I'm Northern Irish and the paw, poor, pour thing really floored me. Never occurred to me we say each word different, when they are meant to sound the same lol. Strange.
supposed to be pronounced diffo, that's why they are spelt diffo, I say them diffo, they used to be diffo in Queens English, probably until the 19th C, just modern laziness in standard RP English.
Here in the northeast of the US we at least pronounce paw and pour/poor differently. Some people pronounce poor and pour differently from each other here as well. I know Canada for a fact pronounces them all differently. I think most English speaking places around the world do.
I'm from Tennessee in the US and just realized I pronounce "paw, poor, pour" all differently and somewhat like Joel. I pronounce "pore and pour" the same way.
I'm Italian. Once I had a chat with a taxi driver in Belfast. At first it was quite traumatizing, but after a few minutes I started to understand something like a word every two. He kind of kidnapped us to show us interesting places around the city and turned a 1 minute drive into 8, but we enjoyed the ride and paid the full price even if it wasn't our request. It was clear he cared about those places and well, it was a taxi full of anthropologists. And another time a local in Bushmills stopped to chat with us and I admit I understood half the stuff he said, but I got that he had never seen the Giants' Causeway and he didn't care about it at all.
I do think some Norther Irish people sound quite American. I think it is because of the pronunciation of some vowels, as well as the strong R sounds. The pronunciation of father 2:00 sound american to me.
I'm from Northern Ireland and I remember back in School during English class when we were learning about Homophones one of the examples from the book was "Paw, Poor and Pour" and we were all confused, even the teacher was like "Now hold on, this isn't right"
I used to be a trainer and once did a two-week course in Brentwood to a class to 20. I thought it went pretty well until one of the feedbacks simply said. "I could listen to him speak all day. No idea what he's saying, just love the sounds."
I've always found it interesting that a lot of Northern Irish pronunciations are closer to American English than British English, especially the way 'r' is pronounced.
It’s not that interesting. It’s called a rhotic accent. They are not exclusive to America. Irish and Scottish accents are both rhotic. English accents used to be rhotic as well (and some still are, see West Country).
@@colincampbell4261 The hillBILLIES may be followers of King Billy who moved to the US to get out of poverty, and found only more poverty, but at least a drier climate.
SternLX how? I'm from Northern Ireland and I've never thought that way about the American accent. Why do Americans always try and steal every good thing about Ireland lol
HypoCore actually it's a valid point as many Ulster Scots ( known in the USA as Scotch-Irish) were also prominent in the settlements of the 13 colonies in America.
I'm iraqi woman 🇮🇶 and I studied English by my own and now when I talk every one says you have got a Northaian Iraish accent!! And that's why i watched ur video and it was definitely like they told me 😅 I guss because I used to listen to my favourite band (west life ) they are Iraish band 💕 my accent became naturally iraish.
Northern Irish accent changes every 20-30 miles Joel is likely close to Belfast . Still the poor paw and pour example stunned me I had no idea they were meant to sound the same
They arent. The southern english way of speaking has warped over the years and gotten lazy, especially with the embracing of recieved pronounciation / royal english. And in all likelihood its recent. from early 1800s, if even that. The difference between paw and the others especially
You know Anna, it might be more difficult to put together, but a comparison between Joel and a person from the "Mid South" of the United States might be interesting. There were a lot of people from Northern Ireland who settled there and the accent of places like Tennessee an Appalachia still have many of the elements. Yeah, I know, the series is on British accents, but I've always been interested how accents in the English speaking colonial areas evolved (US, Canada, South Africa, NZ, Australia).
I spent a full month in Northern Ireland, in Belfast precisely and yeah it's a quite hard accent not gonna lie...but I can say that after the first week it got easier to understand people and I also fell in love with their amazing accent👍 I miss that city so much
I'm gonna be honest, I'm from Derry and I find Belfast way too stressful and overwhelming lol. It doesn't do Ireland justice, more industrialized than everywhere else but Dublin imo
For the paw, poor and pour, The N.I accent clearly pronuances each word uniquely . Especially the word, Poor. It's really good, how Joel makes it so clear which is which. . Anna pronuanced each of the words exactly the same.
My partner is from NI and we've been together for 10 yrs I'm Scottish he lives here with me in Glasgow .I always get him to say how now brown cow....😂😂😂. We say scunnered.....and obviously Aye ..and eejit so many similar words but it's nicer listening to someone from NI.❤️❤️❤️
Fascinating that the Northern Irish accent sounds so much more similar to the Southern U.S. accent than I expected! I’m assuming the large number of Irish (and Scottish) immigrants to the southern colonies played a large role in the development of our accent. Thanks for the video!
