American Attempts a Cockney Accent

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  • Опубликовано: 20 июл 2023
  • Original Video: • British Accents: Cockney
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Комментарии • 166

  • @Isleofskye
    @Isleofskye Год назад +8

    I totally understand if some foreigners are no wiser to Cockney Rhythming slang as she said "having a bubble" was having a laugh but never explained why? lol
    The answer,of course,is "bubble bath" =Laugh.

  • @tobytaylor2154
    @tobytaylor2154 Год назад +10

    That's the best description of my accent I've heard, it's like an enigma machine 😂

    • @janolaful
      @janolaful Год назад

      You haven't got the brains to brake the code lol

  • @timothyallan111
    @timothyallan111 Год назад +3

    You should really watch Only Fools and Horses; not only is it extremely funny, but it is full to the brim with cockney rhyming slang, so you will learn a lot. You will probably have to keep google or some kind of Cockney dictionary open to look up what a lot of things mean, but you will quickly pick up the parlance - like 'moody' being (usually fake) dodgy/nicked goods, and 'hooky', being another word for stolen or 'hot' goods - this is also a word heavily featured in the show's extremely famous theme song 'Hooky Street'.

  • @andybaker2456
    @andybaker2456 Год назад +11

    Oh mate, you've fallen into that old American trap of thinking us Londoners are Australian! I've been to the US many times, and if I had a pound for every time I've been asked if I'm Australian...

    • @andyb2920
      @andyb2920 Год назад +2

      I've got a mate from Wigan who spent time in the US and he was asked if he was Australian .

    • @101steel4
      @101steel4 Год назад +1

      Yep my cousin is from London, lives in Florida and everyone thinks he's Australian.
      They really aren't great on accents lol

    • @andybaker2456
      @andybaker2456 Год назад

      Some people think it's because everyone in the US thinks we all speak with an RP accent. So when they hear an accent that isn't American and isn't RP, they think we can't be English, they know we're not American, so assume we must be Australian!

    • @raythomas4812
      @raythomas4812 Год назад

      snap !

    • @mlee6050
      @mlee6050 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@andybaker2456RP?

  • @EquinoxJones
    @EquinoxJones Год назад +11

    After that video, I bet the geezer took that brass up the apple and pears for a quick bit of how's ya farver. I know I would.

    • @H4CK61
      @H4CK61 Год назад +3

      Puker son so would I.

    • @JoeeyTheeKangaroo
      @JoeeyTheeKangaroo Год назад +2

      Translation: After that video I think that esteemed established gentleman took that lass up the stairs for a quick bit of cheeky rumpy pumpy. I know i'd drag my testicles though 20 miles of broken glass just for her.

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Год назад +2

      Let's hope his Trouble and Saucepans don't find out..

    • @johnchallener
      @johnchallener Год назад +2

      Better than having an Arthur eh?

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Год назад +2

      @@johnchallener A "J " Arthur, surely.
      Or, alternatively, a Sherman or Jodrell...:)

  • @easterdeer
    @easterdeer Год назад +1

    Your attempt sounded pretty good to me! As others have said, you went Australian a few times but it was still great. I love these accent videos so much! Thanks Connor

  • @beerguy177
    @beerguy177 Год назад +5

    dude I think you are an honorary brit

  • @ianwalker5842
    @ianwalker5842 Год назад +2

    You did a really good job here, Connor! Apart from the 'au' and 'ai' diphthong sounds, which at times you do tend to Australian-ize... Although there's a cockney influence in the way some of us Aussies speak, there are also subtle differences that are harder to pick up by the American ear. Having said that though, congratulations on the progress you've made, you're really getting it!

    • @johnchallener
      @johnchallener Год назад

      They say that Aussie accent has a lot of southern England in it

  • @kerrydoutch5104
    @kerrydoutch5104 Год назад +7

    Aussie here. Interesting that a lot of the features of Cockney are still recognisable in Australian speech patterns particularly in the "broad" Australian accent. Guess it makes sense given the way the Australian accent developed from out British beginnings.

