American Reacts to 17 Different British Accents

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  • Опубликовано: 1 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 919

  • @stephenjones1380
    @stephenjones1380 11 месяцев назад +163

    True story: my grandmother grew up in the city of Nottingham, but moved to South Wales. She was chatting on the doorstep with a neighbour, when a stranger passed, stopped and turned, and asked if my grandmother was from - not Nottingham, but - a particular suburb in Nottingham!! That's how diverse our accents are!

    • @jaccilowe3842
      @jaccilowe3842 11 месяцев назад +9

      I moved to Australia when I was 30 and one day in the doctor's surgery I heard two old ladies talking in what was a dead ringer of my grandmother's Brummie accent. It was so exact that I had to ask them their origins and, yep, you guessed it, they came from the same suburb of Brum!

    • @danielkirk5660
      @danielkirk5660 11 месяцев назад +9

      well a up me duck, where abahts from notts was your nan from? I'm guessing st. anns or meadows

    • @stephenhickman304
      @stephenhickman304 5 месяцев назад +1

      I too have always had that skill being able to drill into where the accents collide in certain towns even villages on occasions. I remember one occasion when at work we had a new starter from a town in South Yorkshire who used odd words I recognised from an entirely different regional town. I asked him about it and he was amazed as he had spent a short time prior to adoption as a toddler in that town but was adopted at the age of 4 years old and moved 100 miles south where he lives to this day

    • @thecraggrat
      @thecraggrat 4 месяца назад +1

      I'm from Nottingham too and I reckoned that you could easily tell the shift in the accent when you moved ~5 miles round the city, certainly the dialect changed as you moved round and is/was a major factor in identifying where you grew up😀. My mother was from St Anns. area and I can remember visiting my gran and grandad up there before all the terraced houses were cleared away. Mt Dad was from Burnley and I grew up in Beeston, so my accent/dialect is completely different too, then another 3 miles down the road from me in Long Eaton/Sawley area where a number of my nephews & nieces grew up the accent/dialect has shifted yet again to the Erewash dialect.

    • @denniswithoutthed8390
      @denniswithoutthed8390 3 месяца назад

      Mansfield, by any chance

  • @moonramshaw1982
    @moonramshaw1982 11 месяцев назад +278

    There's something wrong Tyler if you can't tell the difference between Scouse and RP😂

    • @f0rth3l0v30fchr15t
      @f0rth3l0v30fchr15t 11 месяцев назад +43

      I mean, most non-native Brits probably think Scousers aren't speaking English.

    • @nolajoy7759
      @nolajoy7759 11 месяцев назад +5

      😂

    • @thedisabledwelshman9266
      @thedisabledwelshman9266 11 месяцев назад

      @@f0rth3l0v30fchr15t thats cos they aint. lol

    • @jonathanbrowne9538
      @jonathanbrowne9538 11 месяцев назад +7

      Love the scouse accent!

    • @Legorreta.M.D
      @Legorreta.M.D 11 месяцев назад +8

      Are you surprised? He said a few videos back he didn‘t know if there were kangaroos in Austria

  • @jamesleate
    @jamesleate 11 месяцев назад +166

    For hundreds of years people's lives were pretty much confined to a 20 mile area (a day's walk or so), so there are lots of unique accents.

    • @jemmajames6719
      @jemmajames6719 11 месяцев назад +2

      But surely any country would be the same?

    • @jamesleate
      @jamesleate 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@jemmajames6719 Yeah, I'm not sure what the situation is in countries like Germany or France though. Do they have a similar situation?
      The populace has got more and more mobile over the centuries so it wouldn't be the same in the US but should be similar in Europe.

    • @sameebah
      @sameebah 11 месяцев назад +20

      @@jemmajames6719 - you have to consider that the British Isles had wave after wave of invaders and settlers. Those became established in different parts of the country, so you had areas with quite strong linguistic influences.
      We've had Celts, Romans, Angles, Saxons, Jutes, Vikings, Normans . . . Plus influxes of 'refugee populations' such as the Huguenots.

    • @larrycable1827
      @larrycable1827 11 месяцев назад +5

      Hi Tyler. Just to let you know Haggrids Robbie Coltrane is actually Scotish so the accent in the Potterverse is all talent.

    • @mikeh020011
      @mikeh020011 11 месяцев назад +9

      The accents in the UK have slowly became softer due to first radio and then television and more so in the last 30 years due to American shows on television.

  • @louiselane806
    @louiselane806 11 месяцев назад +134

    There’s no such thing as a “normal” British accent. When most other countries think of the British accent they think English accent and the posh version. Some of these as a previous comment stated, are tame or a stereotype. The range of accents throughout the UK is more than 17, way more.

    • @DavesFootballChannel
      @DavesFootballChannel 11 месяцев назад +13

      i don't even think of myself as british i'm english first then british second, if at all!

    • @kathryndunn9142
      @kathryndunn9142 11 месяцев назад

      @@DavesFootballChannel yes I'm like that

    • @gazzie12000
      @gazzie12000 11 месяцев назад +9

      @@DavesFootballChannel Funny - I'm the opposite! British first and English second, and I never really think of myself as English, just British.

    • @blackbob3358
      @blackbob3358 11 месяцев назад +11

      @@gazzie12000 I do'nt consider myself either, i be from Yorkshire. ( Waiting for the stick !! )

    • @Paul-hl8yg
      @Paul-hl8yg 11 месяцев назад

      ​I'm a Yorkshireman, English & British. I'm also a European although totally against the eu. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧@@blackbob3358

  • @SCC_Herring
    @SCC_Herring 10 месяцев назад +35

    She's not exagerating the differences, she absolutely nails it! very accurate. How do we have so much more variety in accents in a tiny space? I'm guessing because we have waaaaay more history.

  • @rikmoran3963
    @rikmoran3963 11 месяцев назад +123

    There are over 300 accents in the UK. The most well known tend to be ones associated with particular cities or areas. Having said that, there would also be different accents within those cities and areas as well, which locals would be able to tell apart. I think most people from the UK could hear people speaking English from anywhere in the world and still understand them (with a few exceptions), so it blows our mind when you can't tell the difference between two hugely different accents or say that you can't understand them. Perhaps, our brains have developed to be good with accents, because we are exposed to them so much.

    • @Diablo_Himself
      @Diablo_Himself 11 месяцев назад +1

      And thats excluding all our foreigners...

    • @raelynne79
      @raelynne79 11 месяцев назад +3

      Gotta say, I can't tell the difference between west coast US-ian and Canadian. That's because so many tv shows were filmed in Vancouver, much of the media we consume is a weird mashup of Californian and West Canada and we in the UK end up thinking they're the same thing.

    • @NicholasFurlong-y7u
      @NicholasFurlong-y7u 9 месяцев назад +1

      There's around 40 not 300 U edder

    • @Diablo_Himself
      @Diablo_Himself 9 месяцев назад +1

      Include all the foreigners in that....
      Way more then.

