British Guy Reacts To Accent Expert Gives a Tour of US Accents!

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  • Опубликовано: 29 окт 2024

Комментарии • 131

  • @mamaflush9945
    @mamaflush9945 Год назад +68

    I know it's a lot to take in, but I'm glad you found it interesting. Please do Part 2 & 3. I wish there was "A Tour on British Accents" that would be very interesting and one that I feel sure would be highly watched. And Eric is so right, your accent is a part of your identity. I may not be right about this, but there's another channel I sometimes watch called "Office Blokes Reacts" and their accents sound very much like yours. But I have a very "untrained ear for British accents, so I hope I didn't offend anyone. Great Reaction👍Thanks so much for sharing.

    • @MuriKakari
      @MuriKakari Год назад +4

      I think Eat Sleep English has one. If I remember correctly it's a lot briefer, but I do remember watching one.

  • @coyotelong4349
    @coyotelong4349 Год назад +9

    15:41 Actually a great example of an African-American Appalachian accent is that of NFL hall of famer Randy Moss

  • @TB-tr3cm
    @TB-tr3cm Год назад +10

    I knew you were from Manchester because of the Office Blokes on You Tube. I think it's a great, interesting and expressive accent. I probably have a sort of general American accent. Having grown up in South Jersey with parents from Ohio. And I'm now living in Northern California. Enjoyed your reaction. Parts 2 and 3 are worthwhile.

  • @petertrabaris1629
    @petertrabaris1629 Год назад +14

    Absolutely, please continue with the whole series. I have seen this several times but, as an American, can't get enough of it. I learn something new each time. I love accents. All accents. I think because I was raised in a Greek American family. My father was first generation American. His parents came from the Peloponnese region. And my mother's family had immigrated from both Germany and Ireland way back in the 1600's, but mostly settled in Appalachia/Kentucky and the North East then the Ohio Valley. So her accent was a slightly modified north Appalachian accent. And, I was raised around many immigrant citizens, European Jewish people who had survived the Holocaust, or escaped the Germans and came to the U.S. So, I was steeped in accents. And being from just outside of Chicago, in Skokie, Illinois, I was also familiar with the distinct Chicago accent, and accents from people literally from around the world. I consider myself very lucky. Cheers, mate.

  • @a00141799
    @a00141799 Год назад +39

    By all means please continue with this series. I wish I could distinguish British accents but I can't. I know that there are a lot of them but they sound similar to my untrained ear. I can tell the difference between an English, Scottish and Irish accent after a few minutes of listening to them. An entertaining reaction to this video Joe. Many thanks. Rich in Seattle. ♠

    • @louisskulnik7390
      @louisskulnik7390 Год назад +1

      I can recognize a few. I can only pick out the Scouse because of The Beatles. I can, sort of, pick out Midlands because of Ozzy. Also the lower class Londoner and the western, country accent. That, and the obvious upper crust accent, is about it. Sounds like a lot, but not really.

    • @coyotelong4349
      @coyotelong4349 Год назад

      Yeah as an American if you listen to someone from London, someone from the West Country, someone from Manchester, someone from Liverpool and someone from Newcastle they all sound really different 😊 definitely watch a video comparing the accents!

  • @manxkin
    @manxkin Год назад +11

    Absolutely do part two. I’ve seen this before but I think you will find it interesting.

  • @gracielynn9623
    @gracielynn9623 Год назад +6

    You definitely got to do part two! This guy is so good.

  • @jeffmorse645
    @jeffmorse645 Год назад +11

    Definitely continue the series. Accents are really interesting in this country with migration and age differences. On my Dad's side my great-grandparents were from Northern Alabama and moved to Arkansas. Because of this my grandpa had a more "classical" Southern accent. My Dad on the other hand was raised in Eastern Oklahoma hills and had a very different accent from my grandpa. I was born and raised in California and my accent is completely different from my Dad's. Its really incredible how each generation's accent changed quite a lot when moving from state to state.

  • @Hoplyte8
    @Hoplyte8 Год назад +6

    I picked up on your Manchester accent. The guy in the video by default is using a General American accent. It's the "TV" accent, and it's common across the whole country, especially with younger generations.

  • @1113-f7o
    @1113-f7o Год назад +8

    Hi! Can you react to: 4 ways American and British people are different by Lost in the Pond?

