@@puffyUwU no the north included too man ...stop blaming south Aren't we all Indians We have a tough time pronouncing the words W instead we use V Example: 1Ve like to party 2Ve like to dance Don't deny...it
@@puffyUwU first we are not south Indians we are indians from south And do you think accent of people from North is soo good or what ??!! We too feel the same when a person from North of india speak English as you feeling Don't make illogical sentences like " south indian accent is funny " and so it is unexceptional
Thanks to all those pesky French loan words in English. And don't get me started on English place names , you have to learn them one by one, they are written in thier archaic spelling but spelled in the modern pronunciation!
He's teaching from according to the phonetics. Do you see the different kind of letters beside the word? Those are the actual pronunciation. It doesn't matter what accent you use. We can pronounce them correctly with the Indian accent. I took phonetics in my college so I know a bit about it. Even when you google words it shows the phonetics. He's teaching that.
Some people commented that the SOUTH INDIAN teacher has worse pronunciation. He was just reading those words as most Indians mispronounce. I bet there is no SOUTH-NORTH difference even Bollywood stars also mispronounced some of these words in their interviews!!!
There is obviously south north east difference while pronouncing some words....as I am bangali , spent childhood in Delhi, living in Singapore.😂😂 and I have many south indian friends here ....so I know 😂😂
@@Unknown2121user kindly change your mentality 🙂 do you even know the fact that the no of English speakers in East India and South India is wayyy more than north and west india !!
@@rakhisaha4644 heyyyyy we are one don't be offended but it is what it is south people accent is different from north the north one is more like modern and the south one is which the whole world thinks Indian accent is
Isn't it he is giving us British pronounciation meanwhile if we look on USA and Australian accent they will say it differently from UK accent. So I guess every demographic have their own pronounciation.
@@thetrickster9885 I'm totally agreed with you, just tell me who said things like "sar fas". I mean everybody pronounce it as it is but no!!! He exaggerate a lot. 7:27
Indian English: we're going today British English: we're going to dieee Edit: a lot of likes wow, now this bonus British English: Dough-nald Trumphhe Indian English: Do-Lund Trump
Actually, students who have been to good english medium schools do pronounce correctly in whole india. The students who go to indian language medium schools pronounce incorrectly in every part of india, not just south india. This is what I have observed.
I am a student from Kerala and I scored more than 90 for saying accurate pronunciations. Maybe some people mispronounce, but many including me, speak out the correct ones.✌🏻
He called dough 'duf' how on earth is that not a mispronunciation ? If someone called me and said "can you pass the bowl of 'duf' " I'd have no fricking idea what they mean , and neither would you .
I found that the word "Schedule" have different pronunciation in many countries. Some of Indians pronounce it as "Shedule"(which is officially recognised by Google), Americans pronounce it as "Skejule", and Britishers - "Shejule". (And sorry if my english is bad, I'm still learning.😅😅)
@@B.R.Garden shit!!! i am a south indian and have lived in different parts of south india but never heard anyone saying appela😂. I agree south indian pronunciation is different sometimes but stop this kind of generalising and mocking. Even north indians dont sound like natives. We all sound like indians.
@@-sr5hd I mean monst of us do pronounce it as "dou". don't tell me you pronounce dough as "duff". Lets be honest both you and I wont understand if someone asks you to give them some "duff".
@@davedarius7346 and Br'ish brought that here almost 300 years ago ,it stayed here and got mixed with other languages and slang words and Indian English became a seperate entity and we've got every right to pronounce it in our way.
@@ryukshinigami1668 Sure you can, but you can't blame the real 'English' Native speakers when they find it weird! Actually British invasion isn't 300 years lol.... Maybe 200 tops! Isn't it Slightly non patriotic to take English as your own when it was a colonial language...Just saying! Meanwhile, countries like Russia and Germany have their own language and embrace it!!
@@davedarius7346 Malayalam is my native , I'm fluent in it and I do love it . I think you are aware that Malayalam is much different than Hindi , thus we need English as a medium of communication to you guys . Portuguese invasion had fed numerous loan words into Malayalam language as well , languages give and take vocabularies and accents develops , embrace them than making fun of it or correcting them , and for your information , British had came to India near 1700s and the ruling was for 200 years .
@@joypodimattam look I forgot to add pronunciation of words.... I think you forgot to study subject verb agreement. Go and turn the pages to know the rules..
@@princechoudhary5772 agreed. You said you pronounce better than that guy. He was imitating his students to improve the pronounciation. So it doesn't matter your accent or pronounciation or accent. I am not native hindi speaker and if I say wo ladki aaya nahi instead of say wo ladki says nahi , I belive you can understand what I am trying to say.
@@sumitbiswas98 yes , but there're a lot of words which people pronounce differently within the same accent. Personally I , also speak in indian accent but still not like this as shown in the video .. but it doesn't mean that others are mispronouncing .
Fun fact: Only a few of them were mispronunciation,the rest were due to his different accent and inability to pronounce things in a British accent simply because his mother tongue is different
that goes for every word in the video, most of these words are pronounced differently in american english of course and some are spelled differently too
Everyone in my 3rd grade used to pronounce 'Antarctic' and 'Arctic' as 'Antartic' and 'Artic' even my damned teacher. And being the nice kid I was believing in my teacher, I wrote 'Antartic' and 'Artic' in my exams. The marks I lost left a scar in my heart TT_TT
My teacher taught us to pronounce Chicago as chi-ka-go, instead of shi-ka-go. I knew the correct pronunciation but I didn't want to risk it by correcting them. The only reason I can pronounce the words correctly is because I was interested in the language and did self study.
Haha, I can also Share one incident like this In our School "Asia" was pronounced as "A-shia" but then in 6th Grade we got a Geography teacher who pronounced it as "A-sha"🤣 and she even told us to pronounce like that.