    • @SylarDean
      @SylarDean 20 дней назад

      @@NicholasFurlong-y7u its estimated around 40-56 distinct dialects/accents in a single region of the UK still exists today and still spoken. Add up all the regions and it's certainly over 300 for the entirety of the UK. But yes.. this video Tyler was watching didn't even scratch the surface for all spoken UK accents/dialects. The video I think she's just mainly touching on mostly cities rather than towns, and the accents most well known around the World from Movies and such, hence why she keeps referring to actors all the time.

  • @TF2CrunchyFrog
    @TF2CrunchyFrog 11 месяцев назад +32

    Welsh is its own language, it's a Celtic dialect. Just as "Scottish" is a very different vernacular to "English with a Scottish accent".

    • @melanierhianna
      @melanierhianna 3 месяца назад

      Strictly not a Celtic dialect. Irish and Welsh are both celtic but they aren't dialects of one another. One is P celtic and the other is Q celtic or in other terms, Brethenic celtic and Goedelic celtic.

    • @herstoryanimated
      @herstoryanimated 3 месяца назад

      English with a Scottish accent is basically the Scots language!

    • @Yesser-Thistle73
      @Yesser-Thistle73 Месяц назад

      @@herstoryanimated I take it you haven't heard the differences between Ayrshire and Glasgow?

    • @herstoryanimated
      @herstoryanimated Месяц назад

      @@Yesser-Thistle73 I am aware of the differences, I believe there are more than 40 different accents across the United Kimgdom and Northern Ireland of which Scotland is obviously a part of that statistic. I was just saying there is a separate language called 'Scots' that is an English variant with words such as:
      Eejit
      A slang term that's derived from a dialectal spelling of the Irish English and Scottish English pronunciation of "idiot".

  • @debbiemillar5864
    @debbiemillar5864 11 месяцев назад +52

    Ive got a Northern Ireland accent but she was doing a Belfast accent. We have many variations in our wee country too, like Derry , Ballymena and my Armagh accent.

    • @jamesleate
      @jamesleate 11 месяцев назад +1

      Wasn't Ian Paisley from Armagh? I don't know if it was the accent or the situation but every time I heard him speak I'd become depressed and deflated.
      I'm sure your accent is beautiful though.

    • @belle_fast3551
      @belle_fast3551 11 месяцев назад +3

      ⁠@@jamesleateno Paisley was from Ballymena!

    • @ShamFraeTheToon
      @ShamFraeTheToon 11 месяцев назад +2

      Born in Armagh, reared in Ballymena and spent most of his mature life living in Belfast......a real mix.

    • @debbiemillar5864
      @debbiemillar5864 11 месяцев назад

      @jamesleate he was born in armagh, MP North Antrim so Ballymena direction. Lol hopefully it was the situation! I put a positive spin on my accent. The only thing with NI accent is its soooo hard to say anything with a W or a R. Shower is a nightmare to get out lol!

    • @stephaniehamilton6217
      @stephaniehamilton6217 11 месяцев назад +3

      Another interesting fact about the Norn Irn (Northern Ireland) dialect is the pronunciation of the letter "H", you can basically tell a person's religious/political persuasion by how they pronounce words beginning with the letter "H".

  • @neilgayleard3842
    @neilgayleard3842 11 месяцев назад +62

    There are 40 plus just in England. A lot of the differences are very subtle. Even many British can't tell one from the other if they are close to sounding the same.

    • @omnishambles4477
      @omnishambles4477 11 месяцев назад +2

      Far more than that, there's about 4 accents within a few miles of me

    • @bencollins4168
      @bencollins4168 11 месяцев назад +1

      The moment he said 40 in Britain, I was i can name more than that in England alone

    • @kevfullo
      @kevfullo 10 месяцев назад +1

      these impressions of accents were laughable. The poor chap didn't have much to work with here.

  • @marko2873
    @marko2873 11 месяцев назад +33

    The UK isn't a large place now, but when you had to travel days by horse to get anywhere it was a whole lot bigger and most people wouldn't stray far from their village. It probably felt like travelling to another country does to us now.

  • @ivylasangrienta6093
    @ivylasangrienta6093 11 месяцев назад +26

    Her scouse was very tame. That also depends on which part of Liverpool you grew up in.

    • @JAL1403
      @JAL1403 6 месяцев назад

      It can be much thicker

    • @chickenperson-ir3bn
      @chickenperson-ir3bn 12 дней назад

      ​@@JAL1403bucket of chicken and a can of coke

  • @ewan8947
    @ewan8947 11 месяцев назад +38

    Tyler, the reason there’s such variation in such a small place (compared to US) is that we are much older than the US. The world was a much bigger place when they developed. Just 50 miles down the road would be a day of travel and so accents developments very separately. To the extent some were not just accents or dialects but their own language even, like Scots. The modern accents are actually watered down versions of the dialects/languages they once were which would have been almost unintelligible to each other in many cases.

  • @TheRealRedAce
    @TheRealRedAce 11 месяцев назад +26

    Hagrid had a very good SouthWest English accent, especially considering the actor was from Scotland!

    • @neuralwarp
      @neuralwarp 11 месяцев назад +1

      And both Dumbledores had very bad Somerset accents.

    • @TheRealRedAce
      @TheRealRedAce 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@neuralwarp True....if not having any trace of a Somerset accent counts as a bad Somerset accent.

  • @DLMoridin
    @DLMoridin 11 месяцев назад +8

    Recieved Pronounciation is a artifical accent created when radio first became popular. It was designed to ensure that no matter where you were in England or how bad your radio reception was, you could understand what the person was saying. We have a lot of accents for two reasons. Lots of people have migrated to england over the years or invaded. We also didnt travel very far in general until more mass transit like trains came around so accents reinforced each other in small areas.

    • @bubba842
      @bubba842 5 месяцев назад

      I speak with an RP accent and can tell you that it's not artificial.
      Radio broadcasts you are on about were spoke in higher RP.
      They were not put on artificially, it's just that most of the people who worked on the radio back then came from well educated and rich families. They went to schools like Eton, Harrow and Rugby.

  • @UnknownUser-rb9pd
    @UnknownUser-rb9pd 11 месяцев назад +14

    Robert Burns was from Ayrshire.A different accent entirely than the Highland accent.
    The Inverness accent is actually very clear and a sort of Scottish version of Received Pronunciation which most people seem to like hearing.

    • @LordLauchlan
      @LordLauchlan 10 месяцев назад +3

      Exactly! Her rendition of an Inverness accent is an insult.

    • @Beatlefan67
      @Beatlefan67 10 месяцев назад +2

      Chuck in the Doric dialect and that'd screw him!

    • @margaretmckay-os1sz
      @margaretmckay-os1sz 2 месяца назад +1

      Her Scottish accents were awful,

  • @janineadkins8259
    @janineadkins8259 11 месяцев назад +10

    She mentions Burns for Inverness but he was born, bred and buttered in Ayrshire! Her Scottish accents are keich.

    • @tasha1721
      @tasha1721 11 месяцев назад +2

      Keich! Ive no heard that in dunkeys!