    • @gabbymcclymont3563
      @gabbymcclymont3563 Год назад

      Alot of the Aussie accent comes from Suffork.

    • @markhughes8314
      @markhughes8314 Год назад

      I thought Strine was a cross of Cockney and Irish?
      Don't know where I got that from btw.

    • @kerrydoutch5104
      @kerrydoutch5104 Год назад

      @@markhughes8314 I think its a mix of all the British and Irish regional accents which makes it hard for non Aussies to copy

  • @viviennerose6858
    @viviennerose6858 8 месяцев назад

    Don't beat yourself up, that 'account' was pretty damned good! I was brought up in a cockney area, some family still use it, but most speak more 'properly' (I'm from a huge family). You're doing extremely well, and would easily get by

  • @ayeready6050
    @ayeready6050 Год назад +3

    Are you having a bubble (bath)? = Are you having a laugh?
    You can also say you having a Turkish (bath) or you having a giraffe?

    • @mancbiker17
      @mancbiker17 Год назад

      I’d never heard of bubble until this video. It was as you say, Turkish or Giraffe

  • @chrisperyagh
    @chrisperyagh Год назад +1

    I'm originally from Chichester and speak with a fair amount of Cockneyisms that are fairly common here, much to the annoyance of teachers and even some other people from the area - mainly dropping Hs, Ts, soft final Ls and not saying THs properly. I had to learn the proper way to make the 'th' sound when I lived in Canada and went to school there. I got a lot of stick when I moved back to the UK not long after, but shrugged it off over time to revert back to where I once was.

  • @tonybaker55
    @tonybaker55 Год назад +2

    I was born in a town in Surrey, which then became part of Greater London, so not a Cockney. At school, there were a lot of mixed accents, from pronounced English to Cockney. My Mum always used to tell me off when I dropped my "h" or "t". My sister had elocution lessons when young and when we are in the same room, you would never think we are siblings.

    • @jamesdignanmusic2765
      @jamesdignanmusic2765 Год назад

      Same on the other side of London for me - born in Hertfordshire but found myself in Greater London without moving house.

  • @H4CK61
    @H4CK61 Год назад +2

    Bubble bath laugh

  • @claregale9011
    @claregale9011 Год назад +3

    Trouble and strife = wife. I say wiv for with . My family originate from lambeth south east london traced back to the 1700s . 😊

  • @jamesdignanmusic2765
    @jamesdignanmusic2765 Год назад

    You're doing pretty well! The "wiv" sound of "with" is used before a vowel, it's just "wi" if it's before a consonant. And the Sydney Australian accent has a lot of cockney in its ancestry, so it's no surprised you noticed the similarity. If you want to hear a cockney accent in action, try finding video clips of Danny Dyer, Ray Winstone, or Barbara Windsor. My own original accent was a closely related "Norf Lunnen" (North London) accent.

  • @LoC28C
    @LoC28C Год назад

    I liKee the way you stared at the audience when you said that you are native. LOL

  • @stephenlee5929
    @stephenlee5929 Год назад +1

    Hi Connor,
    Just to clarify The start, Are you having a Bubble, Bubble in this instance is short for bubble bath, which would rhyme with Laugh.
    Note the might have spoken about the Bubble, who is a Greek bloke, as in Bubble and Squeak, rhymes with Greek.

  • @jimmeltonbradley1497
    @jimmeltonbradley1497 Год назад

    The puzzlement on your face is priceless

  • @BigAlCapwn
    @BigAlCapwn Год назад

    Are you having a bubble = Are you having a laugh. Bubble = Bubble Bath = Laugh

  • @dommyd4
    @dommyd4 Год назад

    Dude you neeeeeeed to watch white gold. Brilliant!