It's interesting that you say that, I'm from Belfast and I found when I traveled through Kentucky, Tennessee and Alabama these were the only places in the world (including the south of Ireland and Scotland! ) where I could talk at normal speed and be understood. Ha!
Ian Logan - that’s fantastic! And not surprising, truly. I just rewatched the video, and there are quite a few sounds that I would identify as Southern US dialect (like the “ing” pronunciation as “-in” and not “-ng”, and the “r” being very pronounced at the end of words.) I’m from North Georgia, so I’m sure you and I could understand each other quite well, lol.
How similar an Appalachian accent is to a Northern Irish!! This is super interesting to see how it has descended through families (my own included) that immigrated frkm Ireland to the region. I always loved the country and irish fiddle and thought it was so cool to see the culture in a different form here in America lol It's especially noticeable when he says singular words. Walkin' talkin' etc. So cool!
Not many people talk about northern Irish accents, maybe you could do a video on our dialect because even talking to an English person it's completely differen
exactly! everyone is always talking about ireland and totally forgetting about northern ireland. it kind of annoys me now because we aren’t that very much appreciated lol
There's a few different northern accents though. I mean someone in Belfast says "Car" like "Koah" but someone from Armagh or south Tyrone would say "Kee arr" and you start to hear the south accent creeping in with some words. Also there's like a posh Belfast and more thick "westie" accent.
Its so delightful to know that there are entire communities of people that actively seek out things like this channel in order to appreciate people's differences. The trend today is to overlook these unique things and to simply accept "we're all the same, all equal." That may be the case but acknowledging that and basking in the incredible little things that seperate us from each other should be met with that much enthusiasm.
Nice accent. I'm from Ecuador trying to learn that crazy but wonderful language. That kind of videos have helped me to improve my listening. Thanks a lot
Love the video. Reminds me of the year I lived in Fermanagh, teaching French, back in 1998/99. I had thought I could get a grasp of what the locals would be saying, but it took me three months to be able to understand a single conversation... Thanks for the video.
I’m Northern Irish and this video is so funny ! 😂🤚🏻 it’s so weird hearing people pronounce things differently because I’m used to the way Joel says it!
Greetings from Slovakia! :) perfect video, thanks. Few years ago I was in Ireland, on holiday. I asked one man for directions and he kept repeating: It is behind "lojts", It is behind "lojts". Only then I did understand, that he thought "traffic lights". Just "it is behind lights" :)))) it was great.
Scundered is used very commonly. I think he is from a little bit out of Belfast, he doesn't sound like he's from Belfast, he sounds like he might be from Newtownabbey, Larne or Netownards; something not so far from Belfast.
I really agree with you Anna. That accent is really amazing. In Sweden we would spell "How are you?" In Northern Irish accent "Haaj aarr yöööyy?" hahhaha.
Joel would do very well in Canada across the Country because those various inflections are common throughout the regions starting from East to West. I live in Saskatchewan and pronounce many of what Joel was saying or at least close enough.
I love the 1:58 "My father" instinct where he tilted his head to the side. We always do that when talking about family, as if they are close-by, a nod away, across the room.
It's so weird to actually h are someone with my accent on the media! I normally just hear American or English.. It's nice to know we are thought of a little!!
From my French point of view, the northern Irish accent makes more sense than the standard English accent 🤣 . I live in England for 6 years and just realised that I sound more Irish than English 🙈😳
ANNA! It's so great to see you, I miss your singing lessons so much but I'm so glad you're still around, YAY! You're just great at teaching, period! This is exactly what my roommate from Belfast sounded like when I lived in Toronto. I never understood a word he said for like 2 years. Hahaha! Great guy though!
I'm from Detroit in the US, and people always tell us we have an accent, which my family totally does, and I knew my family was originally from the Ulster region of Ireland, but it wasn't until listening to this that I realized that my family still sounds like they're from northern Ireland, down to kinda, but not quite dropping the t at the end of words, such as Detroit haha.
In the 1998 movie Ronin, Jonathan Pryce pulls off what sounds a lot like this accent. I remember being particularly impressed with his pronunciation of "now." Thanks for the lesson!
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Scottish accent may be hard for understand (and that's coming from a Portuguese speaker), but I love it and think it can be very sexy sometimes (yeah... dunno if that makes any sense)
Ernesto Serravalle well the Northern Irish and Scottish accents can be remarkably similar, seeing as the vast majority of the population in the North are Scots Ulster descended people. The only major place where you can find a true Irish accent is in the West, such as Counties Galway and Clare. The Leinster accent in places like County Dublin are English influenced and the Ulster accents in the North are Scottish influenced.