A lot of people seem triggered despite the disclaimer in the beginning. This really is not a personal attack on anyone's accent or pronunciation or an insult to India. Neither is the Indian teacher trying to tell us that every single person in India pronounces these words that way. It's merely something he noticed among his own students. Believe it or not, this video is indeed helpful for a lot of people and if you can't benefit from this, just move along. No reason to feel attacked.
I am not talking about this video in particular because idk how these words mentioned in the are pronounced in other accent . The problem is indian or any other countries mispronounciations are termed as mistakes but American ones are termed as accent. Ex, someone invented the word "box" , it is pronounced as "baux" , but Americans change the word according to themselves and pronounce it "baax" and they say thats how its pronounced in America , in India I have heard some people say it as "boax" so one is accent, whole other is mispronounciation. Another one is tomato , its pronounced by some as "tomaato" , " tomaeto" . In India its pronounced as "tomato" . There are many such examples.
Why is it that those words mentioned by the teacher sounded so different from what i have learnt ? I am from northeast of india and i learnt to pronounce as the host . There maybe a little difference but it is almost the same .
Other words that can been added to the list in another video: 1) honest 2) hours 3) niche 4) Chic 5) iron 6) Poem 7) Mojito (although not an English word, it's used very commonly) 8) salad 9) steak 10) zebra 11) food 12) foot
I’m an Indian and a lot of the words the Indian guy pronounced, I’ve heard those pronunciations for the first time. Eg: I’ve never heard anyone say “skwyrrel”
pronunciation varies vastly due to accent the indian accent specially relies heavily on clear pronunciation of each and every word that's why it is often percieved to be comically slow and also because english had different pronunciation of letters in different circumstances edit: I never in my life have heard anyone pronounce circuit as ser-cutet biscuit I have but never circuit
I have never heard and Indian saying colonel as "kolo nel" as pronounced by Mr Manoj. All over India it's pronounced as " K nal". Like wise is the case with demeanour.
Chris in Hindi we have a sound 'थ' which is similar to the 'th' sound in English, but when speaking English this 'थ' sound sounds completely different, causing mispronunciation of words. What are some of the ways to tackle this and could you make a video on such pseudo similar sounds in Hindi and English. Thank You
Man They are not same. One is dental fricative and another one is dental plosive both are vastly different. But you can definitely learn it as it one of the easiest consonants to learn.
The irony here, the host mispronounced the Japanese words for "Karate" and "Karaoke" which was pronounced correctly by the Indian guy. 🥱 So yes, there's nothing wrong with Indian pronunciation as well. It's just the accent.
As an Indian staying in India for the last 50 years, I can say that every state in India has its own pronunciation and style of the English language. In my personal opinion the best spoken English I have heard is from Mumbai and Pune city in Maharashtra state. And that too from age groups 15 to 40. Since I am a travelling musician and photographer, I have visited almost all Indian states. The problem with different pronunciations is that it is affected by local languages having distinct sounds and nuances related to words that are not available with English itself. For example, many Indian languages have consonants sounding like 'L' which are actually pronounced in two different ways. The first is the normal 'La' where the tongue just touches the top palate in the mouth, whereas the second version is more like when the tip of the tongue is rolled back and 'flicked' while touching the palate producing a more rounded and heavy 'La'. This particular second 'La' can be heard in the name of the city 'Belgaon' in the Indian state of Karnataka. I believe pronunciations are also affected due to the nature of a language having a distinct rhythmic characteristic along with subtle intonation, variation in pitch range, loudness and pausing & phrasing to it which is deeply nurtured by traditional and cultural values too. Whenever we hear English spoken by an Indian from a particular state, it is very easy to identify which Indian state he/she is from. Without even telling, we Indians can say Manoj here is from South India by the way he pronounces. After all, languages are meant for communication. And as far as that purpose is satisfied, the pronunciations are only of second value. Its good to have good pronunciations, but its best if one can communicate properly. :) Just some thoughts :) Nonetheless, an interesting video. :)
@mirkalaqre8uqrnafdudqeqfcv You should really learn to understand what you read. Then think and ponder upon it. Then think again. And then write an answer. Read all of my above comment again.This time line by line. Then tell me where in my text did you decipher something that degrades Indians speaking English in their own accent ?
@mirkalaqre8uqrnafdudqeqfcv The word 'problem' is directed towards the presenter of the video as a sarcasm which you clearly did not get. As for the rest of your debate, read the quoted lines : "After all, languages are meant for communication. And as far as that purpose is satisfied, the pronunciations are only of second value. Its good to have good pronunciations, but its best if one can communicate properly" Also please know that I never disrespect any opinions because every individual has different experiences based on various factors. My opinions are based from a singers viewpoint because to me, when I sing in different languages, the pronunciations and the accent matter a lot. This is also something that I like to teach my students. Fun fact : No matter how melodiously I sing a Tamil song, if I don't pronounce the words correctly, I will not be much appreciated. This has happened. Which is why I took care in understanding certain things about that language before my next performance. For me, as an artist who performs in various languages, this is important. It may not matter to others who use languages just for the sake of communication. Hope you understand.
No offense, but this is the first time I'm seeing you not offending anyone ..... 😁 By the way I enjoyed this video... Waiting for upcoming videos on this kinda topic... Best wishes for you!!!!!!
The teacher is a Malayali ( keralite ) . He is pronouncing the way many students pronounce some words. So stop saying I am an Indian and I don't pronounce like that
Unless you all have to go outside of India to work or study, please don't care too much about British pronunciations. As long as people around you understand, it is good enough
I'm a south indian born and raised in the north and I really don't know why and how our friends from the south are pronouncing things so differently. I pronounce exactly or at least very close to how chris does minus the accent of course.
it's probably because of how you learn your languages, you probably learnt both south Indian and north Indian languages at the same time, and probably used Hindi way more than your native tongue. and Hindi being derived from Indo-European language, it's much easier to adapt to European languages, south Indian languages are Dravidian with different rules and sounds, so it's much harder to adapt if you are not well versed in Hindi first.