    • @janineadkins8259
      @janineadkins8259 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@tasha1721 aye its about due a comeback IMO🥳

    • @tasha1721
      @tasha1721 11 месяцев назад

      @@janineadkins8259 agreed! 😂

    • @Pommit
      @Pommit 2 месяца назад

      Keich? I'm from the Isle of man and 'keck' is shit.

    • @Yesser-Thistle73
      @Yesser-Thistle73 Месяц назад

      @@Pommit Oh yes.....But then, you are close to Scotland!

  • @vi11ageidi0t
    @vi11ageidi0t 11 месяцев назад +12

    There are so many accents all in a very small landmass. You can go as little as 30 minutes down the road in any direction and hear a completely different accent to your own.
    I live in a small seaside town in the south-west, I can go north to Bristol or south to Bridgwater etc and they both have noticably different accents to both me and each other.

    • @chrisspere4836
      @chrisspere4836 10 месяцев назад +2

      The Bristol accent is very thick sounding and Bridgwater is a zumerzet accent. I'm a Westonian, Weston-Super-Mare for those that don't know where a Westonian comes from which must be pretty close to your town.

    • @vi11ageidi0t
      @vi11ageidi0t 10 месяцев назад

      @@chrisspere4836 Can't get much closer, as I too am a Westonian! Lol

  • @carolineskipper6976
    @carolineskipper6976 11 месяцев назад +7

    Her accents here are definitely at the 'party trick' level, rather than 'dialect coach' level.She does a fair stab - but doesn't sound like a native of any of these regions. No Brit would believe any were her natural accent- apart from her RP.
    Stephen Fry does come from East Anglia- but his accent is very definitely RP. It's that 'class' element at work.
    The Northern Irish and Irish accents are very different - you'd have to listen to native speakers to hear the difference properly- but they are both distinctive.
    17 accents gives you a flavour of what we have, but there are many many more - even London has a variety, depending where you live. I used to do a 10 mile commute by bus across West London, and listening to the local school kids getting on the bus there were 3 distinct variations as we travelled towards central London.

    • @spencerburke
      @spencerburke 10 месяцев назад

      "The Northern Irish and Irish accents are very different... "
      Meaningless statement. More about politics than linguistics.

    • @JAL1403
      @JAL1403 6 месяцев назад

      Next level, local accents.

    • @Yesser-Thistle73
      @Yesser-Thistle73 Месяц назад

      @@JAL1403 In some fishing areas, the accents subtly change from small town to small town.

  • @helenwood8482
    @helenwood8482 11 месяцев назад +13

    Britain is much older than cars and trains. The accents were developed when few people ever left the town they were born in.

  • @lesliedellow1533
    @lesliedellow1533 10 месяцев назад +3

    Her “London” accent is what is more commonly known as a Cockney accent, and mostly to be found in the East End of London.

  • @Loulizabeth
    @Loulizabeth 11 месяцев назад +21

    A huge part of the reason of why we have such varied accents is because of which different countries invaded us and where they landed and much of the country they conquered and which parts they didn't. And then yes after that most people started where they were after that so an area or a cities accent would over time become much more unique. Once trains and cars arrived we became much more aware of the different accents.

    • @EmilyCheetham
      @EmilyCheetham 11 месяцев назад +4

      Yes the invasion played a part but also the age of the uk. America is only around 247 years old where as England is around 1100 years old. More than 3 times as old with people in back as far as the Stone Age. People way back weren’t traveling far as they had to travel mostly by foot unless they were wealthy. So the at meant many accents and dialects formed in areas of the uk

    • @pathopewell1814
      @pathopewell1814 6 месяцев назад

      Exactly.

    • @Yesser-Thistle73
      @Yesser-Thistle73 Месяц назад

      @@EmilyCheetham Parts of Orkney in Scotland spoke their own language in 3100 to 2500 BC. That and later Scandinavian speakers have contributed to the Orcadian, soft accent.

  • @tonyjefferson3502
    @tonyjefferson3502 11 месяцев назад +22

    the accents on here are very "tame" mild versions of each

    • @davidjackson2580
      @davidjackson2580 11 месяцев назад +2

      Agreed. I have a Cheshire accent, which wasn't covered, but sufficiently near several of the accents that were. The attempt at a scouse accent was very mild compared to what you actually hear, and the Lancashire and Yorkshire ones were too. There are of course multiple Lancashire and Yorkshire accents, but I can understand the need to keep the video short.
      When I was young, I went to Newcastle for an interview and the accent was almost incomprehensible; certainly much stronger that in the video.

    • @ShaneH42
      @ShaneH42 11 месяцев назад

      Yeah, they’re more impressions than an accurate portrayal. I think she’s trying to make sure she’s more understandable and barely uses regional dialects

    • @puffpride8344
      @puffpride8344 11 месяцев назад

      Except the West Country one. Only old people speak like that. The rest of us have MUCH tamer accents or speak in RP lol.

    • @virtualranger7780
      @virtualranger7780 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@puffpride8344 This doesn't stop me from hearing the odd teenager saying: "Alreet me lover!", from time to time, whilst walking around Bristol.

    • @puffpride8344
      @puffpride8344 11 месяцев назад

      @@virtualranger7780 Oh we say that and we put on an accent when we say it lol. But yeah that exists. We just fake the accent because it sounds weird af in RP or a very tame West Country accent. I will say though, Bristol is probably the place where the accent is most alive. If you're gonna meet a young person who has a strong West Country accent, it'll be there.

  • @Craigy2818
    @Craigy2818 11 месяцев назад +14

    The UK has so many accents, it's unreal. This doesn't cover all of them and the variations. It's because we've been invaded so much and became invaders, etc... lol.
    So, the East Anglian accent is part of what makes up the American Southern accents. It's a London, East Anglian and West Country mix... That's why those Americans say things like : "Dang! I done dropped it" 😅

  • @jonathanhaye2953
    @jonathanhaye2953 11 месяцев назад +11

    I have just returned to the UK after 25 years living in the USA, and I can tell you that I STILL can't distinguish between the subtleties of most American accents, and I think many Brits would agree with me. We can hear a broad southern accent, or maybe someone from the Bronx, but once you get into the subtleties of Boston or West Coast, the differences simply don't register with me. If you take the time to point them out with individual examples I can certainly hear them, but they just don't register in day-to-day encounters. Which I think means that we can all pick up the subtleties of pronunciation of accents we are surrounded by (either in real life, or on TV), but less good at hearing regional variations when we're not familiar with them. Love your videos by the way - keep them going, Tyler!

    • @ShizuruNakatsu
      @ShizuruNakatsu 11 месяцев назад +1

      I'm from Ireland, and have never been to the US, at all but I do know certain American accents. I'd definitely notice Texas, California, Boston, Minnesota, New York (especially Brooklyn), and the southern accent of course. "Standard American" just sounds normal to me though so if someone didn't have one of these other accents, I wouldn't know whether they were from Nevada or Ohio.
      I actually struggle more with English accents, despite being to the UK several times, having English family, and getting a lot of UK TV channels here.