In many places outside belfast scundered means bored or fed up. I only discovered it meant embarrased after moving there at 18and was terribly confused at why someone said they were 'bored' when they did something stupid. Just thought I'd share.
I from the west of Ulster, I thought it could mean anything from cold, bored, put upon or just really tired. My aule' Da used to report of being scundered after coming in from the cold after brisk garden work in the winter.
Thats a lie. *scundered* in Belfast means "embarrassed" Outside of Belfast (mainly Ballymena and Mid Ulster) there is *scunnered* which means fed up/tired/pi**ed off. Two different words, with different spellings, different meanings, in two different areas of the country.
I love this accent videos, with proper phonetics analysis. English has been my second language of about 20 years, but my accent is very fluid, it is nice to see where some of the influences come from.
Any time I am in England, I barely get 2 words out and they immediately cotton on to my accent and often ask me to repeat words, now having watched this video I understand why, and it's true that the English love the northern Ireland accent!
Loved the video, would love to hear a version of thicker Irish Accent with words phrases and slangs that are particularly hard to understand, and the same for Scotland I've heard that Aberdeen and Dundee have some of the strongest Scottish accents that even other Scots find it difficult to understand.
Nice, so next time that a mother tongue doesn't understand my accent I will just say that I have a mixed English accent (standard British, Irish, Northern British and American) :D I love this kind of videos, I'm learning sooo much about the differences of the different English accents!
It's funny, but there are very few people, even here in the United States, that know our southern accents come from Irish settlers in the 1800s. The Irish settlers moved through the Appalachian Mountains. You can here the accent when Joel says "walking, talking - and especially Swimming"...
That sorta irish guy LoL America: designated driver - the chap who hangs around the bar watching his buddies drink whilst he sips on juice or soda. Ireland: designated driver - the one amongst all the drinking buddies in the pub who finds his keys first.
So fascinating. I’m from Virginia and have a bit of a southern accent. Our pronunciation is closer to that of the Northern Irish than it is to the British pronunciation.
My partner is northern Irish but we met here in my home country. Honestly, it was very hard for me to understand his accent when we first met. I feel like a complete idiot trying to understand the accent, but I'm used to it after a while ;) I was actually looking for Irish cooking recipe but stumbled to this great video! :)
A point about the velar nasal: we CAN say it (so we can), we just don't do it at the *end* of most words, except in static register. "Sing", "Viking", and surnames all are spared from our laziness.
The Michigan accent has the same rule with words ending in “t” and some of the other rules apply to the Michigan accent as well. It does make it easier to accidentally fall into an Irish accent when we are exposed to one for a longer period of time. Very interesting
Scundered is actually used quite commonly in Northern Ireland. Most people use it as a way of saying 'fed-up', not embarrassed. Joel uses it to describe being embarrassed because he is from south/east Antrim.
I've lived in England for over fifty years, and my accent is much weaker than it was. When they said scundered meant embarrassed I thought I had forgotten - but I also think it means 'I am buggered' in English
I'm from Northern Ireland, and have lived there all my life. But for some reason I can't say cow or ow like a proper northern Irishman. I have no idea why.
Good video Anna but there is not only one accent in Northern Ireland. The accent in North Antrim e.g. Ballymena is very different from the Belfast accent, especially the intonation. Then you have the Londonderry accent and the Dungannon accent. Totally different again. For such a small place we have a big range of accents. I found it interesting that the accent in Northern Ireland had a lot of similar features to the West Country, especially the rhotic r. Maybe it's standard English that's got that wrong? 😆
Well commonly when you go to northern Ireland you go to Belfast because of titanic and all that. so its good to be able to understand what they are saying. because the Belfast accent is completely unique
I love how enthusiastic Joel is. He's finding it so hard to not laugh
So funny hahaa
Yep hes having trouble breathing cause of her she making him laugh
@@theterminator-roadto30subs69 Her unbelievable beauty and Charisma might be causing some of that breathing trouble as well. She is lovely.
I bet he was super horny just standing next to her she is such a milf, I know I would be
I know right! I just want to give him a good tit-poke🎉
"Say hello Joel"
Actually says hello Joel
Only a northern Irish person 😂
From now on the baby sleeps in the crib; Iron helps us play
Hello Joel!!!
The absolute madlad
That's a common joke in every language.
Lily Unicorn I’m Northern iris I don’t talk like that
When you are Northen Irish and you have been saying all these words and you realise that you are actually really Northern Irish😂
Beth McCullough same 😂😂😂😂😂
Beth McCullough OMG so true.
Beth McCullough yep, definitely, I'm from country armagh
oh my soooo true 😂
Beth McCullough sameee im from county down
So can we have a video of just Joel reading us a story? He's adorable and I could listen to him talk all day.