@Chris sir, this is such a helpful video. Being a South Indian myself, I was laughing at how some of us make mistakes in pronunciations. Luckily I got them all right. Believe me, there are some who just don't want to change even after getting corrected. Kudos to your strength and patience (didn't burst out laughing at some points). Lots of love and regards from India. 💕
I pronounced them along with you,many of them had the correct pronunciation while many didn't.I am still a learner who lacks confidence while speaking English.This video is of great help to the people like me who want to improve their pronunciation so,thankyou for this video!
I am from Shillong,Meghalaya India and my School was established by the Wales Missionary,so my pronunciation is similar to the English accent rather than Indian Accent..
For those commenting, they're from the North and they don't pronounce many of the words this way, PLEASE READ THE TITLE OF THE VIDEO. Those who are from the South and saying they don't pronounce some of the words this way, good for you, but many DO pronounce the words wrongly, and this video is not for you. Move on!! I am an English teacher (I have taught South Indians and North Indians) and I have heard many of these words pronounced exactly the way Mr. Manoj pronounced them. So this WILL benefit them.
Here we see a monolinguist trying to correct a bilinguist's (possibly a multilinguist's) accent. You see, when you speak multiple languages, your accent tends to bleed into all the languages and you end up with a mixed accent. The British guy pronounced the Japanese loan words, karaoke and karate incorrectly. In fact, the Indian guy's pronunciation was close to how these 2 words are originally pronounced. So, yeah, he isn't pronouncing words incorrectly, he just has an accent which depends on the culture he grew up in and the number of languages he speaks.
And I'm from India state Punjab..we have simple accent like...in our English isn't good we pronounced in punjab accent...so I think sir ...you need to make one video with Punjab accent which will so helpful for all Punjabi people 🙏
A lot of it is mispronunciation, you can’t deny that. Accented words are different, mispronounced words are different, no-one’s disrespecting anything.
Idk why many of you guys are blaming him and fighting over accents. Many people here are saying that Indian English is something other than British English and yeah, it's true but don't forget that Indian English is actually introduced by British English, which means we all have sorta British accent. So, stop bashing him. He is just helping us to correct out pronunciation!
i just wanted to say that Karate is actually pronounced KaraTAY coming from the original japanese word origin and infact karaTEE is the arguably wrong and adapted form the word so i at the very least would not call it "wrong" to say karatay. same with karaoke but in that case it would probably hard for a british person to understand exactly what they were trying to say so i guess that ones sorta important
Qatar too, I think, in addition to numerous other words. However Trupthi db, you can say that...that it's the right way to pronounce it in the language to which it is adapted. I think that's how loan words usually work. They eventually lose the pronunciation of the source language. (Disclaimer: I'm not a linguist)
in north india, our pronunciation is almost fully correct british pronunciation........ he is pronouncing everything like that because of the south indian accent, hence the 'sir-cute'......we say 'sir-kit'
Well,not all students in south are taught this way , it may be in government schools and very very few private schools. People commenting down about south indian accent , what about northies mispronouncing 'version' as 'versan' , 'international' as 'internasnal' . Am not trying to offend northies , am just trying to say that typical accents slightly exist on both the sides , so there is never a need to comment on one part of your own country and prove the country's unity to be the worst under a foreigner's youtube channel. And people commenting about south indians' english , have you'll ayleast ever heard the name of 'Shashi Tharoor' a malayali from south who even challenges the englishmen's vocabulary and has taken India's pride to great heights. And now even while googling for pronunciations google has an option of indian english pronunciation along with american and british . Though the pronunciations of the Indian in this video are very wrong , India has it's own slightly different pronunciations . But yeah , officially we follow British english.
I am an east Indian & I never pronounce "ballet", "plough", "squirrel", "surface" and "circuit" the way the Indian teacher said. And many of the other words I pronounce like the British accent.
I'm from the North and I can relate . Even people who are uneducated call circuit 'sir-kit' , my sister got enraged due to the horrible pronunciations the teacher gave example of 😆
It's very useful to correct pronunciation 👏 kindly upload weekly 100 pronunciation to develop more knowledge about correct pronunciation. Future generations will learn correctly atleast. Kindly do the needful help sir. Love British accent ❤️ and especially learning from you. Thank you for your selfless service 🙏 from India 🇮🇳
Hello Sir! I'd like to tell you that I'm a student as well as an English teacher. I teach my juniors and mates. I swear on that I'm fluent in English language. Manoj sir has mispronounced some English words as per Indian English perspective. We don't say some of these words like this in Standard Indian English. We pronounce circuit,cucumber,divorce,dough,interesting,quarantine,sour,squirrel,surface,taboo, colonel, cup-board, et cetera, jewellery, relative as same as, they are pronounced in British English.
It's really hard to say but our teachers doesn't focusing on pronunciation Even my english teacher can't speak English properly And sometimes she couldn't even translate sentance properly... ;(
Genuine question, since we have different pronounciation in British and American English/Accent how can we not call it "Indian Pronunciation"? As in who decides anything that is not Euro-centric is wrong?
Britishers and Americans were the English creators, same like when someone tries to speak Hindi, they can't create their own Hindi called British Hindi, there is only Indian Hindi, so when the pronounce something which is not similar to Indian Hindi, then their Hindi is wrong
Because they made the fuckn language eh ? Only native speakers have authority to approve arguments about their language. Same with indians, only indians can tell if foreigners are pronouncing it right or not. Don't you guys make fun of foreigners/south bombay/south delhi girls for speaking in hindi with english scent ? Yeah you can because it's your native language. Same way british have the right to correct their language.
@@khyatisrivastava3542 sorry to burst your bubble but the Britishers brought English to all its colonies. 🥱 Including America. English is not American but no one gives a crap when they modified the language. 🤣😂
@@khyatisrivastava3542 English was created by the British, but Americans and Australians don't speak the way Britishers do. if the language is spoken long enough it evolves according to the needs of the land if Hindi is spoken to the same extent as English, it sure will evolve with new accents.