  • @PorridgeDrawers
    @PorridgeDrawers 11 месяцев назад +17

    There can be variations of Scottish accents in one town and hundreds all over Scotland.

    • @da90sReAlvloc
      @da90sReAlvloc 11 месяцев назад +1

      Scottish sounds Geordie to me

    • @PorridgeDrawers
      @PorridgeDrawers 11 месяцев назад

      @da90sReAlvloc there's loads of Scottish accents and dialects. One somewhere might sound a bit Geordie if it is close to the border.

    • @Yesser-Thistle73
      @Yesser-Thistle73 Месяц назад +1

      @@PorridgeDrawers Even in one county, like Fife, there are the coastal accents ( and completely different words!), while inland and further north, the accents -and dialects are different again.

    • @PorridgeDrawers
      @PorridgeDrawers Месяц назад

      @Yesser-Thistle73 It's the same in Ayrshire. So many different dialects.

  • @RevPeterTrabaris
    @RevPeterTrabaris 11 месяцев назад +19

    Tyler, I always love your enthusiastic interest in learning new things. According to the U.S. Census there are more than sixty million people in the United States who claim either English or Irish heritage, followed by German at forty million. The history of U.S. accents is in no small way brought into existence from our ancestry. When you think of it this way, we hear variations of these accents everyday even though they are being modified in most parts of the country by influence of the many other ethnic language patters in the U.S. I don't think you have ever reacted to the Wired channel's two or three part series where they explain "American" accents. It would be fun to see you react to those videos on the heels of this one. I am significantly older than you, but I have heard and been aware of the many U.K accents increasingly throughout my life. I think if you listen to U.K. speakers (We are going to encounter them mostly through the media.) and listen closely enough to hear the way they speak and where the speakers come from (Easy info to look up.) you will indeed find that you are actually familiar with these variations. I also watch a lot of British movies and television series. Wonderful video. I hope you have a great day. Peace

  • @phillipjerram-wood7785
    @phillipjerram-wood7785 11 месяцев назад +8

    Love your videos, there are so many accents even within the same city and towns

  • @missharry5727
    @missharry5727 11 месяцев назад +6

    I grew up near Bradford in West Yorkshire. That accent is quite different from East Yorkshire, South Yorkshire and North Yorkshire. It's deiscernably different even from Leeds which is not very far away. Having lived in Hampshire since 1971 I have mostly lost what Yorkshire accent I had which was never very strong. But I still can't bring myself to pronounce "bath" with the extravagantly long A sound of the South of England. I say it to rhyme with path, not baath. But I have discovered that if I am speaking to someone else with a strong regional accent - it used to happen a lot at a summer school I regularly attended in South Wales - I become much more Yorkshire.

  • @Rhianalanthula
    @Rhianalanthula 11 месяцев назад +7

    There are two main Welsh language soap operas. Pobol y Cwm is based in South Wales, and gas been broadcast since the 1970s. Rownd a Rownd is based in North Wales and has been on screens since the mid 90s. Neither is particularly fussy about the type of Welsh accent, as long as you can speak Welsh. Sometimes, the cast will be speaking English depending on the storyline, showing that many are bilingual. Pobol y Cwm had Michael Sheen guest staring as a doctor when one character, Kelly, was in hospital a few years back (I think before lockdowns)

  • @TheNoobilator
    @TheNoobilator 11 месяцев назад +9

    The fundamental answer to "why are there so many accents in the UK when it's so much smaller than the USA?" is that for a much, MUCH larger percentage of the USA's history, movement of people and hearing people from other regions via mass media has been possible. For hundreds and hundreds of years here in the UK (and much of the old world), people were effectively limited to their home village and maybe a few nearby where they would go to trade; they spoke almost exclusively with people from their own village, and as such accents and dialects could continue to develop to be more and more divergent and geographically specific. Essentially, without TV, radio, phones, and cars, the world is _effectively_ much bigger - remember that distance is only really relevant relative to how easily distance can be covered.

  • @antonycharnock2993
    @antonycharnock2993 11 месяцев назад +10

    EVERY town and city has its own accent. Also don't confuse accents with dialects of which Yorkshire has its own.

    • @Lola-bn1no
      @Lola-bn1no 11 месяцев назад

      Yep Barnsley sound different from Sheffield that's just south yorkshire it self

  • @sammyross9076
    @sammyross9076 11 месяцев назад +9

    Tyler listening to these accents they were tame representations of the accents the people speak , the people from these areas have a way thicker accent with local colloquialisms and often speak a lot faster making it very hard to understand to the american ear.

  • @mertaksac9718
    @mertaksac9718 11 месяцев назад +7

    "how are there so many accents?"
    It might not be a very big country, but it's very old. The accents were formed before you could get to the next town easily, so they all sort of evolved in isolation. The US, on the other hand, was all colonised at more or less the same time, relatively speaking, so the accents span a much greater distance

    • @neuralwarp
      @neuralwarp 11 месяцев назад

      You wait till he finds out how many pubs there are in Romford.

  • @rosemariewelch1525
    @rosemariewelch1525 11 месяцев назад +17

    There are almost 40 different accents in England alone it can change county by county. It is believed the reason for this is because of the various settlers eg Vikings Saxons Norman's etc., that came together to form the language . Also another factor is where the area is , eg by the sea , weather , industry etc.,

    • @scragar
      @scragar 11 месяцев назад +3

      A big factor is language deviates more when it's isolated. The UK has had a very long time where the fastest way to communicate was for someone to ride a horse.
      So areas only loosely mixed with neighbouring areas(after all if it's an hour walk across a dirt road you're unlikely to do so unless you had a good reason to).
      In the modern age accents are getting lost because travel and communication are so much easier. It's no longer an hour walk on a dirt road, it's a 5 minute trip on a train or 10 mins on the bus/car. You can always ring someone or video call, etc. The distance between the accents is shrinking as everyone's accent becomes a sort of average of those they communicate with frequently and the range of accents most people communicate with becomes broader.

    • @blackbob3358
      @blackbob3358 11 месяцев назад +1

      There's 40 in Yorkshire alone, love.

    • @neuralwarp
      @neuralwarp 11 месяцев назад

      Someone said 300 British accents, and I'd believe them. There are 4 in my town alone.

  • @Natalie-qu2ue
    @Natalie-qu2ue 11 месяцев назад +5

    The Republic of Ireland is not part of the UK, only northern Ireland the two are different countries, and accents can change within the same county the Yorkshire accent can change from city to city.

  • @NathanielBTM
    @NathanielBTM 11 месяцев назад +8

    the 3:36 "London" accent she shows is not how modern day londoners really sound, it's called the "Cockney Accent" and it developed in east london... and though some people still have that accent over here, it's usually the older generation or people who moved outside of london. the younger generation may still hold elements of the accent but most people in london have a variation of Recieved pronounciation mixed with elements of slang and some other accent they grew around with from the migration population in london, so Caribbean, African, Asian ect ect.