I'm Northern Irish and the paw, poor, pour thing really floored me. Never occurred to me we say each word different, when they are meant to sound the same lol. Strange.
supposed to be pronounced diffo, that's why they are spelt diffo, I say them diffo, they used to be diffo in Queens English, probably until the 19th C, just modern laziness in standard RP English.
they are meant to be different. english just cant speak properly
The Irish pronunciation is actually the way I've been taught at school in my country...
Here in the northeast of the US we at least pronounce paw and pour/poor differently. Some people pronounce poor and pour differently from each other here as well. I know Canada for a fact pronounces them all differently. I think most English speaking places around the world do.
I'm from Tennessee in the US and just realized I pronounce "paw, poor, pour" all differently and somewhat like Joel. I pronounce "pore and pour" the same way.
I'm Italian. Once I had a chat with a taxi driver in Belfast. At first it was quite traumatizing, but after a few minutes I started to understand something like a word every two. He kind of kidnapped us to show us interesting places around the city and turned a 1 minute drive into 8, but we enjoyed the ride and paid the full price even if it wasn't our request. It was clear he cared about those places and well, it was a taxi full of anthropologists.
And another time a local in Bushmills stopped to chat with us and I admit I understood half the stuff he said, but I got that he had never seen the Giants' Causeway and he didn't care about it at all.
Non of us northern irish people care about the giants cause way ahha
Heyy, the Giants’ Causeway is awesome! I really recommend you visit haha
As a Northern Irish guy living in the West Midlands, I have been asked if I am American or Canadian quite a few times. Very strange.
The Golden Fleece I've had the Canadian question multiple times before
When I visited England from Canada, my friend kept being asked if he was Irish.
listen to the ing part of the video it sounds quite American
I do think some Norther Irish people sound quite American. I think it is because of the pronunciation of some vowels, as well as the strong R sounds. The pronunciation of father 2:00 sound american to me.
The Golden Fleece American accent is basically the Irish accent. The first English speaking settlers were Irish
I love the way Anna delights in the diverse sounds of people's accents. She honors them all with her smiles of happiness.
I'm from Northern Ireland and I remember back in School during English class when we were learning about Homophones one of the examples from the book was "Paw, Poor and Pour" and we were all confused, even the teacher was like "Now hold on, this isn't right"
I've noticed alot of Americans will say 'Gurbels' for Goebbels, not knowing that the 'r' comes from phonetic instructions for the British.
I’m Welsh from Cardiff, but my Nan came from Belfast. Love hearing the Northern Irish accent as it always reminds of her ❤️
That's a posh accent lol
Litterally just add “lads” or “son” at the end of any phrase and boom it’s Northern Irish
Banjaxed! Class word
Mit (mate) or Lik (like)
@That sorta irish guy Hi only used in Derry or Ballymena. Also Derry people say 'yes' when they say 'hello'
Martin Mullan so do ppl from Belfast but it’s mainly jus wa so ye want ni
@@acousticmotorbike2118 only certain parts of Derry/Londonderry do that.
I used to be a trainer and once did a two-week course in Brentwood to a class to 20. I thought it went pretty well until one of the feedbacks simply said. "I could listen to him speak all day. No idea what he's saying, just love the sounds."
@George Garrigues Much as I would have enjoyed that, no. Brentwood, Essex, UK
@@TheGiantKillers random to see an essex local under a random youtube video😂😂 i’m romford
@@katiephelps4118 Ahh. Not quite. I'm a Northern Irish local, but visited Brentwood to deliver a training course.
I've always found it interesting that a lot of Northern Irish pronunciations are closer to American English than British English, especially the way 'r' is pronounced.
Especially there’s a lot of Irish flead from their home cuz their catholic
It’s not that interesting. It’s called a rhotic accent. They are not exclusive to America. Irish and Scottish accents are both rhotic. English accents used to be rhotic as well (and some still are, see West Country).
I'm Northern Irish and i have literally been asked by English people if i am American!
@@didid3ksaulster scots influenced USA accents
@@colincampbell4261
The hillBILLIES may be followers of King Billy who moved to the US to get out of poverty, and found only more poverty, but at least a drier climate.
I always thought I lost my Belfast accent, but watching this I realised I haven't. Good channel, thumps up.
Thank you Connor.
Nice Ricky
So....Anna finds it crazy that "paw poor pour" are not pronounced all as "paw paw paw"? Crazy! :D
Lol
I worked as an auto electrician when I was young and power was a word I used often. The Aussies I worked with heard Par.
hi
@@jamesmcgee7723 Yeah, par, tar (towel), tal (towel)...