He must be mispronounsing the word...👈 This thought must be for Indians... It's all because of mother tongue influence... Thanks both of you to correct 100 words ... 🤓🙏🏻🙏🏻🇮🇳
hope one day I will pronounce every single word in a correct way. But the worst thing for us is no one has the complete information. The teachers itself are pronouncing words in a wrong way in my school , and this is horrible. I know if we get the correct info. we will learn very quickly.
great video! It is interesting to read through the comments. Most people do not realise that they have an accent or mispronounce words. Everyone in India mispronounces certain words, be it bengali, punjabi, kannadiga or malayali. I have worked in a outbound center for around 3 years and the struggle to neutralise an accent is real for everyone. Just because you studied in a convent doesn't make your english perfect ( I am looking at you, you roys and das s in the comments). I am yet to meet a Indian either from the north or the south who doesn't mispronounce atleast a few words of english in their conversation.. this is what makes us Indian... So lets stop with the dissing sessions and just accept that we are different.
I'm from West Bengal and I'm not from English background but still most of the pronunciations we do is correct don't know why many of them sounded so weird.. it's maybe from South so they have different accent..
IT'S BECAUSE OF DIFFERENT LANGUAGE FAMILY ENGLISH SANSKRIT BENGALI AND OTHER NORTH INDIAN LANGUAGES ARE INDO EUROPEAN LANGUAGES WHILE SOUTH INDIAN LANGUAGES COMES UNDER DRAVIDIAN LANGUAGE FAMILY MAY BE THAT'S WHY
All Indian's didn't pronounce English with Modern English RP, that depends their mother_tounge . So stop the competition between south Indians and North Indiana, all are equal. Any way thanks brother Chris
Yeah... I'm fed up with replying to people commenting"This is South Indian accent", "Only South Indians have a bad accent" and so on. Everyone can make mistakes, and it's completely normal too. ✌🏻
This is british English and every country has its own accent in English or other .But,In India we follow simple English .Yes we follow british accent in our English but we don't follow same to same british accent .So don't compare between them
To be honest if you talk to a person who is beginner in English language, they will understand Indian accent more better than other accents as it is more precise and clear and we know that if there's a letter, we have to use it rather than skipping it to show off
I'm not against anyone but why is everyone criticising Indians for having different accent. Why a french guy or a Chinese guy speaking different accent is normal and problematic if an Indian does the same . We are not British people, we are Indians and we have our own accent. If any Indian have any problem with English accent, why don't they leave India and go where they'll find people who would speak British accent 😑😑
Most of the Indian Government High School are not focusing on pronunciation of words.
Indian English accent sounds funny...did you know that iam Indian too
@@zyllas9715 may be foreigner indian accent will also be more funnier
Yes!!!
@@puffyUwU no the north included too man ...stop blaming south
Aren't we all Indians
We have a tough time pronouncing the words W instead we use V
Example: 1Ve like to party
2Ve like to dance
Don't deny...it
@@puffyUwU first we are not south Indians we are indians from south
And do you think accent of people from North is soo good or what ??!!
We too feel the same when a person from North of india speak English as you feeling
Don't make illogical sentences like " south indian accent is funny " and so it is unexceptional
English has dual standard personality, we write different and pronounce different lol😂
Thanks to all those pesky French loan words in English. And don't get me started on English place names , you have to learn them one by one, they are written in thier archaic spelling but spelled in the modern pronunciation!
He's teaching from according to the phonetics. Do you see the different kind of letters beside the word? Those are the actual pronunciation. It doesn't matter what accent you use. We can pronounce them correctly with the Indian accent. I took phonetics in my college so I know a bit about it. Even when you google words it shows the phonetics. He's teaching that.
@@HS-so1yo yeah I can see those phonetic words, they help me lots to pronounce correctly.
You can thank William the Conquerer for that.
you should learn French
He's looking like as if he's the little brother of Elon Musk 😂
Now I can't unsee it
What makes u say that
But yeah, it's what u see
But he doesn't look like Mr. Musk' a lil brother to me ,lo
In simple words you can say "he resembles Elon Musk", your way of saying it seems a bit rude, make sure you don't offend people in doing so.
😂😂😂
😂😂😂 yeh!!! Really
2:41 I have honestly never heard an Indian saying circuit as 'sir cute'.😂
Most actually pronounce circuit as the same in the British accent.
Yes, everyone does the same. The teacher is from South India, so I guess, in South India people pronounce it that way
I used to pronounce "Sir cute" for a long time. I studied in a convent school lead by Kerla teachers.
@@ashaypallav4158 ah! I've learned Received Pronunciation Phonetics 🇬🇧. It's /s3:kit/ or Sir-Kit
@@ashaypallav4158 hahahaha, told ya, south Indians pronounce it tha wa😂
@@NikhilTheGreatest I agree but North Indians are no less than South Indians. I mean they literally say Eschool 🤣
Some people commented that the SOUTH INDIAN teacher has worse pronunciation. He was just reading those words as most Indians mispronounce. I bet there is no SOUTH-NORTH difference even Bollywood stars also mispronounced some of these words in their interviews!!!
He already mentioned it that he is pronouncing the words how his students use to mispronounce, generally.
There is obviously south north east difference while pronouncing some words....as I am bangali , spent childhood in Delhi, living in Singapore.😂😂 and I have many south indian friends here ....so I know 😂😂
There is difference actually and it's quite stark
@@Unknown2121user kindly change your mentality 🙂 do you even know the fact that the no of English speakers in East India and South India is wayyy more than north and west india !!
@@rakhisaha4644 heyyyyy we are one don't be offended but it is what it is south people accent is different from north the north one is more like modern and the south one is which the whole world thinks Indian accent is
Isn't it he is giving us British pronounciation meanwhile if we look on USA and Australian accent they will say it differently from UK accent. So I guess every demographic have their own pronounciation.