  • @leehallam9365
    @leehallam9365 Год назад +4

    Connor, you did very well.Dick Van Dyke would be proud.

  • @danc1897
    @danc1897 Год назад +1

    With "Water" the t sound is made at the back of your throat instead of with your tongue if you're a cockney imo. But the t still actually exists.

  • @JustinSawyer-ji5wm
    @JustinSawyer-ji5wm Год назад +3

    Connor said he can't sleep on his Roberta. He has to sleep on his side.

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Год назад +1

      I have to alter my sleeping position as I get a pain in the Gregory's..

  • @ericbyo9472
    @ericbyo9472 Год назад

    Best thing with accents is to try and relax into it, trying too hard and being stiff is usually what trips people up.

  • @zee2012
    @zee2012 Год назад +7

    Even in London we have regional accents North, South, East and West London all sound different from each other, People from outside London don't realy notice it but Londoners do, apart from the east end accent mainly because it is very distinctive people tend to recognise it more.

    • @brigidsingleton1596
      @brigidsingleton1596 Год назад

      I am from, and am still living in South East London and I do not like it when people say people like me are South Londoners. Our accent is TOTALLY different. For one thing, we do not say sarf for South, but the South Londoners do.

  • @Grib68-
    @Grib68- Год назад

    Harry Enfield did a comedy skit called telecockneys,it’s a parody of the Teletubbies.

  • @lg5819
    @lg5819 Год назад +2

    I’m a cockney Connor but unfortunately genuine cockneys are a dying breed now in the U.K. but we don’t always speak with Cockney rhyming slang, like in this video but we do speak with the same accent. Oh by the way Connor you said your English 😂 but shouldn’t that be New English if your from New England. 😂

  • @julianrogers8608
    @julianrogers8608 Год назад +1

    almost every word in this video is normal across most accents im from wales and i say most of these words the same should also do welsh accents i watched ur video on wales history alot of the words you said perfectly which most welsh cant even pronounce

  • @raythomas4812
    @raythomas4812 Год назад

    I was born in Mile End - East London , and then moved to Bow - Then Essex - Then Elephant and castle , now Bromley ...Cockney or Common ?

  • @tamielizabethallaway2413
    @tamielizabethallaway2413 Год назад

    There's over 40 accents over here.
    Ooh my Cockney accent is cool! Yay. 😁😁😁

  • @keefsmiff
    @keefsmiff Год назад +1

    Great Chris Pratt impression lol

  • @marcussmith8747
    @marcussmith8747 Год назад

    Bit late to the party, but as a north Yorkshire man (Scarborough) who has never set foot in London, I think I have almost, if not all of, the same talking characteristics as the cockney guy.

  • @Bennyboy138
    @Bennyboy138 7 месяцев назад

    The "are you having a bubble" phrase just means 'are you joking'. In the UK we usually say 'are you having a laugh' but in cockney slang they say 'bubble' just because bubble is attributed to 'bubble bath' and 'bath' rhymes with 'laugh'.....if that makes sense 😵‍💫😆

  • @quingquong
    @quingquong Год назад

    Having a.bubble = Bubble bath = having a laugh.

  • @101steel4
    @101steel4 Год назад

    Septic ain't got a Scooby😁

  • @Grigpig
    @Grigpig Год назад

    This one reminds me of Luke’s failure in the cave.

  • @bill-wd7zs
    @bill-wd7zs Год назад

    That were rite plotin!

  • @enemde3025
    @enemde3025 Год назад

    Mary Poppins...FFS !!
    NEVER joke about being a Brit just because your great, great, great grandmothers' dog was born here !!
    " bubble"= bubble baff (bath) = laff (laugh).
    The " butter" meme is from Newcastle.

  • @anthonyyarwood6865
    @anthonyyarwood6865 Год назад +1

    I'm from Manchester but I use all the same words as him. The only thing that is different is are accents. We say words the same but you would know that he's from London and me from Manchester.