@@jamesmcgee7723 Oh yeah, and "WHERE. ARE. ARE. BAGS" - Michael McIntyre
What's amazing is how much of the Northern Irish accent is prevalent in the General American accent.
SternLX how? I'm from Northern Ireland and I've never thought that way about the American accent. Why do Americans always try and steal every good thing about Ireland lol
HypoCore actually it's a valid point as many Ulster Scots ( known in the USA as Scotch-Irish) were also prominent in the settlements of the 13 colonies in America.
Well, there's the rhotic "r", pronouncing "t" as "d", not pronouncing the g in -ing words, the first "a" vowel in the video, etc.
why do they try an steal it simple. their granny and granda immigrated then said im irish that fuckin stupid
We didn't steal it, we brought it with us!
I'm iraqi woman 🇮🇶 and I studied English by my own and now when I talk every one says you have got a Northaian Iraish accent!!
And that's why i watched ur video and it was definitely like they told me 😅 I guss because I used to listen to my favourite band (west life ) they are Iraish band 💕 my accent became naturally iraish.
That's funny and cute lol
Northern Irish accent changes every 20-30 miles Joel is likely close to Belfast . Still the poor paw and pour example stunned me I had no idea they were meant to sound the same
They arent. The southern english way of speaking has warped over the years and gotten lazy, especially with the embracing of recieved pronounciation / royal english. And in all likelihood its recent. from early 1800s, if even that. The difference between paw and the others especially
You know Anna, it might be more difficult to put together, but a comparison between Joel and a person from the "Mid South" of the United States might be interesting. There were a lot of people from Northern Ireland who settled there and the accent of places like Tennessee an Appalachia still have many of the elements. Yeah, I know, the series is on British accents, but I've always been interested how accents in the English speaking colonial areas evolved (US, Canada, South Africa, NZ, Australia).
Ahh hillbillies and Billy boys
@@clairjay Only American "hillbillies" have no hatred of Catholics.
this is so brilliant, I am working as an English teacher in spain and I am going to use this to summarise my NI accent for my students!!!
I spent a full month in Northern Ireland, in Belfast precisely and yeah it's a quite hard accent not gonna lie...but I can say that after the first week it got easier to understand people and I also fell in love with their amazing accent👍 I miss that city so much
@@johnlavery6116 yeah I will :)
I'm gonna be honest, I'm from Derry and I find Belfast way too stressful and overwhelming lol. It doesn't do Ireland justice, more industrialized than everywhere else but Dublin imo
I was born in Canada and moved to Norn Ireland age 4. I had to relearn my accent!!! People love it!
I'm northern Irish it's so funny watching this I can't stop laughing this is like deja vu lol
Lolololol
It’s so weird to hear like this ahaha
@@Anna-ug8cq ya'll sound Canadian lol is that just me
@@Steve-zc9ht Lmao, no I think the same. Just a little bit
Depends where in Canada. Newfoundlanders can sound much like people from Wexford and Kerry. Like really a lot.
For the paw, poor and pour, The N.I accent clearly pronuances each word uniquely . Especially the word, Poor. It's really good, how Joel makes it so clear which is which. . Anna pronuanced each of the words exactly the same.
Occasionally I heard eejit directed at me as a boy growing up in southern Arkansas in the 1950's. Words die hard.
Jamaicans also use it
My partner is from NI and we've been together for 10 yrs I'm Scottish he lives here with me in Glasgow .I always get him to say how now brown cow....😂😂😂. We say scunnered.....and obviously Aye ..and eejit so many similar words but it's nicer listening to someone from NI.❤️❤️❤️
Fascinating that the Northern Irish accent sounds so much more similar to the Southern U.S. accent than I expected! I’m assuming the large number of Irish (and Scottish) immigrants to the southern colonies played a large role in the development of our accent. Thanks for the video!
It's interesting that you say that, I'm from Belfast and I found when I traveled through Kentucky, Tennessee and Alabama these were the only places in the world (including the south of Ireland and Scotland! ) where I could talk at normal speed and be understood. Ha!
Ian Logan - that’s fantastic! And not surprising, truly. I just rewatched the video, and there are quite a few sounds that I would identify as Southern US dialect (like the “ing” pronunciation as “-in” and not “-ng”, and the “r” being very pronounced at the end of words.) I’m from North Georgia, so I’m sure you and I could understand each other quite well, lol.
@@Kelly-Fam-GA I'm sure we could, lol. I loved the South, great place, great people.
How similar an Appalachian accent is to a Northern Irish!! This is super interesting to see how it has descended through families (my own included) that immigrated frkm Ireland to the region. I always loved the country and irish fiddle and thought it was so cool to see the culture in a different form here in America lol
It's especially noticeable when he says singular words. Walkin' talkin' etc. So cool!