Yes.. but we are not supposed to mispronounce words as professionals
Nope, there are only 3 correct english pronunciations, british, american and australian, so u can pronounce words in any one of em
@@thetrickster9885 I'm totally agreed with you, just tell me who said things like "sar fas". I mean everybody pronounce it as it is but no!!! He exaggerate a lot. 7:27
@@roguepegasus4637 Does that mean the Scottish, Irish and South African natives are pronouncing words in English the wrong way?
@偽物ですヒンズー教 exactly, but you can say that all the native pronunciations are the correct ones
Indian English: we're going today
British English: we're going to dieee
Edit: a lot of likes wow, now this bonus
British English: Dough-nald Trumphhe
Indian English: Do-Lund Trump
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
😂 yeaaaahhhhh
🤣🤣
😁 wacha bawtel.
Guess....
😭😆😆😆
People of Kerala pronounce words differently from us( east India)
South Indians pronounce 'Escape' sounds like 'escapa'.
believe me, Indian sir's pronunciation is accurate with the majority population south Indian English speakers
@@witnessacademy9435 I know, but they said mispronounced
Actually, students who have been to good english medium schools do pronounce correctly in whole india. The students who go to indian language medium schools pronounce incorrectly in every part of india, not just south india. This is what I have observed.
I am a student from Kerala and I scored more than 90 for saying accurate pronunciations. Maybe some people mispronounce, but many including me, speak out the correct ones.✌🏻
People : "No one has the perfect British accent"
Me : - Louis Tomlinson -
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
WTF WTF WTF I FOUND MY PEOPLE!!! OI OIIII AS YOU COULD PROBABLY TELL IM GOING CRAZZYYY AAAHHH VAS HAPPENINNN MY GUYSS 🤡😭🤡😭🤡😂😂
@@vedikamusmade6876 😂😂😂😂 hiya xx
Heyyyyyyy
@@kevin281d4 chill
That's not mispronunciation, that is an accent.
@girl that's what he said it's not mispronounced
He called dough 'duf' how on earth is that not a mispronunciation ? If someone called me and said "can you pass the bowl of 'duf' " I'd have no fricking idea what they mean , and neither would you .
@@cat-man5522 well...I might have skipped that part 😂
I found that the word "Schedule" have different pronunciation in many countries.
Some of Indians pronounce it as "Shedule"(which is officially recognised by Google), Americans pronounce it as "Skejule", and Britishers - "Shejule".
(And sorry if my english is bad, I'm still learning.😅😅)
@@Pintukumar-mu3zc yeah
Am I the only Indian who was taught the same pronunciation as the british guy's pronunciations 💀??
Fr who tf says Squairall or whatever lol
Nah, I'm here with you
@@sahana_hegde I mean-
Yeah (some of) my friends do, so stop being offended. The teacher was immitating his students
@@sooyaself2411 I'm not offended. I just haven't met anyone who pronounces it that way lol
@@sahana_hegde was you writing tf tf necessary here, without any context? Just copying so called modern way of talking
i finally found my accent - british 😂
Surprisingly🧐 ..same here..🤣🤣
Me too 😂😂
🤔😂😆
just because you don't mispronounce those words doesn't mean your accent is British
@@mg1721 have you ever heard of "Sarcasm"..😆
Actually, south Indians have a different English accent than the rest of the India (which is totally fine).
Ohhkay. But is mention necessary? Isn't it obvious
It's like gun fire🔥 ddddddddd,tttttttt
@@helper5846 Revolver fire sounds in India dhiskyun. Bang in english countries.
South Indians pronounces an 'apple' but sounds like 'appela'
@@B.R.Garden shit!!! i am a south indian and have lived in different parts of south india but never heard anyone saying appela😂. I agree south indian pronunciation is different sometimes but stop this kind of generalising and mocking. Even north indians dont sound like natives. We all sound like indians.
As I far as I know, I pronounce all these words correctly. There is only difference of tongue and accent which doesn't counts for wrong pronunciation.
Yes i agree with u ... it's not imp to change our accent as long as we are pronunciation it correctly
Yeah I pronounce most of the words correctly
4:10 nobody in india will understand what is dou
Well if you're gonna speak a different tongue then you'll have to speak it like them. 🤷
@@-sr5hd I mean monst of us do pronounce it as "dou". don't tell me you pronounce dough as "duff". Lets be honest both you and I wont understand if someone asks you to give them some "duff".
Bri'ish when they hear American English : " Wadder" That's a different accent
Bri'ish when they hear Indian
English : "Waater" Wrong pronunciation
English is native to the America, duh
@@davedarius7346 and Br'ish brought that here almost 300 years ago ,it stayed here and got mixed with other languages and slang words and Indian English became a seperate entity and we've got every right to pronounce it in our way.
@@ryukshinigami1668 Sure you can, but you can't blame the real 'English' Native speakers when they find it weird! Actually British invasion isn't 300 years lol.... Maybe 200 tops! Isn't it Slightly non patriotic to take English as your own when it was a colonial language...Just saying! Meanwhile, countries like Russia and Germany have their own language and embrace it!!
@@davedarius7346 Malayalam is my native , I'm fluent in it and I do love it . I think you are aware that Malayalam is much different than Hindi , thus we need English as a medium of communication to you guys . Portuguese invasion had fed numerous loan words into Malayalam language as well , languages give and take vocabularies and accents develops , embrace them than making fun of it or correcting them , and for your information , British had came to India near 1700s and the ruling was for 200 years .
Having an accent is fine but not a wrong pronunciation. Many a times it may even change the meaning.
I never pronounce dough as duf.. Circuit as cir cute.. And a lot more. Majority of my pronunciation words is right
🤣
Word 'is, words 'are, it proves your pronounciation also "correct"
@@joypodimattam look I forgot to add pronunciation of words.... I think you forgot to study subject verb agreement. Go and turn the pages to know the rules..