    • @JoeeyTheeKangaroo
      @JoeeyTheeKangaroo Год назад

      It's really confusing to me, I'm from Greater Manchester & I thought they'd get someone who sounds like Michael Caine not someone who sounds similar to me.

    • @andybaker2456
      @andybaker2456 Год назад

      He was using the same words as she was though, just pronouncing them with his London accent.

  • @davidjones3890
    @davidjones3890 Год назад

    Have a go at Brummie next, iit's alsow vedy diistiinctiive, ay it?

  • @magnolia7277
    @magnolia7277 Год назад

    Looking good in black!

  • @ronaldball7023
    @ronaldball7023 Год назад

    Bubble bath - laugh

  • @kimwilson3863
    @kimwilson3863 Год назад +2

    If you watch Only Fools and Horses you will pick up cockney quicker as it's speaking in sentences not single words. Rhyming slang is not hard, it's not like enigma, it's just rhyming one word with another, not rocket science lol. You can do it with any words and with an American accent. Pick the rhyme then shorten it by dropping one word. Ruby Murray (old time singer) = curry, drop Murray and you have, "I'm goin for a ruby". Rosie Lee (old time actress) = Cup a tea, drop Lee and you have, "do ya want a cup a rosie". Simples! 😁 like bubble bath = laugh, drop bath and you have "you avin a bubble"? Try it yourself with words that are more known and familiar with Americans. Have fun.😁🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Год назад

      It is difficult because the connecting word is not,often,spoken.
      My Trouble and Saucepans taught me that.L(
      There is an example. Who was I referring to as my Trouble and Saucepans,Kim?

    • @kimwilson3863
      @kimwilson3863 Год назад

      @@Isleofskye Well that's a new one on me. I know trouble and strife is wife but I can't think of a word that rhymes with saucepans, and I have a large vocabulary. I suppose it also depends on your pronunciation of the word, so saucepans can have emphasis on sauce or pans thereby changing the sound of word to be rhymed. I am intrigued, please let me know. 🤔

    • @H4CK61
      @H4CK61 Год назад

      @@kimwilson3863 saucepan lids ...kids

    • @kimwilson3863
      @kimwilson3863 Год назад

      @@H4CK61 yep I know that one lol. The trick is the second word should be one syllable to get the right rhythm and the subject must be one everyone is familiar with. Today people use Ruby for curry even though they probably have no idea who Ruby Murray was.

    • @kimwilson3863
      @kimwilson3863 Год назад

      Of course it could be rhymed if the word was saucepan rhyming with man ie, saucepan =old man but the use of two double syllables in trouble then saucepans doesn't lend itself to a quick rhyme making it more complicated.

  • @andyb2920
    @andyb2920 Год назад +2

    That put a Smile on my face, referencing Mary Poppins and Dick Van Dyke piss poor attempt at a cockney accent.

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Год назад

      Dick Van Dyke wasn't a Cockneyman?

    • @andyb2920
      @andyb2920 Год назад

      @@Isleofskye I know mate, that's why I said his cockney accent was piss poor, 😁

    • @andyb2920
      @andyb2920 Год назад

      @@Isleofskye Question? Do you sort of feel silly now?

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Год назад

      @@andyb2920 I feel more than just silly Andy, My disappointment in my delusion is immeasurable and no words can adequately express my remorse regarding my inexcusable faux pas. I am mortified that I got to make such a Schoolboy error and I only try to crave your forgiveness for my brief moment of total complete and utter insanity in making this mistake. I have no excuses and I can only apologize, profusely, for my misconception, once again. You are a good man for pointing this out to me. I'm inconsolable at the moment.....:(

    • @andyb2920
      @andyb2920 Год назад

      @@Isleofskye 👍 Christ 'o' me, thats f--king epic. Take care mate. Shag on fella!