  • @Alex-kd5xc
    @Alex-kd5xc Год назад +10

    This series is such a good one! I’m from New Mexico, which (unbeknownst to me until recently) has its own dialect of Spanish, so that’s interesting. There’s definitely way more variation in accents the more you go East though.

  • @bluskyz7398
    @bluskyz7398 Год назад +4

    SO interesting! I knew there were regional accents, but not to this detailed extent! I have also heard the 'r' in 'wash' (warsh) from folks in/from PA.

  • @steventambon2588
    @steventambon2588 Год назад +1

    So glad you are doing these, make sure to do all the parts… this guy will blow your mind

  • @jamesl6639
    @jamesl6639 Год назад +2

    My grandfather was from Jarrow, near Newcastle England, he spoke with a heavy Geordie accent, my own father, had trouble understanding, his father. Peace!

  • @secolerice
    @secolerice Год назад +1

    I have watched this video many times and it still seems as it goes by so fast! Yes, please do the rest of them.

  • @willantvan
    @willantvan Год назад +1

    You definitely sound like you're from Lancashire, my dude!
    I was excited to see you reacted to this, looking forward to your reaction to the next video in the series

  • @BenScarborough2
    @BenScarborough2 Год назад +2

    I’m so glad you reacted to this! You put out great content. One thing they do not address is common spelling errors that are normal in certain regions because of accents 😆

  • @buddystewart2020
    @buddystewart2020 Год назад +1

    Yeah, keep going with it. This dude is insane with his accent skills and knowledge.

  • @robertdedrick7937
    @robertdedrick7937 Год назад +9

    I've been to Ocracoke Island and it is hard for the average American to understand them .

    • @eyeamg0dly
      @eyeamg0dly Год назад +5

      I live in that area, they aren't too hard to understand. its more of a mix of their accent and standard ENC / Downeast accent, which isn't too bad. the people on Harker's island on the other hand are extremely hard to understand.

  • @Reindurr417
    @Reindurr417 Год назад +3

    I would have guessed you were from Northern England. I know your accent is pretty distinct and thicker than most English people which I associate with the North of England. Can't wait for Part 2 of this video! I'm from the Ozarks and my region is in that one!

  • @josephmulka
    @josephmulka Год назад +1

    Hey Joe, I was just wondering if you were still going to get around to the University if Michigan football facilities tour by: Sports dissected by COISKi, thank you for reading this, have a great day 😊

  • @krisweinschenker598
    @krisweinschenker598 Год назад +2

    That was a pretty good video to do.
    He got the Pittsburgh and Delmarva accents down pretty well.
    I loved in both places.
    There is an island in Chesapeake Bay (Tangier) that has very distinctive accent similar to Ocacroke

  • @vawest2052
    @vawest2052 Год назад +5

    I grew up in the Appalachian mountains of West Virginia and my first job out of state crushed me, nobody could understand what I was saying. I was laughed at, people automatically thought I was stupid. It was the late 1980s, people were so rude back then. I even had speech therapy for 4 years and still have to try really hard to hide my accent at meetings but it's so difficult.
    I totally understand why Arnold Schwarzenegger still has his accent after 60 years, I can't shake mine off either. This guy in the video is amazing at his job.

    • @samuelhiatt9338
      @samuelhiatt9338 Год назад

      Well how else would the Yankees get by without being able to convince themselves that they're better than everyone else? Seriously, the way they treat Southerners is just ridiculous. Some of the most ignorant people on the planet come from New Jersey, Boston, or New York, yet they've somehow convinced themselves that Southerners are a bunch of inbred, uneducated morons based on nothing but native dialect/accent. The reality is that if someone were to talk about accents that are native to racial demographics, for example, the same way they mock the Southern accent, they would rightly be described as racist. But I guess in their mind, it's okay to hate certain people for no reason as long as it's the right kind of person.

    • @DTG_LOCKETT
      @DTG_LOCKETT Год назад +1

      You could have cut that four years down to a month by joining the army. I thinned mine out In less than a month out of necessity because the Drill Sergeants made life a living hell because I had a very thick Creole accent.