@@joypodimattam speaking English is a different thing and same goes with writing . It has nothing to do with pronunciation.
@@princechoudhary5772 agreed. You said you pronounce better than that guy. He was imitating his students to improve the pronounciation. So it doesn't matter your accent or pronounciation or accent. I am not native hindi speaker and if I say wo ladki aaya nahi instead of say wo ladki says nahi , I belive you can understand what I am trying to say.
I didn't knew that I mispronounced so many words thank you it really helped me alot
ruclips.net/channel/UCllE1sYqfYAbM6kvFUCl88A
It's not mispronounced it's indian english just like American english
@@sumitbiswas98 yes , but there're a lot of words which people pronounce differently within the same accent. Personally I , also speak in indian accent but still not like this as shown in the video .. but it doesn't mean that others are mispronouncing .
@@AyushKumar-wv8zs 'Bride' in english 'bride' in Indian english too but in Japanese english is 'blide'.
@@sumitbiswas98 we're here to learn the British accent my guy
Fun fact: Only a few of them were mispronunciation,the rest were due to his different accent and inability to pronounce things in a British accent simply because his mother tongue is different
Finally someone said it. It was more of an accent thing
example: it is karate not karati
True
Not true it's not just accent it's phonetics the way u shld spell certain words
@@christofjamie2178 not quite....
well I pronounce most of the words just like manoj, except for the ones that I've learnt through listening. This helped.
For Kind Info:
The word colonel can be pronounced in two ways: in American accent it's col-o-nel and in british accent it's cor-nel.
that goes for every word in the video, most of these words are pronounced differently in american english of course and some are spelled differently too
Very true
@@_predebut_6733 Who teaches American English in Indian Schools?
What is that which is written on the right hand side of the words ??
@@_predebut_6733 What is that which is written on the right hand side of the words ??
Everyone in my 3rd grade used to pronounce 'Antarctic' and 'Arctic' as 'Antartic' and 'Artic' even my damned teacher. And being the nice kid I was believing in my teacher, I wrote 'Antartic' and 'Artic' in my exams. The marks I lost left a scar in my heart TT_TT
So true...I still can't let go off my wrong pronunciation 🤦🤦
My teacher taught us to pronounce Chicago as chi-ka-go, instead of shi-ka-go. I knew the correct pronunciation but I didn't want to risk it by correcting them. The only reason I can pronounce the words correctly is because I was interested in the language and did self study.
Haha, I can also Share one incident like this
In our School "Asia" was pronounced as "A-shia" but then in 6th Grade we got a Geography teacher who pronounced it as "A-sha"🤣 and she even told us to pronounce like that.
A lot of people seem triggered despite the disclaimer in the beginning. This really is not a personal attack on anyone's accent or pronunciation or an insult to India. Neither is the Indian teacher trying to tell us that every single person in India pronounces these words that way. It's merely something he noticed among his own students.
Believe it or not, this video is indeed helpful for a lot of people and if you can't benefit from this, just move along. No reason to feel attacked.
Your comment really made my day.
I am not talking about this video in particular because idk how these words mentioned in the are pronounced in other accent .
The problem is indian or any other countries mispronounciations are termed as mistakes but American ones are termed as accent.
Ex, someone invented the word "box" , it is pronounced as "baux" , but Americans change the word according to themselves and pronounce it "baax" and they say thats how its pronounced in America , in India I have heard some people say it as "boax" so one is accent, whole other is mispronounciation. Another one is tomato , its pronounced by some as "tomaato" , " tomaeto" . In India its pronounced as "tomato" .
There are many such examples.
This is one of the best channels to learn British accent.
This is like saying all of North Europe has the same accent.
Why is it that those words mentioned by the teacher sounded so different from what i have learnt ? I am from northeast of india and i learnt to pronounce as the host . There maybe a little difference but it is almost the same .
Yes its because the teacher must be trying to pronounce the words like the students so that he can understand how the students pronounce the words
Same in Bengal
Our mispronunciation is more like
Iskool, istation , ismile etc because in Bengali they are written that way .
Ahok lo..
@@rohandutta9986 I agree!
Probably because you are from NE while this teacher is from south india
Who the hell says "Sircutee"; as an Indian, I can confirm that I've never ever heard anybody pronouncing circuit in that way. Reference - 2:41.
True
Also the athlete one, 1:58
@@some.generic.username5254 Actually, My observation has been that Indians do a lot more grammatical errors than mispronunciations if at all.
@@raahatarora3120 it's probably because we apply rules of our native language to English.
😂 truee
Other words that can been added to the list in another video:
1) honest
2) hours
3) niche
4) Chic
5) iron
6) Poem
7) Mojito (although not an English word, it's used very commonly)
8) salad
9) steak
10) zebra
11) food
12) foot
Noted.... ♥️
I’m an Indian and a lot of the words the Indian guy pronounced, I’ve heard those pronunciations for the first time. Eg: I’ve never heard anyone say “skwyrrel”
We don't pronounce so many words incorrectly as he says
Yeahhh
@@mi-y omg a stay👀
But he's talking about his students, he made the list of words by what he experienced in his school.
Do you feel insulted or smth?
@@sooyaself2411 lol hi
Maybe south indian malayali accent
Malayali. A teacher from Kerala. 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
പവർ......🔥
pronunciation varies vastly due to accent the indian accent specially relies heavily on clear pronunciation of each and every word that's why it is often percieved to be comically slow and also because english had different pronunciation of letters in different circumstances
edit: I never in my life have heard anyone pronounce circuit as ser-cutet biscuit I have but never circuit
I have never heard and Indian saying colonel as "kolo nel" as pronounced by Mr Manoj. All over India it's pronounced as " K nal". Like wise is the case with demeanour.
His voice is like the male voice in google... When he was pronouncing the words.