Not many people talk about northern Irish accents, maybe you could do a video on our dialect because even talking to an English person it's completely differen
+person t I think I will do a series dedicated to Irish accents and the differences :)
exactly! everyone is always talking about ireland and totally forgetting about northern ireland. it kind of annoys me now because we aren’t that very much appreciated lol
There's a few different northern accents though. I mean someone in Belfast says "Car" like "Koah" but someone from Armagh or south Tyrone would say "Kee arr" and you start to hear the south accent creeping in with some words. Also there's like a posh Belfast and more thick "westie" accent.
Its so delightful to know that there are entire communities of people that actively seek out things like this channel in order to appreciate people's differences. The trend today is to overlook these unique things and to simply accept "we're all the same, all equal." That may be the case but acknowledging that and basking in the incredible little things that seperate us from each other should be met with that much enthusiasm.
I’m Northern Irish And I Said All Of These Words And It Matches My Accent/The Way I Say It
"Say hi, Joel!" "Hi Joel!" 😂 Love it.
Nice accent. I'm from Ecuador trying to learn that crazy but wonderful language. That kind of videos have helped me to improve my listening. Thanks a lot
Love the video. Reminds me of the year I lived in Fermanagh, teaching French, back in 1998/99. I had thought I could get a grasp of what the locals would be saying, but it took me three months to be able to understand a single conversation... Thanks for the video.
I’m Northern Irish and this video is so funny ! 😂🤚🏻 it’s so weird hearing people pronounce things differently because I’m used to the way Joel says it!
Greetings from Slovakia! :) perfect video, thanks. Few years ago I was in Ireland, on holiday. I asked one man for directions and he kept repeating: It is behind "lojts", It is behind "lojts". Only then I did understand, that he thought "traffic lights". Just "it is behind lights" :)))) it was great.
he bucked her after that yeoo uppa Joel lad
UnicornGuy no u cant buck her shes minging
lashed it into her
Yepppa
Gwaan Joel ya good thing ya
See the look on her face when she's saying "what he'll do is bring the tongue up to the roof ..." 4:15
You can see hear the influence of the Southern US accent especially the Black Ebonics talk as well. Also I hear a little Jamaican accent here too.
These accent videos are a wonderful idea, I enjoy every episode!
Anyone noticed that he actually said “Hello Joel” 😂😂😂 Loved the video 👍🏼
I really appreciate your effort, always bringing some guests, you deserve more subscribers! ^^
Scundered is used very commonly. I think he is from a little bit out of Belfast, he doesn't sound like he's from Belfast, he sounds like he might be from Newtownabbey, Larne or Netownards; something not so far from Belfast.
Joel - what a legend.
I really agree with you Anna. That accent is really amazing. In Sweden we would spell "How are you?" In Northern Irish accent "Haaj aarr yöööyy?" hahhaha.
Joel would do very well in Canada across the Country because those various inflections are common throughout the regions starting from East to West. I live in Saskatchewan and pronounce many of what Joel was saying or at least close enough.
I love the 1:58 "My father" instinct where he tilted his head to the side. We always do that when talking about family, as if they are close-by, a nod away, across the room.
It's so weird to actually h are someone with my accent on the media! I normally just hear American or English.. It's nice to know we are thought of a little!!
Yeah English from London and American English is the more popular dialects of the English language they are everywhere 24/7
JUMB UP for Joel and Anna, my favorite RUclips English teacher! Thank you for sharing, Joel!
Why am I watching this When I'm originally from Northern Ireland
this made me chuckle
Same
this is awesome!!! I also love the "now" "cow" pronounciation
Thank you for these accent videos. I really enjoy them! :) Love the Northern Irish accent. Always been one of my favourites! :)
You are one of the best english trainers on planet. Your dedication is commendable. Hats off to you. May god bless u
From my French point of view, the northern Irish accent makes more sense than the standard English accent 🤣 . I live in England for 6 years and just realised that I sound more Irish than English 🙈😳
Try to visit NI.
No such thing as “standard English accent”
Whats standard English
He sounds completely normal to me as a northern Irish man.
To me as a American ya'll sound almost Canadian just a little idk lol but ya'll sound like people from West country to lol
Yea sounds normal to me
Apart from scundered meaning embarrased!
So interesting accent, nice and pleasant. Thank you!
+juan carlos lira thank you
I have a friend that is from N. Ireland. This was helpful. I live in the USA.
When you're in the American South, and Joel speaks just like us, minus the "cow, now," bit.
ANNA! It's so great to see you, I miss your singing lessons so much but I'm so glad you're still around, YAY! You're just great at teaching, period!