    • @ashhabimran239
      @ashhabimran239 11 месяцев назад +1

      Dunno if it's just me, but the Cockney accent sounds like a dying breed at this point

    • @alexmckee4683
      @alexmckee4683 11 месяцев назад +1

      MLE is much more common than either Cockney or RP in the Saarf-East.

    • @thebasedspectre3048
      @thebasedspectre3048 8 месяцев назад

      The Cockney accent is Londons accent anything else is a parasite

  • @royfishall6482
    @royfishall6482 11 месяцев назад +7

    Most Brits were brought up watching US TV shows so have no trouble understanding American English. I can tell the difference between some of the US regional accents. I can just about tell the difference between US and Canadian speakers; where you would have no difficulty. Like you say, our ears get 'attuned' and the average Brit detects all the different UK accents just as you can detect all the US regional ones.

  • @blackbob3358
    @blackbob3358 11 месяцев назад +3

    Stephen Fry be from East Anglia, but you cetainly could'nt tell that, by the way he speaks. He's what they call Public School, where, it seems, the first thing they do is "beat any accent out of you", metaphorically or physically.

  • @JoannDavi
    @JoannDavi 11 месяцев назад +5

    "I forgot."
    We know, goldfish, we know.

  • @TheGwydion777
    @TheGwydion777 2 месяца назад +1

    She's not bad, but far from perfect. Better than I could for sure. Then again, I couldn't do accents from my own language and country that well. Hats off for a craic at least.

  • @alisonrodger3360
    @alisonrodger3360 11 месяцев назад +5

    All three of her attempts at a Scottish accent sound, to a Scot, exactly like an English person failing to do a Scottish accent.
    Small mercies that she didn't attempt a Fife or Buchie accent.

    • @simonorourke4465
      @simonorourke4465 11 месяцев назад +1

      I'm just glad she didn't try Doric lol

    • @alandanskin4415
      @alandanskin4415 11 месяцев назад +1

      She relocated Burns to the Highlands and dubbed him a knight

    • @Yesser-Thistle73
      @Yesser-Thistle73 Месяц назад

      @@alandanskin4415 He would be "black affrontit!"

  • @emmac6886
    @emmac6886 10 месяцев назад +2

    This is before you get into micro region accents too. For example I live in the North East and for people who live here you can tell the difference between the accents in Newcastle, Durham, Hartlepool, Middlesbrough and a pit accent that that's all within a 60 mile radius. One of the examples she uses for Geordie, is Billy Elliot, but that is not actually Geordie, its a Billingham/colliery village accent that is distinct from Geordie (depending on the character in the film).

  • @gillian3168
    @gillian3168 10 месяцев назад +6

    Listen to some Scottish accents, we don’t all have a Glaswegian or Edinburgh accent, our dialect and accent changes pretty much every time you drive from one town to another, I belong to NE Scotland where we have our own distinctive dialect which instantly identifies us as coming from that part of Bonnie Scotland 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

    • @Yesser-Thistle73
      @Yesser-Thistle73 Месяц назад

      Absolutely! One county can be home to several dialects and accents.

  • @LeeStewart
    @LeeStewart 11 месяцев назад +3

    I’m a Geordie and I have spoken to Australians and New Yorkers and there is difficulty understanding some of the words I use, which is why I do my best to speak as posh English as I can when I visit those places.

    • @kevfullo
      @kevfullo 10 месяцев назад +1

      I've got a scouse/lancashire accent and vocabulary. I do the same with a terrible posh voice so I can be understood. "Thas reet klempt, knowwharrImean lar?" doesn't really work abroad. Or at home 😂

  • @millerklein
    @millerklein 11 месяцев назад +3

    I was brought up in the East End of London in the 1950's and 60's. Natural accent the 'Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels' example. My secondary school from 11 was in a posher part of London, and they very quickly switched me to received pronunciation. So effectively that while my family mostly stayed with a generic Cockney accent, I can 't even fake it anymore. At the time the view was that if you were going to succeed (university, good job etc) you needed to shed your accent; particularly those seen as 'lower class'. It is much better now, but for years anyone with aspirations shed their native accent.

    • @danmayberry1185
      @danmayberry1185 11 месяцев назад +1

      Similar story for my Gran. b Stepney 1896, she boarded in Chelsea for work as a charwoman at Kensington Palace (Grandad was a Cornish Bobby at Marble Arch). Spent her last years with us in Canada, and reverted to her childhood ways and accent, as I grew to love kippers, but drew the line at jellied eels.

  • @stephenkelly8176
    @stephenkelly8176 3 месяца назад +1

    The expression on Tylers face when he hears the Glaswegian 'attempt' 😂 😂

  • @PolarBear4
    @PolarBear4 11 месяцев назад +3

    Accents over here are very distinct even in smaller areas. I'm from Newcastle and it's possible to tell where in the city someone is from if you know the accent! I was picked out as not sounding local by a nurse at my GP surgery because I grew up in a different part of Newcastle!
    It's not just Americans who can't tell the difference though. Geordie accents are often mistaken for Welsh/Scottish/Irish ones. I've lost count of the number of times if I've been asked if I'm from any of those places. Just earlier this year had someone from the south coast insist I was Scottish because I didn't sound like Ant and Dec (2 very famous TV presenters who are from Newcastle - just a different part of Newcastle to me!) which kind of proves my point of if someone from the area doesn't have the exact stereotype of that accent people don't realise they're from there - so there are many variants even within cities.
    That's before dialect is thrown in the pot too! When you get to certain parts of the UK you can tell who invaded them because of dialect. There's several words we use in the Geordie dialect which are similar to Norwegian words for example.

  • @Marzipan_Rocks
    @Marzipan_Rocks 11 месяцев назад +10

    Americans aren’t exposed to many English accents because decisions are made that you won’t understand them, so there’s only a few accents that make it into mainstream movies. I’m from New Zealand, we get a lot of British TV here, so I can understand them all pretty well.

    • @bareakon
      @bareakon 7 месяцев назад

      Part of the reason that Trainspotting was subtitled when aired in the US.

    • @lillianschild17
      @lillianschild17 7 месяцев назад

      @@bareakon They've also been known for dubbing Australian films.

  • @ChrisPopham
    @ChrisPopham 11 месяцев назад +3

    I find it funny how in Grimsby they have a Lincolnshire accent and 12 miles up the road in Immingham it's a lot more Yorkshire

  • @Thestorminator89
    @Thestorminator89 11 месяцев назад +2

    Even though she did the yorkshire accent with Sheffield, Yorkshire is the UK largest county and is split into 4 areas, North Yorkshire, West Yorkshire, South Yorkshire and East riding of yorkshire which I am from, more precisely Kingston Upon Hull. And all have different variations. Especially Hull.

  • @enemde3025
    @enemde3025 11 месяцев назад +4

    There are more than 17 " British" accents in England !
    There are many SCOTTISH accents/dialects. Not just Glasgow and Edinburgh.
    Try listening to the DORIC accent of North East Scotland. (Aberdeen/Peterhead).
    If you think there is no difference between SCOUSE and RP, then you need a hearing test !!
    The next town to me is only 8 miles away, and they speak in a different accent to me.