Chris in Hindi we have a sound 'थ' which is similar to the 'th' sound in English, but when speaking English this 'थ' sound sounds completely different, causing mispronunciation of words. What are some of the ways to tackle this and could you make a video on such pseudo similar sounds in Hindi and English. Thank You
Man They are not same. One is dental fricative and another one is dental plosive both are vastly different. But you can definitely learn it as it one of the easiest consonants to learn.
I have noticed some Brits when they pronounce 'TH'. there's a slight touch of F in it , .. idk if I heard it wrong ,
@@nishamnd4567 Yeah I guess thats a different dialect spoken in north of England.
@@nishamnd4567 no prounce the “Th” sound as a “F” however the RP accent prounce as th sound
@@nishamnd4567 You are talking about the unvoiced 'th' sound.. Watch videos of voiced and unvoiced 'th' sounds...
Yes as 🇮🇳 indian I really found this video useful....thanks a ton for your effort.....🙏😊
I appreciate that you not offending any one😂. Best way.
The irony here, the host mispronounced the Japanese words for "Karate" and "Karaoke" which was pronounced correctly by the Indian guy. 🥱 So yes, there's nothing wrong with Indian pronunciation as well. It's just the accent.
As an Indian staying in India for the last 50 years, I can say that every state in India has its own pronunciation and style of the English language. In my personal opinion the best spoken English I have heard is from Mumbai and Pune city in Maharashtra state. And that too from age groups 15 to 40. Since I am a travelling musician and photographer, I have visited almost all Indian states. The problem with different pronunciations is that it is affected by local languages having distinct sounds and nuances related to words that are not available with English itself. For example, many Indian languages have consonants sounding like 'L' which are actually pronounced in two different ways. The first is the normal 'La' where the tongue just touches the top palate in the mouth, whereas the second version is more like when the tip of the tongue is rolled back and 'flicked' while touching the palate producing a more rounded and heavy 'La'. This particular second 'La' can be heard in the name of the city 'Belgaon' in the Indian state of Karnataka. I believe pronunciations are also affected due to the nature of a language having a distinct rhythmic characteristic along with subtle intonation, variation in pitch range, loudness and pausing & phrasing to it which is deeply nurtured by traditional and cultural values too. Whenever we hear English spoken by an Indian from a particular state, it is very easy to identify which Indian state he/she is from. Without even telling, we Indians can say Manoj here is from South India by the way he pronounces. After all, languages are meant for communication. And as far as that purpose is satisfied, the pronunciations are only of second value. Its good to have good pronunciations, but its best if one can communicate properly. :) Just some thoughts :) Nonetheless, an interesting video. :)
@mirkalaqre8uqrnafdudqeqfcv You should really learn to understand what you read. Then think and ponder upon it. Then think again. And then write an answer. Read all of my above comment again.This time line by line. Then tell me where in my text did you decipher something that degrades Indians speaking English in their own accent ?
@mirkalaqre8uqrnafdudqeqfcv The word 'problem' is directed towards the presenter of the video as a sarcasm which you clearly did not get. As for the rest of your debate, read the quoted lines : "After all, languages are meant for communication. And as far as that purpose is satisfied, the pronunciations are only of second value. Its good to have good pronunciations, but its best if one can communicate properly"
Also please know that I never disrespect any opinions because every individual has different experiences based on various factors. My opinions are based from a singers viewpoint because to me, when I sing in different languages, the pronunciations and the accent matter a lot. This is also something that I like to teach my students. Fun fact : No matter how melodiously I sing a Tamil song, if I don't pronounce the words correctly, I will not be much appreciated. This has happened. Which is why I took care in understanding certain things about that language before my next performance. For me, as an artist who performs in various languages, this is important. It may not matter to others who use languages just for the sake of communication. Hope you understand.
Much appreciated. Hope to get some more like this. Thanks.
Im from Kerala & I can definitely say the Indian words he said was accurate!
I pronounced every word the way chris did and i think that is how most of this gen kids do it too , right??
No offense, but this is the first time I'm seeing you not offending anyone ..... 😁 By the way I enjoyed this video... Waiting for upcoming videos on this kinda topic... Best wishes for you!!!!!!
The teacher is a Malayali ( keralite ) . He is pronouncing the way many students pronounce some words. So stop saying I am an Indian and I don't pronounce like that
Many people who comment neither listen to what they say in the beginning of the video nor understand he is imitating some of his students.
Unless you all have to go outside of India to work or study, please don't care too much about British pronunciations. As long as people around you understand, it is good enough
Really worthwhile video. Kindly make pronounciation video with another 100 new words.
I'm really greatful to this channel for such kind of video which tells us actual difference between these acent..Thanks lot
I'm a south indian born and raised in the north and I really don't know why and how our friends from the south are pronouncing things so differently. I pronounce exactly or at least very close to how chris does minus the accent of course.
it's probably because of how you learn your languages, you probably learnt both south Indian and north Indian languages at the same time, and probably used Hindi way more than your native tongue. and Hindi being derived from Indo-European language, it's much easier to adapt to European languages, south Indian languages are Dravidian with different rules and sounds, so it's much harder to adapt if you are not well versed in Hindi first.
@Chris sir, this is such a helpful video. Being a South Indian myself, I was laughing at how some of us make mistakes in pronunciations. Luckily I got them all right. Believe me, there are some who just don't want to change even after getting corrected.
Kudos to your strength and patience (didn't burst out laughing at some points).
Lots of love and regards from India. 💕
I am from North-East India. Well we don't pronounce like this. I think every state/region in India has different accent.
I pronounced them along with you,many of them had the correct pronunciation while many didn't.I am still a learner who lacks confidence while speaking English.This video is of great help to the people like me who want to improve their pronunciation so,thankyou for this video!
I am from Shillong,Meghalaya India and my School was established by the Wales Missionary,so my pronunciation is similar to the English accent rather than Indian Accent..