    • @bamachine
      @bamachine Год назад

      I was born and raised on the southernmost mountain of the Appalachians(in northern Alabama). I went to Newark, NJ for 2 weeks, back in the early 90's, for a certification class, so my company could buy and sell Panasonic telco equipment. Everybody else in the class was from NJ, NY or PA, except me. The first day, they had us stand up and give a brief introduction of ourselves and our experience level. They all immediately gave me that look. At the first break, they crowded around me to ask all the stereotypical questions. By the end of the second day, I had disabused them of the notion that they were more intelligent than me. By the third day, whenever they had a problem understanding concepts, they turned to me as much as they did to the instructor.

  • @Julie_Rios
    @Julie_Rios Год назад

    New subscriber. Enjoying this video. Definitely a part 2, please!

  • @kellysowhat88
    @kellysowhat88 Год назад +1

    Does anyone remember the 90s kids US tv show Gullah Gullah Island? I don’t remember anything about it really except that it was set close to that area, but I suspect it was likely not a good representation.

  • @innotech
    @innotech Год назад +1

    My area of southern Louisiana speaks Cajun which has some French in it and a pretty distinct acxent

  • @christophermckinney3924
    @christophermckinney3924 Год назад

    Yes do part 2&3. You’ll learn a lot.

  • @CourtReporter7
    @CourtReporter7 Год назад +3

    It’s interesting bc his “Philly” accent (even though it was only two seconds) is way more of the stereotype that I hear non-Philadelphians use to mimic a Philly accent than the actual Philly accent. From…a Philly girl.

  • @miamidolphinsfan
    @miamidolphinsfan Год назад +1

    definitely react to part 2

  • @Trix897
    @Trix897 Год назад +2

    My accent is a mix of New York, Great Lakes, Canadian, and a touch of a Southern drawl.
    It just depends on the words and phrases I’m using at the time.
    I’ve lived all over the country, so I picked up a bit everywhere I’ve lived.
    I’m currently in the Seattle area these days in Washington: my 9th state. 🙂
    By the way, I could tell that you were from Manchester as opposed to Liverpool.

  • @Neo-hw7nu
    @Neo-hw7nu Год назад +1

    My roots are in north central Alabama and I do have a distinct southern accent but not quite as strong as he was talking about.

  • @Moon_Wolfie
    @Moon_Wolfie Год назад

    I live primarily in southern Virgina, but I also spent many summers, spring breaks and Christmases in western Missouri around Kansas City, so when I speak it can sound like a mix. At times a more southern or central accent will come out depending on if I am in Virgina, Missouri, who I am talking to or even the speed I am speaking. In collage someone once asked if I was German with my quick speaking. I took French and Spanish so some of that may have also influenced how I sometimes may say something. Within Virgina, it can also depend on if you are in the mountains area, south eastern, northern, peninsula or eastern shore. How people pronounce Norfolk is different among Virginia’s- native or one’s brought to the area via military.

  • @billsager5634
    @billsager5634 Год назад +1

    He skipped over NJ, except to mention the great diving line between northern and midland accents pass through Trenton. In NJ, we have several accents, but the main word is "water". In Northeastern NJ, its pronounced more that "WAR-ter", where as northwestern and central NJ its water is more "General American" "wa-ter", whereas is southern NJ, its pronounced more like "WOO-der".
    Strangely, he states there is no distinction between the 5 boroughs of NYC. Pre-1960, there were definite distinctions, and even today natives can distinguish a Brooklyn, a Bronx, or a Staten Island accent. Additionally, within those areas, you definitely have ethic-influenced accents as well. Listen to people like Jerry Seinfeld, Buddy Hackett, Joy Behar, Mel Brooks - all from Brooklyn and are Jewish. Then listen to Tony Danza, Ray Romano, etc, for the Italian-Brooklyn accent. Or take Jackie Gleason for a typical Brooklyn accent.
    Again, seems like accents were stronger with older generations. Check out RUclips videos of people like Jackie Gleason, Jimmy Durante, Rodney Dangerfield, Steve Lawrence, Barry Manilow, and many more - all from New York (all except for Dangerfield) are from Brooklyn.