    • @JAL1403
      @JAL1403 6 месяцев назад

      Same a council estate for 4 miles from me speaks a different accent.

  • @SallyH247
    @SallyH247 Месяц назад +1

    Hearing "Scouse" be described as the same as "RP English" is HILARIOUS to me!!! 😂😂

  • @SocialBrowsing
    @SocialBrowsing 11 месяцев назад +5

    The world is smaller now. When our accents developed people rarely left their towns or cities, and over hundreds of years they were not connected to other places all that much. Also of course being an island we were invaded ALOT, having all these other cultures bring their own accents, which integrated and changed the local's dialect creating a new merged form. Further, we have a much denser population for different accents to develop, so although the country's landmass is smaller, the population is much denser than America on average, with more towns and cities closer together.

  • @marimped
    @marimped 4 месяца назад +1

    I'm Manc and we have various different accents depending on where you're from in and around the wider Greater Manchester area, eg, Wigan, Oldham, Salford for a few different examples...

    • @JaneCarmichael-yh2pc
      @JaneCarmichael-yh2pc 2 месяца назад

      Yes, I am a Manx, and her attempt at Manc was diabolical.

  • @jonntischnabel
    @jonntischnabel 11 месяцев назад +4

    I speak with a peak District accent, (a toned down mancunian accent, with a hint of Yorkshire), and i can tell if someone I'm speaking to is from 10 miles north or south from me.

  • @tmac160
    @tmac160 11 месяцев назад +2

    You managed to interrupt each clip perfectly. Well done.

  • @FrancesThompson-e3m
    @FrancesThompson-e3m 11 месяцев назад +3

    There are some very distinct accents not covered here such as Barnsley in South Yorkshire.

  • @DMGamanda
    @DMGamanda 11 месяцев назад +4

    Really class in the uk isn’t necessarily based on financial status or job. There are a lot of very wealthy working class people as there are a lot of cash poor ‘posh’ or upper class. I don’t think class here is quite the same as in the US.

  • @pabmusic1
    @pabmusic1 11 месяцев назад +3

    The variation is in part due to the 'founder effect". Where accents have travelled abroad they don't represent the full range of accents because it's never a representative sample. The greatest variety is always in the original.

  • @robertmassie4903
    @robertmassie4903 11 месяцев назад +2

    A 1000 years ago we did not have many roads.Nobody moved around so much so never heard other accents.The local accent came about.

  • @jonathanbrowne9538
    @jonathanbrowne9538 11 месяцев назад +3

    I find with most accents, it's the vowels that matter most. Consonants can vary from region to region (like a scouser changing a hard k sound to a more guttural, gravelly sound, or the fricative t sound that sounds almost like an s in many Irish accents), but if you can nail the vowel sounds of a particular accent, you're doing alright.

  • @MonaMartin166
    @MonaMartin166 11 месяцев назад +2

    I'm from Northern Ireland. We can tell where people are from by their accents within about 6 miles. I once heard a barman in Sydney who had clearly tried to lose his accent - probably on the run. I asked if he was from Downpatrick and he went white as a ghost, he angrily asked me how I knew that - from your accent I said, he was completely shocked, said he didn't have an accent, I just laughed, you can't really lose it.

    • @gillian3168
      @gillian3168 10 месяцев назад +2

      Same in Scotland and if the accent doesn’t give it away then the choice of words does, Scot here living in England near the Welsh border, I’ve found that the English struggle with Scottish, Welsh and Irish accents yet we all understand each other? My accent is NE Scotland specifically Doric dialect and since moving to England I’ve been asked many times which part of Ireland I’m from 😂

  • @allanheslop4493
    @allanheslop4493 11 месяцев назад +3

    Tyler England would fit into many us states . In the uk an accent can change from 1 side of a city to the other

    • @Yesser-Thistle73
      @Yesser-Thistle73 Месяц назад

      In the 'Kingdom of Fife', in Scotland, there are very many accents - some to do with the fishing areas (sea fishing, not angling), and some being inland, or associated with different towns and areas, some from farming areas.

  • @circus-jf5kr
    @circus-jf5kr 11 месяцев назад +1

    I went to school in Headington Quarry, Oxford. Our accent was called the Quarry Gable. David Mitchell sometimes drops into it during one of his rants on "Would I lie to you". Makes me feel quite homesick.😂

  • @sergarlantyrell7847
    @sergarlantyrell7847 11 месяцев назад +5

    With the Irish accents, generally speaking, if they sound happier, they're from the Republic of Ireland, if they sound a wee bit depressed, they're from Northern Ireland.

  • @liamtimms777
    @liamtimms777 11 месяцев назад +2

    West Country accent is why all pirates talk like they do in films due to fact the first filmed pirate (long John silver) had a deep Somerset accent ,

  • @stuartfaulds1580
    @stuartfaulds1580 11 месяцев назад +3

    That's only a tiny amount of accents we have.

  • @marvinc9994
    @marvinc9994 10 месяцев назад +1

    The best thing about Received Pronunciation (RP) is its _clarity_ . As far as the _generalised_ West Country accent sounds (esp in Devon and Cornwall), if you listen very carefully - and use a bit of imagination - you can hear where what WE regard as a 'typical' American accent comes from, developing over a few hundred years. Tyler's lovely accent, for example, has a sort of languid, 'lazy' quality about it that you can find all over the South West.

  • @autumnwinter1462
    @autumnwinter1462 11 месяцев назад +3

    9:18 You should watch that video on the languages of the British Isles. It’s very fascinating.

    • @condorone1501
      @condorone1501 11 месяцев назад +1

      Ireland 🇮🇪 is not a British Isle/Island. This is an outdated Imperialistic and Possesive term that is not recognised by the Irish Government nor by the Majority of Irish people living in Ireland. The correct geographical term for these Islands is Great Britain and Ireland. The correct political term for these Islands is the UK and Ireland.

  • @peterturner369
    @peterturner369 11 месяцев назад +1

    I have no accent but I am from Birmingham and when I used to get drunk I will speak with a Birmingham
    accent.

  • @stephenlee5929
    @stephenlee5929 11 месяцев назад +14

    Hi Tyler,
    In general, no-one has RP as their natural accent, it is learnt/taught.
    The idea is to allow everyone to understand.

    • @Greenwood4727
      @Greenwood4727 11 месяцев назад +3

      we also have the telephone voice, its not quite RP but more understandable, and we can click in and out of it

    • @mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072
      @mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072 11 месяцев назад +2

      Speak for yourself

    • @stephenlee5929
      @stephenlee5929 11 месяцев назад

      @@mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072 OK, I'm sorry, I was not aware of anywhere that RP was the natural accent, can you tell me where that might be?

    • @mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072
      @mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072 11 месяцев назад

      @@stephenlee5929 middle and upper middle class londoners usually

    • @stumilesyt
      @stumilesyt 11 месяцев назад

      @@stephenlee5929 A lot in the counties around London too, the home counties etc like Surrey but also some parts of Hampshire/Wiltshire. The Salisbury accent for example is much more commonly RP than the rest of Wiltshire (West Country).