This is exactly what my roommate from Belfast sounded like when I lived in Toronto. I never understood a word he said for like 2 years. Hahaha! Great guy though!
I'm from Detroit in the US, and people always tell us we have an accent, which my family totally does, and I knew my family was originally from the Ulster region of Ireland, but it wasn't until listening to this that I realized that my family still sounds like they're from northern Ireland, down to kinda, but not quite dropping the t at the end of words, such as Detroit haha.
In the 1998 movie Ronin, Jonathan Pryce pulls off what sounds a lot like this accent. I remember being particularly impressed with his pronunciation of "now." Thanks for the lesson!
Interesting video! I imagine you have already planned for a video showing the scottish accent. That's the accent I find most difficult to understand.
+Ernesto Serravalle coming soon
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Scottish accent may be hard for understand (and that's coming from a Portuguese speaker), but I love it and think it can be very sexy sometimes (yeah... dunno if that makes any sense)
Ernesto Serravalle well the Northern Irish and Scottish accents can be remarkably similar, seeing as the vast majority of the population in the North are Scots Ulster descended people. The only major place where you can find a true Irish accent is in the West, such as Counties Galway and Clare. The Leinster accent in places like County Dublin are English influenced and the Ulster accents in the North are Scottish influenced.
I love that accent!!! Thank you Joel
In many places outside belfast scundered means bored or fed up. I only discovered it meant embarrased after moving there at 18and was terribly confused at why someone said they were 'bored' when they did something stupid. Just thought I'd share.
And tired
That is exactly what I was thinking. I was starting to think that I've been saying it in the wrong context all this time.
Means bored or fed up for me to. Never knew it meant embarrassed
I from the west of Ulster, I thought it could mean anything from cold, bored, put upon or just really tired. My aule' Da used to report of being scundered after coming in from the cold after brisk garden work in the winter.
Thats a lie. *scundered* in Belfast means "embarrassed"
Outside of Belfast (mainly Ballymena and Mid Ulster) there is *scunnered* which means fed up/tired/pi**ed off.
Two different words, with different spellings, different meanings, in two different areas of the country.
I love this accent videos, with proper phonetics analysis. English has been my second language of about 20 years, but my accent is very fluid, it is nice to see where some of the influences come from.
+Rui Sousa glad you enjoy them!
English Like A Native Maybe you should learn the difference between British & Irish.
This is an Irish accent not a British accent.
Any time I am in England, I barely get 2 words out and they immediately cotton on to my accent and often ask me to repeat words, now having watched this video I understand why, and it's true that the English love the northern Ireland accent!
Loved the video, would love to hear a version of thicker Irish Accent with words phrases and slangs that are particularly hard to understand, and the same for Scotland I've heard that Aberdeen and Dundee have some of the strongest Scottish accents that even other Scots find it difficult to understand.
+PlsFundMe UK2016 I am planning to cover Scottish soon :)
Nice, so next time that a mother tongue doesn't understand my accent I will just say that I have a mixed English accent (standard British, Irish, Northern British and American) :D I love this kind of videos, I'm learning sooo much about the differences of the different English accents!
It's funny, but there are very few people, even here in the United States, that know our southern accents come from Irish settlers in the 1800s. The Irish settlers moved through the Appalachian Mountains. You can here the accent when Joel says "walking, talking - and especially Swimming"...
Most common phrase in all of Ireland:
“I’ll have a pint”
Where's get er bucked
"Ay shure hi, yer gonny get a while lot of ones sayin that ladd"
That sorta irish guy LoL
America: designated driver - the chap who hangs around the bar watching his buddies drink whilst he sips on juice or soda.
Ireland: designated driver - the one amongst all the drinking buddies in the pub who finds his keys first.
give is a pint
@@RoyalCaymanian in Northern Ireland its whoever hasn't passed out.
The paw, poor, pour part proves they distinguish those three completely different words. That's being articulate and erudite!
Thanks for getting him to say 'how now brown cow'! Made my day that did. Ha!
When I found out he is also called Joel, I double thumbs-upped. Then he did the same thing shortly after. I feel so understood.
So fascinating. I’m from Virginia and have a bit of a southern accent. Our pronunciation is closer to that of the Northern Irish than it is to the British pronunciation.
I'm from Lynchburg!
You talkin bout the
Out and house and mouse sounds?
@@PallahDaOracle yes!
Thats because your ancestors are from the North of Ireland lol
Northern Ireland is British. I think you mean English
@@funkyfranx yes indeed! Thanks for pointing that out.
Thanks Anna, it makes me realize that most of indonesian people uses northern Irish accent
On ing u really see how Irish English made northern USA and Canada accents
Sounds like Scouse too
Nova Scotia especially
No
Fantastic video. Northern Irish has always been my favorite accent.