  • @scottshinbaum1772
    @scottshinbaum1772 Год назад

    I'm from Alabama, and while we follow the general basis of what he said at the end, there is also a distinct difference in "city" vs "country" accents, and you can tell based on where people immigrated from.
    In Birmingham, there is a big influence from the Pittsburgh accent due to the close relationships in the Iron and Steel industry there, especially in the northern parts of the city where the steel plants are located. Birmingham is known as the Pittsburgh of the South. Mobile picks up a lot of the Louisiana and New Orleans influence that is going to be talked about in part 2 due to a heavy French immigration there. Meanwhile Huntsville picks up some of the Appalachia traits that he mentioned as the southern tip of the Appalachian Mountains is in North Alabama.
    There was also a heavy Ashkenazi Jewish settlement in the deep south around 1900, so that accent picked up a heavy Germanic influence and harshness. It is all very fascinating how it played out, and also points to his statements at the beginning about the amount of diversity within these regions as well.

  • @anenglishmanplusamerican7107
    @anenglishmanplusamerican7107 Год назад +1

    Hello mate. I love your videos, they're really good. React to Parth 2, because, as everyone says in the comment, it is worthwhile.

  • @jagdawgii929
    @jagdawgii929 Год назад +2

    Hopefully he touches on Jax more in part 2, we are not like the college football belt lol, its more of a coastal southern and somewhat general American, its not thick country at all

  • @HeavenhoundGiuseppe
    @HeavenhoundGiuseppe Год назад +3

    That guy probably speaks better Pittsburghese than half the people in Pittsburgh. Sadly a lot of young people around here have been taught to speak "proper" English in school and have abandoned our "lazy" pronunciations. Not to mention the words we use thanks to the Irish, Italian, and Eastern European people who immigrated here during the industrial revolution.

    • @japcar84
      @japcar84 Год назад

      Sadly? 😅😅😅 That accent doesn't travel well outside of SW PA. The schools might just be preparing students to be successful no matter where they live, which isn't a bad thing.

  • @acerone10
    @acerone10 Год назад +2

    My name is Donna in Ohio, but in Pennsylvania my cousins call me Dawna.

  • @rebeccahanson6941
    @rebeccahanson6941 Год назад

    Yes do part 2

  • @sllingky
    @sllingky Год назад

    I can pick out your northern accent for sure, but there's no way I would have been able to narrow it down to which northern accent! Definitely listen to the next part! I'm a "midlands" accent moved into the "northern" accent region and have lived here for 25 years and STILL can't get used to these speech patterns! The story behind how accents were formed is so fascinating.

  • @Kell12UK
    @Kell12UK Год назад

    Do Part 2 and 3!!!!!!

  • @gordieparenteau6555
    @gordieparenteau6555 Год назад

    16:05 The accent in the outer banks of North Carolina is very similar to Newfoundland in Canada.

  • @1bobsgirl
    @1bobsgirl 3 месяца назад

    I grew up in Central Virginia, and we say out the same way as the coast does.

  • @samuelhiatt9338
    @samuelhiatt9338 Год назад

    I'm from North Carolina and am from the central area of the state, meaning that most of the people I know have the classic Southern accent, but my family is primarily from the Western part of the state, meaning that I have grown up with a much more Appalachian accent despite being only a hundred miles or so east. My accent has much more in common with those in Tennessee or West Virginia than it does with those even in neighboring South Carolina or Georgia.

  • @nehemiahmarcus308
    @nehemiahmarcus308 Год назад

    I grew up in Pittsburgh and I hate my accent. Sometimes I will slip back into it and people have difficulty understanding me.

  • @julienandross
    @julienandross 3 месяца назад

    1:42 im american, i can tell youre from northern england but thats it.
    if i had to get more specific id guess the northernmost sides of north england, somewhere above manchester and leeds, maybe around newcastle. but i could be completely wrong about that lol. northern england is as specific as i can confidently guess.

  • @philipmcniel4908
    @philipmcniel4908 Год назад +1

    Someone did a similar sort of video with the different accents of the British Isles, but in a much quicker way, here: ruclips.net/video/-8mzWkuOxz8/видео.html

  • @jilljohnson1413
    @jilljohnson1413 Год назад

    Don't even get me started on the "pop" vs "soda" battle. I'm right on the line so I use both. And my favorite band Elbow is from Manchester (or a suburb) so grateful for your music. I know the city has produced lots of good bands.