  • @elizabethadracul120
    @elizabethadracul120 11 месяцев назад +1

    Hi hunni I have watched this video before, and a lot of the accents she does are very correct, but I have to say her London accent is way off, that one is more of an early 1900 accent, think of the film oliver twist.
    Most of the London accents now are far removed from that one.
    I love being able to walk around the streets of the UK and hearing all the different accents there are, it's fun to listen while people watching and trying to guess where the person might live or come from based on their accents.
    I think the one's she forgotten that I love the most are the Devon and Cornwall accents and the many different ones there are in southern island depending on the village and what part of southern island you are from, as they all very different.
    Great video hunni I really enjoyed watching you trying to work out each accent.

  • @jmillar71110
    @jmillar71110 11 месяцев назад +4

    Way more than 3 different accents in Scotland. I can go 4 mile left, 4 mile right and 4 mile north (I'm on coast so south I would be in the water😂) and all accents are different😊
    P. S. Alot of Americans don't know a Scottish accent, I've been asked numerous times by Americans if I'm Irish 😂

  • @andrewobrien6671
    @andrewobrien6671 11 месяцев назад

    I was visiting Canada and went for a haircut. The Barber working on the next chair heard my voice and asked me where in Oldham I was from, as that was where he had emigrated from. Best shave and haircut ever. You never lose it

  • @catbevis1644
    @catbevis1644 11 месяцев назад +1

    My local accent has almost completely died out- you only really hear it in people over the age of 60 as the younger crowd speak more of a received pronunciation (I'm something of a throwback as I spent most of my youth with my grandmother). One of my friends once met an old man in a pub and said "hey you have the same accent as my friend- are you from X-village?" and this man looked really confused and admitted that's exactly where he was from. The pub was only ten miles from the village but the accent was distinct enough for my friend to spot it. I only live about 50 miles away today- within the same county- and people still ask where I'm from as I "have an accent".

  • @grantelliot9803
    @grantelliot9803 11 месяцев назад +9

    I could tell the difference, but pretty much all of them were very poor attempts of them. She also got a few things wrong. Robert Burns is not from Inverness. He's from Alloway in Ayrshire, while Ewan McGregor is from Crieff near Perth, not Edinburgh, and I can tell as I'm in Scotland

    • @missdaisy9363
      @missdaisy9363 11 месяцев назад

      I agree, I'm in Inverness and her Invernesian accent was appalling. Glad she didn't try the Hebridean accent!

    • @Yesser-Thistle73
      @Yesser-Thistle73 Месяц назад

      @@missdaisy9363 Oh! Heaven forfend!!

  • @rachelbarber8814
    @rachelbarber8814 4 месяца назад +1

    I can assert that her London accent was dire. In fact it differs from North to South London even. Not to mention generational changes in accents. She’s trying to imitate more of a Cockney accent.

  • @TheHominidShow
    @TheHominidShow 11 месяцев назад +3

    Her Birmingham accent sounds more like South African

  • @JohnResalb
    @JohnResalb 11 месяцев назад +2

    Oh yes - when you're on the bus in some regions, you can hear the accent changing as the bus goes along its route.

  • @rosemariewelch1525
    @rosemariewelch1525 11 месяцев назад +3

    It is believed Geordie spoken in Newcastle is the oldest accent

  • @puffpride8344
    @puffpride8344 11 месяцев назад +1

    I'm from the West Country and what she does there is a dying accent. It's extremely rare to meet someone under the age of 60 that sounds like that. We either speak in a much tamer way that you'd have no hope of picking up on, or we speak in RP.
    I think it's outdated to say that RP is middle/upper class. I grew up in social housing in a very working class family but I have an RP accent.
    That wasn't a "London" accent. It was a "cockney" accent, which is East London. That accent is dying off too though. It's not as far gone as the West Country accent but it's on its way out. It's being replaced with the "multicultral London English" (MLE) accent, also called "roadman". It's a beautiful mix of accents. I'd love to see you react to it.

  • @joannemoore3976
    @joannemoore3976 11 месяцев назад +6

    I am from the Birmingham area and that was the only one that didn't sound very convincing to me..I wonder if other people felt the same for their region..she is obviously exaggerating them. One does not simply walk into Mordor in a slightly exaggerated Yorkshire accent cracked me up.

    • @mdx7460
      @mdx7460 11 месяцев назад +1

      Read this as she was speaking in her Birmingham accent and I was like 😑 then she did the scouse accent straight after and I felt the same, being from Liverpool.

    • @L4g__
      @L4g__ 11 месяцев назад

      For me being from the south west hrr accent was fairly mild to me. Sure us younger folk dont have super thick accents but we wouldn't bat an eye at one wayy thicker than hagrids

    • @karenstephens7299
      @karenstephens7299 11 месяцев назад

      Agree. There are variations in Birmingham accent depending on class and area. She didn't nail it in my opinion

  • @Attirbful
    @Attirbful 11 месяцев назад +1

    This many accents are completely normal for any settled area that has been settled for ages and which has seen many peoples come and go. In Germany also, we can have accents that are very distinct from one village to next one over and it includes not only accentuating words but even vocabulary. Think of it this way: The UK has been created by people who have settled in various parts and they have each developed their own language systems without much need to communicate with anyone living several day trips away. Then it has been invaded by the Vikings, the Angles and Saxons, the Romans, and has had an enormous French influence (French being the language at court (hence pig and pork, cow and beef, etc.)). As a seafaring nation itself, it has invaded most countries on earth at one time or another and people from there would immigrate back to England, again influencing the language where they lived. It is centuries and centuries of these immigration and settlement patterns that create a rich linguistic tapestry in really old countries. America was settled since the late 1500s but only even existed as a nation on its own for about 300 years; and English was the major and eventually official language. Book printing was already invented and technology catered to a pretty good general education of first generation immigrants to all learn the same lingua franca (English) which, after Webster, was also codified in its differences from British English to become General American. Of course, the larger areas (South, Northeast, West etc.) has had cross influences due to major settlement patterns (Midwest had many German and Scandinavian immigrants, California and the South Mexicans, Louisiana had its French past etc.) and their regional accents were influenced by these. Yet, by and large, you simply have not had the history to develop hundreds and thousands of local accents (I guess linguists can prove local variations, but I mean clearly distinguishable for the everyman) and, you are also much less likely to stay within one region for your entire life individually. Yet, your country was (and is) vast and many areas are not densely populated and can therefore be moved into. People move from New York to Philadelphia, then to the frontier in Kentucky and lo and behold, it is Gold Rush season and you move your family to California. In Europe, most people stay put where they are more or less and used to stay put until higher education and travel and commuting possibilities arose in the nineteenth century… The land is pretty much owned in its entirety by someone, so we do not move as easily or when we do, it requires that someone else moves out first.