Why do I feel the next thing Joel’s gonna say is:
*“THIS IS SKELLIGE!!”*
I pronounce a lot like Joel and I am 🇨🇦 Canadian
Love the series, love the accent! Have got some friends in Ireland and I appreciate their accent so much. It's a warm and friendly way of speaking.
I am studying English Linguistik and your videos are helping so much with the pronounciation. Thank you very much :D
Northern Irish or Belfast accent is by far the most sexy and pleasant to the ears xD
aorelain Wait are you being serious I think our accent is horrible, I would rather have a Cork accent or something 😂
gem authority Our accent is horrible lol I hate it.
are you drunk
STOP READING MY NAME LOL same
If you listen to Northern Irish accents long enough they become unappealing especially the belfast accent creating words like 'norn iron'
My partner is northern Irish but we met here in my home country. Honestly, it was very hard for me to understand his accent when we first met. I feel like a complete idiot trying to understand the accent, but I'm used to it after a while ;) I was actually looking for Irish cooking recipe but stumbled to this great video! :)
Oh my goodness. As an adolescent my friends and I occasionally said “ijit” for “idiot”. Hilarious.😂
A point about the velar nasal: we CAN say it (so we can), we just don't do it at the *end* of most words, except in static register. "Sing", "Viking", and surnames all are spared from our laziness.
Loved the intro ^^ aren't you the accent queen 👸
The english language is very interesting and amazing!!! I am very excited!!
It's actually an Ulster dialect a combination of both Ulster Scots and Ulster Irish. It's a beautiful accent to listen to alright.
The Michigan accent has the same rule with words ending in “t” and some of the other rules apply to the Michigan accent as well. It does make it easier to accidentally fall into an Irish accent when we are exposed to one for a longer period of time. Very interesting
Scundered is actually used quite commonly in Northern Ireland. Most people use it as a way of saying 'fed-up', not embarrassed. Joel uses it to describe being embarrassed because he is from south/east Antrim.
In fermanagh we don't use the word
In Scotland it's 'scunnered'.
In Derry we say scunnered
Bit late comment.
Immigrant to USA, naturalized.
Many pronounciations of Joel is how we say these words in the Yoo Ess of Ey.
Scundered can also sometimes mean tired or worn out.
"Been travellin' all day and I'm scundered."
Weaboo.Trash WOW its hard to find someone who likes anime in northern ireland :O xD
@@cheyannemahaffy691 you've clearly never been to Q-Con
I've lived in England for over fifty years, and my accent is much weaker than it was. When they said scundered meant embarrassed I thought I had forgotten - but I also think it means 'I am buggered' in English
More northern irish weebs? Yay 😂😂
That's knackered; Scundered sounds like you forgot to brush you teeth or change your under-trousers
After watching a break down of Northern Irish accents I understand it to be closer to our Newfoundland accent then I thought it to be
As a Northern Irish person, I find this very funny
I don’t know how I got here looking for Irish ☘️ drill tracks but I stayed watched and enjoyed thanks ✌️ like and subbed aswell 😎
I'm from Northern Ireland, and have lived there all my life. But for some reason I can't say cow or ow like a proper northern Irishman. I have no idea why.
Jazzajazzaroo 12
That's quite a common thing mate. It's just a demon, go to a chapel and get it cast out
Same with me but with poor. I say it like "pour" sometimes lel.
because your family have money
I say “gayte” instead of “geit” 😔
I someone hits ye and ye need to say ow u will b sweet just say ahhhhh like most ppl do yer welcome
The fall me trajo aquí... Muchas gracias from Coñombia
I was in England a guy asked me what part of Scotland I was from i replied County Antrim
Ouch...
Hi Anna, I really love your accent videos. I'm already looking forward to the next one.
Good video Anna but there is not only one accent in Northern Ireland. The accent in North Antrim e.g. Ballymena is very different from the Belfast accent, especially the intonation. Then you have the Londonderry accent and the Dungannon accent. Totally different again. For such a small place we have a big range of accents. I found it interesting that the accent in Northern Ireland had a lot of similar features to the West Country, especially the rhotic r. Maybe it's standard English that's got that wrong? 😆
Andy McKinney don't forget the south Armagh accent which is completely different altogether
I'm in Armagh City which is different again.
Derry*
Lol What mate down by Dublin isn't it?
Well commonly when you go to northern Ireland you go to Belfast because of titanic and all that. so its good to be able to understand what they are saying. because the Belfast accent is completely unique
2:27
+ how are you
- hauyoyoui
Of all the English speakers Irish accents are hardest to understand for me yet its flow sounds musical and pleasant