    • @Trix897
      @Trix897 Год назад

      It’s crazy especially in New York State…most of the state does “soda” except for the Western part of the state where it’s “pop.”
      Weird how there’s a shift there.

    • @hatleyhoward7193
      @hatleyhoward7193 Год назад

      “Do you want a Coke?”… “I’ll take a Diet Dr. Pepper please”… Pop and Soda aren’t words used for a lot of Southern States.

    • @Neo-hw7nu
      @Neo-hw7nu Год назад

      @@hatleyhoward7193 I am from Alabama and I use the term soft drink more than anything. I don't call everything coke. Occasionally, I use the term soda.

    • @hatleyhoward7193
      @hatleyhoward7193 Год назад

      @@Neo-hw7nu I should have been more specific and many of my fellow Texans would kick me for even referring to us as the South. A lot of East and South East Texas regional Counties would have been more accurate.

  • @arnoldrivas4590
    @arnoldrivas4590 Год назад

    Your question in the beginning is a tough one. I'm American from Los Angeles. Born and raised. You said you're English but not from London. No disrespect, but your accent reminds me of Connor's accent. Connor, aka, CDawg. He's Welsh. If you hadn't said you were Mancunian, I would have guessed you were northern. But closer to Wales or near the Midlands.

  • @lilsuzq32
    @lilsuzq32 Год назад +1

    British english is totally up front and center in the US southern accent

  • @Ifyernotawakeyet
    @Ifyernotawakeyet Год назад

    I live in Alabama and someone out west mentioned Georgia accents. I typed, "Well, Alabama is a mixed bayug (bag) of dialects"

  • @derekdodds4530
    @derekdodds4530 Год назад +1

    American here. To me, your accent sounds like it's from somewhere in the north of England. It is a little similar to Scottish but not as strong and difficult to understand.

  • @castlecorn593
    @castlecorn593 Год назад +1

    For the African American accent she missed some stuff we also use "be" like Oh every time he go there he be wilding most black people also use a lot of slang that changes very frequently

    • @TheSaharay1
      @TheSaharay1 Год назад

      That's slang, not exactly accent. And as such, it isn't really trackable by geographic boundaries as easily

    • @castlecorn593
      @castlecorn593 Год назад

      @@TheSaharay1 ik that I just threw that in there cause black people use a lot of slang

  • @SteveStone-r1d
    @SteveStone-r1d 9 месяцев назад +1

    Manchester

  • @zacharyliles8657
    @zacharyliles8657 Год назад

    You're definitely a northerner from you accent, I'd probably guess Geordie except I know you're a Man U fan so I think you're from near Manchester haha

  • @CatSorcery
    @CatSorcery Год назад

    Is worsterchire a place? Like the really tangy sauce? I would guess you're from there for some reason.

  • @8mycake244
    @8mycake244 Год назад

    I grew up in the Deep South. Tired was pronounced Tide. OVER THERE was pronounced OVA THAR. I don't speak that way anymore, but it is fascinating. My mother is still living, and she pronounces FISH as Fey-ish. ha.

    • @Neo-hw7nu
      @Neo-hw7nu Год назад

      Did you live in a rural area or near a city. I'm from Birmingham, Alabama originally but, while still southern, my accent isn't as strong as what you are describing.

    • @8mycake244
      @8mycake244 Год назад

      @@Neo-hw7nu I'm originally from Muscle Shoals, Alabama, but grew up just outside in the country. So, yeah, a bit redneck back in those days of the late seventies and eighties. Funny we're both Alabamians originally.

  • @aimeemarie5462
    @aimeemarie5462 Год назад

    You asked in the beginning about your accent and what we think. I don't think your accent is very strong compared to a lot I've heard. When you say specific words it's obvious where you are from but it isn't apparent with the first word that pops out of your mouth haha

  • @SomeRandomOldFatGuy
    @SomeRandomOldFatGuy Год назад

    I'm American and a lot of our accents confuse me because they don't seem regional. Hopefully this will give answers

  • @MuriKakari
    @MuriKakari Год назад

    I've watched enough to know the answer but when I started watching this channel- I knew your accent was Northern, not Scouse, not Geordie, and not Yorkshire. By elimination, I probably would have guessed Mancunian, especially since there are definitely features in your speech I think of as marking a more urban accent and I do hear similarities between your accent and the Office Blokes. Your accent is part of why I kept watching your channel too, since I think you have a very clear example of the Manchester accent, and I do like to work on accents.