  • @bigphizza2819
    @bigphizza2819 Год назад

    Cor blimey guv'nor, you 'avin a giraffe?

  • @generaladvance5812
    @generaladvance5812 Год назад

    This was a better attempt than the Geordie. I think you did pretty well.

    • @brigidsingleton1596
      @brigidsingleton1596 Год назад

      Strange. To my South East London ears, Connor sounded more convincing with his attempt at a Geordie accent.

  • @kevino2622
    @kevino2622 Год назад

    Bubble Bath... Laugh

  • @martinburke362
    @martinburke362 11 месяцев назад

    Americans just don't realise how funny they are when they attempt a British accent😂😂😂

  • @susangarvey9415
    @susangarvey9415 Год назад

    I cant tell you how many times ive been asked what part of Australia I'm from when i lived in Ireland and its ilegal to 'ave butter on our bread in our 'ouse, only bu'err will do fanks!

  • @robbeaman3542
    @robbeaman3542 Год назад +2

    To say account... Say it without closing your lips. Keep lips apart. Naturally Americans say accownt...

    • @LowGrav1ty
      @LowGrav1ty Год назад

      It's pronounced similar to "A Can't" 😂

  • @ashscott6068
    @ashscott6068 Год назад

    It's just whichever is easiest to say. "Wimmee" is easier to say than "with me" or "wiv me". But "Wivvim" is easier to say than "with him" or "wi'im".

  • @TheOrlandoTrustfull
    @TheOrlandoTrustfull Год назад +6

    As someone who was born in East London, I don't think I can watch this, sorry mate. Leaving a comment for the algorithm though.

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Год назад

      I watched it with my trouble and saucepans.

  • @MrE1871
    @MrE1871 Год назад

    Your cockney accent is pretty close now on a lot of the words Connor. I find on some words Londoners almost don’t pronounce the letter t. The way they say water sounds like war er to me and with account it sounds like accoun to me.

  • @viviennerose6858
    @viviennerose6858 8 месяцев назад

    Quite a lot of the time you will hear me instead of my. For example me muvva = my mother. Where's me shoes, where's me dinna (dinner) etc. Words ending er always sound like a - almost like u, as in up

  • @first-dooblette6911
    @first-dooblette6911 Год назад

    There is one chanel with all the battle of France (Batailles de France)

  • @brendaflower7790
    @brendaflower7790 Год назад

    Really! Both my parents were cockneys, born within the sound of Bow bells, that is to say The
    Church of St Mary- le- Bow in The London Borough
    Of Stepney in The East End of London. My father
    had the old dialect and this is nothing like it.Also
    you cannot call yourself a Cockney unless you are
    born within the sound of Bow Bells. Other than
    that you are just a Londoner.

  • @danc1897
    @danc1897 Год назад

    Come wi'me - I suggest the cockneys drop "th" entirely in that phrase actually. (My dad is a cockney by the way).

  • @dazparry1580
    @dazparry1580 Год назад +1

    I didn't doubt your Englishness, too much Jimmy Carr about you. Haha.

  • @susangarvey9415
    @susangarvey9415 Год назад

    Anyone else think that Connor looks like Harry Styles or do i need new specs?

  • @kevino2622
    @kevino2622 Год назад

    This is my accent (mine is a mixture of cockney and Essex accent), you do a pretty good job of copying... the way you're ending words with a hard A "twittAH" is closer to the Essex accent

  • @6sofar_
    @6sofar_ Год назад

    love it,, but its pisser tho..pisser=funny... just how ya repeating its ace like you're getting way better with it... just need seem someone so invested the British accents cuz its just like nothing to us.. but yeah keep doing thing G and keel learning!

  • @first-dooblette6911
    @first-dooblette6911 Год назад

    There is too , apocalypse verdun,the more big battle in the ww1

  • @raythomas4812
    @raythomas4812 Год назад

    I'm Married to a Bubble ( Bubble and Squeak = Greek )

  • @angelavara4097
    @angelavara4097 Год назад

    We sound a lot like cockneys here in wolverhampton,well I do anyway.

