen's accent..
    Please, if you can and like, could you do more videos as this one?
    I would love that

  • @TheSer21
    @TheSer21 3 года назад

    The Queen speaks the best English in the World. A pleasure to hear here talk.

  • @alyas6375
    @alyas6375 7 месяцев назад

    When I lived in London, my collegues often teased me that I have Queen's crew English, when in fact even after years of living there I still had bookish English.

  • @natianatia351
    @natianatia351 4 года назад +1

    Thanks for this video. I love it. Keep them coming

  • @jp.dlamini
    @jp.dlamini 5 лет назад +1

    What a glorious accent! I could listen to her for ages.

  • @livb6945
    @livb6945 4 года назад

    In the word "gratitude", she does the same sound at "ti" as at "tu"! Also, she wouldn't pronounce the "r" at the end of "power", but she does in this example because it is followed by a vowel.

  • @jerydob6499
    @jerydob6499 Год назад

    So, heads of state, embassadors, etc, often speak to foreign people's in their own language. So pronouncing every letter helps the people whose first language isn't the same as the speaker. So far the Quen 's English is superb, that's sue- [like when someone sues for damages in court of law] - 'perb like the sound a cat makes when it is happy but with a 'b' on the end. She pronounced ' power' while enunciating all sounds. She did not say ' peau[r] or pow uh which is common in the American south. Love you but the Queens English in this video has been outstanding. Kudos to the Queen. I hope she is with the Power in heaven. Btw I like your vids. You do a pretty good job. Ty for posting them. Cheers.

  • @feroz1212011
    @feroz1212011 4 года назад +2

    So basically Recieved pronounciation is Royal Pronounciation.
    By the way, my sister thought me to speak few words like Power as Paar, Hour as Aar. I always do that, but I was impressed by the way she speaks words like "Very" so loyally. Relly posh way to speak.

    • @jaciel610
      @jaciel610 2 года назад

      Not really. It’s for the aristocracy and rich people.
      Many politicians, dukes, earls… speak with this accent.
      .
      Back then you needed to learn this accent for certain jobs. Like working in a manor (for a lord or the royals), the tv and radio, stores, hotels and restaurants (luxurious ones)

  • @mirelapaulus
    @mirelapaulus 5 лет назад +4

    What about Emma Thompson's accent? I love her way of speaking English. And I could listen to her speaking all day. What do you think about her accent?

  • @rominaarend9576
    @rominaarend9576 3 года назад

    Yes, I would love to speak like the Queen (with some of my own accent included)! I love the healthy emotional part of her attitude, which comes out in her speaking.

  • @AYESHA-vk2uz
    @AYESHA-vk2uz 5 лет назад +4

    Very interesting video, i'm not native speaker but i can understand every single word which the queen said.
    ᬫ᭄ᬦᬭᬶᬓ᭄

  • @heatherchili8113
    @heatherchili8113 4 года назад +1

    Her Majesty sounds so elegant!!!

  • @sergiosorbo6955
    @sergiosorbo6955 5 лет назад +1

    Very great lesson, Tom. I really appreciated it.

  • @mumstheword8851
    @mumstheword8851 4 года назад +1

    You do a wonderful Queen's accent, Tom. 👍👍😃😃

  • @v.gopalakrishnan350
    @v.gopalakrishnan350 5 лет назад +119

    The very nature of unphonetic languages permits very many accents which is not a desirable trait in a language!
    Here, the Queen pronounces the words very clearly which makes the speech pleasant to hear!
    *A native native English speaker's pronunciation lacks this clarity!
    Thanks for this enjoyable video!
    * Please read many native speakers'

    • @JohnnyRanks-s7z
      @JohnnyRanks-s7z 5 лет назад +4

      Lol Spanish is phonetic but I can’t understand Puerto Rican’s

    • @v.gopalakrishnan350
      @v.gopalakrishnan350 5 лет назад +16

      Even in phonetic languages, there are many dialects which don't conform to standard pronunciation!
      The spoken form has its own peculiarities in all languages!
      The one advantage in phonetic languages is the written word can be pronounced correctly by anyone knowing the alphabets of the language!

    • @user-wt5if6rx8m
      @user-wt5if6rx8m 5 лет назад +2

      @@v.gopalakrishnan350 my biggest problem with french lmao

    • @noveseth2863
      @noveseth2863 4 года назад +12

      The assumption of different dialects being an undesirable trait in language is incredibly ignorant

    • @mynamename5172
      @mynamename5172 4 года назад +2

      We do it to confuse foreigners.

  • @sleepycalico
    @sleepycalico 5 лет назад +3

    Loved this! Thank you so much!

  • @user-wt5if6rx8m
    @user-wt5if6rx8m 5 лет назад +26

    the "oo" sound is the poshest part of the accent lol sounds so snobbish. it's cool though

    • @Agent1W
      @Agent1W 4 года назад +2

      Toooo right, mate.

    • @abcdefgh8830
      @abcdefgh8830 4 года назад +1

      Lol I say too or two exactly how the queen says and I'm not even a native speaker!

  • @sylviafisher6268
    @sylviafisher6268 5 лет назад

    Hi Tom! I am a big fan of your channel. I am a Chinese. Just add a Chinese subtitle for this video.Hope I can help more Chinese people learn English here. And I watched your channel a lot before I arrived in England. It helps me a lot. Thank you!

  • @fernandopattino
    @fernandopattino 5 лет назад +6

    This is video I was waiting for! the Queen's english is the stereotype we have about British English. I don't know if it's just me but I think that RP is spoken slowly, and that's why for a non-native speaker is the easiest to understand, btw, for me the fastest is the Scottish. It has been a challenge for me to understand it, the company I work for here in Mexico comes from Scotland. Your videos have helped me to understand the standard words in Britain (pavement, rubbish, mobile, litter, etc.) Myy accent and the words I used to say are so American.
    Great Video and Thanks Tom!!

    • @walterwhite5578
      @walterwhite5578 5 лет назад +2

      Also, RP tend to pronounce and voice their vowels and consonants. They also enunciate their words clearly

    • @DevJonathanRamos
      @DevJonathanRamos 4 года назад

      Walter white yes! The same way we do when we speak Spanish.

  • @languagepolicy
    @languagepolicy 5 лет назад +6

    Very interesting video! Thanks a lot! 😊

  • @sulafaayoub1635
    @sulafaayoub1635 5 лет назад +3

    Oh, I think adding a live chat is an amazing idea Tom!!
    Like it👍💞