  • @michaeltnk1135
    @michaeltnk1135 Год назад

    Just keep in mind that these are exaggerated accents and not indicative of how many people there actually talk. Just those with the strongest accents

  • @famousz578
    @famousz578 Год назад

    Your my favorite RUclips fr idek why I beinge your videos

  • @girl...124
    @girl...124 Год назад

    Can you react to the Liverpool accent videos i wanna learn it

  • @rickhambric9737
    @rickhambric9737 Год назад

    Hell, Georgia has 7 dialects alone!!!

  • @kathleenchilcote9127
    @kathleenchilcote9127 Год назад

    Watch part two! It's interesting!

  • @saintseer9578
    @saintseer9578 Год назад

    1:45 are you a Geordie?
    Update: I just saw you were from Manchester. I guessed Geordie because you sounded very “northern” to me if that makes sense.

  • @ChumpWumber
    @ChumpWumber Год назад

    I think most people would know that you're from England but not be able to place where exactly

  • @BlitzTaco
    @BlitzTaco Год назад

    ruclips.net/video/lfIWX5vGTEk/видео.html here's a good clip that shows what a Baltimore accent sounds like

  • @dripcaraybbx
    @dripcaraybbx Год назад

    I guess you're from north England. From there, my only templates are Yorkshire or Liverpool, so if you don't sound like Mel B or Paul McCartney, I'm stuck! But I'm not hearing much Yorkshire so I guess northwest England.

  • @richlisola1
    @richlisola1 Год назад

    You’re from somewhere in the north. Northern England

  • @ringo-lf3cd
    @ringo-lf3cd Год назад

    I'm guessing that your accent is either a Yorkshire or Leeds accent. Northern England for sure.

  • @miked5814
    @miked5814 Год назад

    Manchester. I definitely hear a Manchester accent. Am I right?
    Edit- I was right. How about that?

  • @robertrodgers1423
    @robertrodgers1423 Год назад

    I know you don't substitute F for TH as many do.

  • @ismaelmaneiro222
    @ismaelmaneiro222 Год назад

    I'd guess manchester. Your accent kind of reminds me of Michael Bisping.

  • @elfdogre2181
    @elfdogre2181 Год назад +2

    The only thing I dislike about this video is the wokeness of the helpers. For instance, I don't know any Latino that accepts "Latinx" as being descriptive of who/what they are. One of my neighbors used fun descriptive words such as "pendejo" to describe people trying to force "Latinx" into the language.

  • @games.c123
    @games.c123 Год назад

    If I had to, I'd guess your accent is from Northern England... Yorkshire or somewhere close?

  • @JoeyNiklas
    @JoeyNiklas Год назад +1

    What's sad is that because of Hollywood and TV in general, these dialectal differences are disappearing.

  • @chasewilliams1286
    @chasewilliams1286 Год назад

    Would guess middle England

  • @terrycarter1137
    @terrycarter1137 Год назад

    definatly English, rough guess Nottingham.

  • @willrobinson4976
    @willrobinson4976 Год назад

    You are from the Manchester area.

  • @ironiccookies2320
    @ironiccookies2320 Год назад

    From your accent I'd say Northern English. Probably northwest, definitely not northeast.

  • @chsfive
    @chsfive Год назад

    Your accent to me sounds like Liverpool or Sheffield.

    • @chsfive
      @chsfive Год назад

      Didn't get to the part where you addressed it, guess if you split the difference I was kinda right. Lol

  • @tippytoptiger248
    @tippytoptiger248 Год назад

    I'm just an ignorant American but from watching stand-up and movies, I would just think you were from Central or North England. You don't sound pretentious enough to be from London.

  • @anthonysantucci4803
    @anthonysantucci4803 Год назад +1

    Pahk the cah in the havhd yahd. Let’s go Boston

  • @josephsiegel8300
    @josephsiegel8300 Год назад

    Do the merchant accent

  • @Tevon17
    @Tevon17 Год назад

    bro that is not Baltimore wtf😂😂😂😂😂

  • @MrQuispx
    @MrQuispx Год назад

    The north, yer from the north

  • @jeffgilligan2004
    @jeffgilligan2004 Год назад

    I am guessing the midlands...