    • @martinwebb1681
      @martinwebb1681 Год назад +4

      Cor blimey you're pushing it a bit aint you, when I used to deliver up there from down here I certainly didn't hear anything like a cockney around your way ... not even close.

    • @andybaker2456
      @andybaker2456 Год назад

      I used to work with a bloke from round your way here in London. We took the mick out of his accent all the time!

    • @robertallmark248
      @robertallmark248 Год назад

      Born with in the sound of Bow bells was you my little cockney rebel. Love and peace angela

    • @101steel4
      @101steel4 Год назад

      No, no you don't

  • @stuarthumphrey1787
    @stuarthumphrey1787 Год назад +10

    You're almost a cockney Connor. You did well considering you only knew the Dick Van Dyke version, who BTW sounds absolutely bloomin awful

  • @Loki1815
    @Loki1815 5 месяцев назад

    Go wiv 'im not go wiv Him..
    'avin' not Having
    'ouse, 'elp, 'ello, 'ow, nah, all, liek, nite,
    Wal-a, Bet-a, but-a, twit-a accoun...

  • @brigidsingleton1596
    @brigidsingleton1596 Год назад +1

    No wonder you like the English comedian, Mickey Flanagan... He really does talk like that guy Paul.. and I prefer Paul speaking than that girl, sorry, I missed her name.
    I still think your description of Paul's way of speaking,, as being cool, is odd though.

  • @neilgayleard3842
    @neilgayleard3842 Год назад +1

    He thinks he's English/ British. No he's bit plastic paddy.

  • @neuralwarp
    @neuralwarp Год назад

    No. True Cockneys don't glottalise their medial Ts, only their terminal Ts. That's the Estuary accent.

  • @BasherBrookes
    @BasherBrookes Год назад

    For twitter account say twitta accant 👍😎

  • @first-dooblette6911
    @first-dooblette6911 Год назад

    Hello,i am french and watch,if you want,( apocalypse la 1ere guerre mondial).
    This is one documentary on ww1 with a lot real film captured in this war
    And if you want there is apocalypse la 2eme guerre mondiale

  • @barryfeagan3969
    @barryfeagan3969 Год назад

    your insult to the whole of the UK. "She sounds more American". You are getting too cheeky in your old age mate.!!!

  • @Loki1815
    @Loki1815 5 месяцев назад

    I haven't watched this yet but Oh, No!.....

  • @ericg5791
    @ericg5791 Год назад

    Oi Con. It ain't exactly that some of the words are pro nAnced differently,they are just said quicker than the lazier slower Queens English

  • @rjart4
    @rjart4 Год назад +1

    The Geordie video was far funnier.

  • @johnhood3172
    @johnhood3172 Год назад

    I think accents are caused by laziness in speech over time.

  • @neuralwarp
    @neuralwarp Год назад

    Yes, you keep pronouncing the terminal R. The pseudo-Cockney is saying AH.
    //Be ' ah//
    //Twi ' erra cann '//

  • @proudofyourroots9575
    @proudofyourroots9575 Год назад

    People here dont like people trying to do their accents mate. Just so you know. Mostly because it usually happens because of classism. All the accents youve chosen are working class ones.

  • @raythomas4812
    @raythomas4812 Год назад

    The worse one I've ever heard is Dick Van Dyke - I cringe whenever I hear it

  • @ZombieATAT
    @ZombieATAT Год назад +1

    Firstly, no. Just because your great-great-grandfather was born in another country, doesn't mean you're that nationality. I know you're joking Conner but your countrymen actually take this stuff seriously (and it's BS).
    Secondly, no. Nobody in England, expect other Cockney folk, love the Cockney accent. She's lying Conner.
    Thirdly, no. This accent is too easy because it's familiar. Just like "posh twat", this accent is one of the only two British ones that are in US films. Try Scouse, Yorkshire or even Weegie.