  • @lordylou1
    @lordylou1 11 месяцев назад +3

    This lady only did 17 accents (for time purposes probably). There's easily at least 17 different accents in each county. Drive 20 minutes in any direction and the accent will have changed twice. Bear in mind with the Welsh accent, it takes less than an hour to drive the entire length of Wales and you'll pass through at least four accents while you do it.

  • @hakarthemage
    @hakarthemage 11 месяцев назад +1

    Some accents vary within a single city or at least within 20 miles.

  • @ImJustSaiyan89
    @ImJustSaiyan89 11 месяцев назад +3

    If you wanna see REEAAAALLLY thick British accents you need to watch the films Kes. And Hot Fuzz!!

  • @WeeGrahamsaccount
    @WeeGrahamsaccount 11 месяцев назад +2

    I was brought up in Stirling and there is a Stirling accent which is quite a clipped version of a Scottish accent. And there are three versions even in that city. I enjoy your videos but remember Scots are British as well. Cheers x

  • @Isleofskye
    @Isleofskye 11 месяцев назад +4

    Thanks, Tyler, and this was good HOWEVER "17 Accents" ?????? There are more than 17 accents within 100 miles or so , of where I live on the very edge of London and Kent...lol
    There is another video with 67 Accents with 10 million views though this does include many foreign ones, at the end.
    The truth is somewhere in between.😀

    • @michaelchampion936
      @michaelchampion936 11 месяцев назад

      Wi grew up in london/Kent area, and went to Uni in the midlands/North area. When I came back after my third year I could hear that people from Biggin Hill had their own accent slightly different from the general Bromley /Orpington crowd. Lost that ear after about six months back, but it was a strange thing to hear.

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye 11 месяцев назад

      @@michaelchampion936 Yes, then you have "Man Of Kent" v "Kentish Man" accents. The Suburban accents.All the nearby London accents from Jafraican to Cockney then RP the Surrey and Sussex x 2 etc. At Tonbridge(?) they have 4 Counties all meeting (Jent,Surrey and East and West Sussex) lol

  • @DianaSheward
    @DianaSheward 2 месяца назад

    Round where I live on the Herefordshire/Shropshire/Welsh border,there is a different accent every 2 miles.The village I grew up in had a totally different accent to the village just 2 miles down the road,but my mother,who didn't grow up in this area, couldn't tell the difference at all .In the town 5 miles from me, I can tell which part of that town folks are from.It's crazy that there are so many accents here,but remember,these places were much more enclosed and isolated in the past.Every village was pretty much self-sufficient,so nobody had to go outside of it. That's where and why all the accents grew up.
    Northern and Southern Ireland have TOTALLY different accents Tyler ! Holy moly !😂🤣😂🤭
    An interesting video.
    As someone with Welsh ancestry,and living on the Marches (the Welsh border),I can't fathom why it is that the US doesn't know of Wales and it's accents more. Welsh things just don't seem to register at all with the Americans,yet Wales is an entire country,with it's own language, history,culture,etc,etc,but,no,the yanks don't get it.Strange.🤷🏻‍♀️👍🏼🇬🇧❤️❤️❤️

  • @4yaears
    @4yaears 11 месяцев назад +3

    Mate, remember that a Scottish accent IS a British accent. As are every other accent that comes from Britain.

  • @marblwrexbro458
    @marblwrexbro458 11 месяцев назад +2

    The North Walian accent she uses is more common in North West Wales, where Welsh is most commonly spoken. I’m from Wrexham in North East Wales, where the accent is somewhere between the North Wales accent she uses and a Northern English accent. This is because there’s some people from England have come over the border to live and work, particularly from the nearby counties of Cheshire, Shropshire and Merseyside.
    For the South Walian accent, I recommend watching an episode of Gavin & Stacey.

    • @jamesleate
      @jamesleate 11 месяцев назад

      For the sake of humanity I recommend never watching an episode of Gavin & Stacey ever. It is overly sentimental and not in the least bit funny everything is just supposed to be sickeningly nice (like an episode of Heartbeat....bleugh).

    • @marblwrexbro458
      @marblwrexbro458 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@jamesleate He doesn’t have to. I was just giving an example where he can find the accent.

    • @jamesleate
      @jamesleate 11 месяцев назад

      @@marblwrexbro458 Sorry, it's a natural reaction to the mention of that show. I didn't mean it to sound so mean.

  • @samanthawatkinson9925
    @samanthawatkinson9925 11 месяцев назад +5

    It's very strange how Derbyshire always gets missed .we are smack bang in the middle of the country and we hardly get a mention in anything!. Not that I'm complaining,it's kind of nice and secretive 😂our county is glorious,yet greatly overshadowed by Yorkshire ,with is lovely but can't hold a candle to my home county

    • @joannemoore3976
      @joannemoore3976 11 месяцев назад +1

      Good point. In fact she pretty much avoided the East Midlands.

    • @antonycharnock2993
      @antonycharnock2993 11 месяцев назад +1

      A Derby accent is completely different from a Chesterfield accent though and it changes again as you go west through the Peak District. I'm from Rotherham but right on the border with Sheffield and Barnsley so the accent changes within a few miles of me. Derbyshire also borders Rotherham so you get the mixing around Eckington, Killamarsh and Clowne. A lot of the accent in those areas is old pit dialect.

    • @samanthawatkinson9925
      @samanthawatkinson9925 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@antonycharnock2993 I was born in chesterfield and live in Matlock, you can definitely hear a chesterfield accent is different. Family from clowne have the slight deeda tone of Yorkshire. We all have the same telephone voice though😂

  • @huwford2731
    @huwford2731 11 месяцев назад +1

    I grew up in a town in South Wales which grew out of two villages, barely a mile apart, but I can tell which one someone is from by their accent.

  • @JoannDavi
    @JoannDavi 11 месяцев назад +4

    Tyler: "Most Americans don't know where Wales is."
    Well, you don't know most of America outside of Evansville, Indiana.

  • @neuralwarp
    @neuralwarp 11 месяцев назад +1

    Yes: Gangsta, Chelsea, Cockney, Estuary, and Essex are all in parts of London, but totally different.

  • @stewedfishproductions7959
    @stewedfishproductions7959 11 месяцев назад +2

    Tyler... Just saying that a Welsh accent even sounds Irish or Scots is funny and likely to make you out as possibly an American... LOL 😅 😂 🤣

  • @Louisyed
    @Louisyed 3 месяца назад +1

    The scouse was so mild - for a good example watch an interview with Jodie Comer. Shes a scouser but does amazing accents in much of her TV work so hearing her natural scouse is a shock

  • @FinlayMacintyre-ti9li
    @FinlayMacintyre-ti9li 11 месяцев назад +8

    Scottish accents are British, Scotland is part of Britain

  • @ChildrenMatterNews
    @ChildrenMatterNews Месяц назад

    Aww, i was waiting for the manc accent 😂😂 but shes nailed it. N shes actually not exaggerated at all, if anything she's actually toned it down loads 😂😂 great vid

  • @Tuffydipstick
    @Tuffydipstick 11 месяцев назад +3

    It’s not Western England. It’s West Country.