    • @jeffgilligan2004
      @jeffgilligan2004 Год назад

      I guessed wrong, BTW: Some of my distant ancestors from England came from Cambridge, Shropshire, and Manchester.

    • @BritishGuy22
      @BritishGuy22  Год назад

      At least you didn't say London. The midlands is more like the accent from the Peaky Blinders if you have ever seen that, great show!

  • @richlisola1
    @richlisola1 Год назад

    Not all black people have African American accents

  • @tracyfrazier7440
    @tracyfrazier7440 Год назад

    Too much information. He is very talented, but I have yet to see an accent video that doesn’t either give you too much or too little information.

  • @dominicvioli7098
    @dominicvioli7098 Год назад

    Please react to the fallen of ww2

  • @dondangler2458
    @dondangler2458 Год назад

    You sound northern, thats all i got

  • @puppylove2493
    @puppylove2493 Год назад

    i like the accent well educated english only...terrible grammar spoken by both countries

  • @jeffrey.a.hanson
    @jeffrey.a.hanson Год назад

    This guy is incredible. He’s a real life deep fake.

  • @meghanellis9864
    @meghanellis9864 Год назад

    British accent

  • @MlTCH
    @MlTCH Год назад

    This video drips a little with wokeness.

  • @lebamadness
    @lebamadness Год назад +9

    Ugh this video is so cringe worthy; however, the accent presentation is great, but I wish the wokeness was kept out. Also, they should check their facts on slavery ( not kidnapped, sold by their own people for profit). Thank you to the Brits for their war on ending slavery, and for being the first to do so, with France and the U.S. following your example.

    • @philipmcniel4908
      @philipmcniel4908 Год назад +5

      Well, I presume the slaves didn't go along voluntarily, so from their perspective I think "kidnapped" was probably the most accurate word (keep in mind, the ones who were here in the US--the subject of discussion here--were 100% the victims of slavery; none of them were the profiteers). I do think the use of the term "colonizers" (as opposed to the more historically-common "colonists") was chosen to be a bit more accusatory, to imply that the settlers who came to this continent from Europe came here voluntarily to grab control for themselves and exploit a new land, when many of them--though perhaps more in the North than the South--were basically forced out of Europe by religious persecution, economic oppression, or famine (take the Quaker persecution, the Highland Clearances, and the Irish potato famine, for instance).
      p.s. I think it's interesting that the person who discussed the Hispanic dialects used the word "Latinx," since it demonstrates that she's likely college-educated and highly assimilated into progressive white American ways of thinking about language and gender: The Hispanics who are not highly-assimilated in this way (e.g. first-generation Hispanic-Americans) seem to almost never use the term "Latinx" or any other attempts to make Spanish words more gender-neutral, as it sounds foreign at best, and at worst like someone's telling them their language needs to be "fixed" because something's "wrong" with it.

    • @tracyfrazier7440
      @tracyfrazier7440 Год назад

      And to whom did those Africans sell their waring, defeated Africans to? The British, who had an unquenchable thirst for slaves, and didn’t care how they were acquired. Only when the U.S. and other countries were no longer buying, did the British decide to end the slave trade. Good for them.

    • @adrian2736
      @adrian2736 Год назад +4

      How were they not kidnapped rofl wtf are you talking about

    • @lebamadness
      @lebamadness Год назад +2

      @@adrian2736 I suggest that you learn actual history, and not the narrative pushed. If you mean kidnapped by ruling tribes in Africa, then you would be correct. Thomas Sowell (Harvard Educated, African American) has a great video on facts about slavery not taught in schools.

    • @samuelhiatt9338
      @samuelhiatt9338 Год назад +1

      ​@@adrian2736 His point is that they're accusing the buyer of kidnapping, not the actual slaver in the first place. They weren't kidnapped by the slave owners, they were bought. The people that they were actually kidnapped by were almost exclusively other West Africans who then sold them into slavery. That doesn't excuse the buyer from wrongdoing, but it also doesn't mean they were the kidnappers.

  • @columbusga7067
    @columbusga7067 Год назад

    America is isn't based on English