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Год назад +2

      My Trouble loves The Cockney accent.

    • @ZombieATAT
      @ZombieATAT Год назад

      @@Isleofskye I've never heard anyone say they like that accent.

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Год назад

      @@ZombieATAT Leave it out, Squire. You have got to be'aving a Giraffe. Everyone loves a chirpy,cheeky Cockney...

    • @ZombieATAT
      @ZombieATAT Год назад

      @@Isleofskye No they don't, you just love yourselves (which is fine lol). I don't find people from any UK region or county really care too strongly about other accents.
      In comparison to the US and for Connor to understand, you're basically New Jersey.
      Folks out in; Houston, Portland, Detroit or Charlotte, aren't sat around wishing they had a New Jersey accent.
      Sorry :)

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Год назад

      @@ZombieATAT To face the harsh reality that everyone in The UK does not want to be a cheery, cheeky, chirpy, cock er nee, like me, both saddens and disappoints me in equal measures.
      I shall,personally,just have to continue with my lifelong Received Pronunciation that I was taught at Grammar School, near Brixton,back in the late 1960s lol

  • @antoineduchamp4931
    @antoineduchamp4931 Год назад +1

    Your cockney shows good promise Connor! but really it is an accent absorbed into the accent of London in general. It is not pleasant to my ear and a lot of people... but you get criticised if you say this. Basically it is the ultimate in lazy, lazy prononciation.

    • @martinwebb1681
      @martinwebb1681 Год назад +3

      Go take a swim in the Thames.

    • @antoineduchamp4931
      @antoineduchamp4931 Год назад

      @@martinwebb1681 cannot swim.

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Год назад

      @@antoineduchamp4931 All the better!
      I jeste.mon ami...

    • @antoineduchamp4931
      @antoineduchamp4931 Год назад

      @@Isleofskye tant mieux mon vieux

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Год назад

      @@antoineduchamp4931 I am so sorry, monsieur,, mais mon french is a little bit, how you say? , rusty...

  • @JoeeyTheeKangaroo
    @JoeeyTheeKangaroo Год назад

    Oh God.
    Be very careful here, imitation isn't really considered flattering if you are being insulting and stereotypical.
    And as I am typing this you say 'I'm English so I am so I am native.' please don't do this geneticism bullshit, I get it was a joke though.

    • @JoeeyTheeKangaroo
      @JoeeyTheeKangaroo Год назад

      That being said I'm glad you noticed the T, the omittance of the T and your D in saying 'water'. Many Americans make fun of us for saying it like this. Also many Australians were people who were from Essex originally which is why Aussies sound like cockneys.

    • @auldfouter8661
      @auldfouter8661 Год назад

      @@JoeeyTheeKangaroo I have a recording of my father's late cousin born 1907 made in 1997. He was an Essex farmer and to my ear his speech sounds partially like an Australian. I'm Scots - as was the Essex farmer's father , but there was no trace of Scots in his accent. His mother was local Essex ( Dunmow).

  • @davidware9549
    @davidware9549 Год назад +1

    With cockney people are only cockney if they are born within distance of the church bells st Mary le bow in the city of London

  • @andrewsims4123
    @andrewsims4123 Год назад

    There are accents in America, a great many of them. It's about time you explored these things in your own country. Accents are common throughout the world young man and can identify when you come from within towns and cities the lady presenting the video is not American 😡 not everyone on the planet is American, quit being so arrogant 😡the guy is not Australian I can assure you. What is it with Americans , why are you always being offensive 😡

  • @longshanks90
    @longshanks90 Год назад +3

    Bubble bath laugh

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Год назад +1

      You explained the connection but she didn't!

    • @longshanks90
      @longshanks90 Год назад

      @@Isleofskye literally no rhyming slang either just a working class london accent like 90% of us