This was great. Can we get more of such comparisons as it helps understand the differences clearly
Thank you so much Chris.This is really very helpful for us .
Most of these words are mispronounced by teachers 😂
Its South Indian accent not mispronounced.
@@Dream11..... my teachers are from south mate
@@Dream11..... sorry but having an accent doesn't mean you can pronounce word incorrectly.
@@Dream11..... pronunciation and accent are completely different things bruh
@EXTREME pleajee don't mock us. We use to irun our shirts and I guess northies invented jeero.
For those commenting, they're from the North and they don't pronounce many of the words this way, PLEASE READ THE TITLE OF THE VIDEO. Those who are from the South and saying they don't pronounce some of the words this way, good for you, but many DO pronounce the words wrongly, and this video is not for you. Move on!! I am an English teacher (I have taught South Indians and North Indians) and I have heard many of these words pronounced exactly the way Mr. Manoj pronounced them. So this WILL benefit them.
You are absolutely right...
I read somewhere where a guy wrote "if I make mistake in English please don't correct me because I don't have any respect for this language".
Here we see a monolinguist trying to correct a bilinguist's (possibly a multilinguist's) accent. You see, when you speak multiple languages, your accent tends to bleed into all the languages and you end up with a mixed accent. The British guy pronounced the Japanese loan words, karaoke and karate incorrectly. In fact, the Indian guy's pronunciation was close to how these 2 words are originally pronounced. So, yeah, he isn't pronouncing words incorrectly, he just has an accent which depends on the culture he grew up in and the number of languages he speaks.
And I'm from India state Punjab..we have simple accent like...in our English isn't good we pronounced in punjab accent...so I think sir ...you need to make one video with Punjab accent which will so helpful for all Punjabi people 🙏
It’s not pronunciation, it’s the accent! Respect the region!
If that's accent, then what does mispronunciation mean? Can you give example?
@@khyatisrivastava3542 how will you pronounce woman
@@wandererpknaga woman is pronounced as vumun, women is pronounced as vimen
A lot of it is mispronunciation, you can’t deny that. Accented words are different, mispronounced words are different, no-one’s disrespecting anything.
@@khyatisrivastava3542 ok thanks
Idk why many of you guys are blaming him and fighting over accents. Many people here are saying that Indian English is something other than British English and yeah, it's true but don't forget that Indian English is actually introduced by British English, which means we all have sorta British accent. So, stop bashing him. He is just helping us to correct out pronunciation!
Nice video 70 % i was prounoucing wrong thanks to both of you
These words are not only mispronounced in South but here, in North as well...Thank you for this wonderful lesson Chris...
Merry Christmas 🌲🍷✨🎇
He is prouncing so nicely
That's sounds so sweet
i just wanted to say that Karate is actually pronounced KaraTAY coming from the original japanese word origin and infact karaTEE is the arguably wrong and adapted form the word so i at the very least would not call it "wrong" to say karatay. same with karaoke but in that case it would probably hard for a british person to understand exactly what they were trying to say so i guess that ones sorta important
Exactly! You can't borrow a word from another language, change how it is pronounced and say that is the right way!!
Another similar word is sultan.
Qatar too, I think, in addition to numerous other words. However Trupthi db, you can say that...that it's the right way to pronounce it in the language to which it is adapted. I think that's how loan words usually work. They eventually lose the pronunciation of the source language. (Disclaimer: I'm not a linguist)
Karate is pronounced as karatey because the origination of this word is from Japan
I am learning Japanese so let me put down how karate is pronounced in Japanese.
空手(カラテ) pronounced as का-रा-ते .
in north india, our pronunciation is almost fully correct british pronunciation........ he is pronouncing everything like that because of the south indian accent, hence the 'sir-cute'......we say 'sir-kit'
I am really shocked that not a single word of our Indian English is properly pronounced.
Well English native speakers need to learn how to pronounce Indian names 😂
It's a joke
Not a joke bruh , facts....
Indian name Kamal ..
Khamal 🤭🤭🤭🤣
Well,not all students in south are taught this way , it may be in government schools and very very few private schools.
People commenting down about south indian accent , what about northies mispronouncing 'version' as 'versan' , 'international' as 'internasnal' . Am not trying to offend northies , am just trying to say that typical accents slightly exist on both the sides , so there is never a need to comment on one part of your own country and prove the country's unity to be the worst under a foreigner's youtube channel.
And people commenting about south indians' english , have you'll ayleast ever heard the name of 'Shashi Tharoor' a malayali from south who even challenges the englishmen's vocabulary and has taken India's pride to great heights.
And now even while googling for pronunciations google has an option of indian english pronunciation along with american and british . Though the pronunciations of the Indian in this video are very wrong , India has it's own slightly different pronunciations .
But yeah , officially we follow British english.
I am an east Indian & I never pronounce "ballet", "plough", "squirrel", "surface" and "circuit" the way the Indian teacher said.
And many of the other words I pronounce like the British accent.
I'm from the North and I can relate . Even people who are uneducated call circuit 'sir-kit' , my sister got enraged due to the horrible pronunciations the teacher gave example of 😆
@@cat-man5522 the teacher is a keralite
@@amlinprinson5000 yeah , I got that much from other comments.
It says South Indians... and as a south indian i can confirm this is how most of the people pronounce it
@@cat-man5522 listen to the first few minutes of the video.
It's very useful to correct pronunciation 👏 kindly upload weekly 100 pronunciation to develop more knowledge about correct pronunciation. Future generations will learn correctly atleast. Kindly do the needful help sir. Love British accent ❤️ and especially learning from you. Thank you for your selfless service 🙏 from India 🇮🇳
Hello Sir! I'd like to tell you that I'm a student as well as an English teacher. I teach my juniors and mates. I swear on that I'm fluent in English language. Manoj sir has mispronounced some English words as per Indian English perspective. We don't say some of these words like this in Standard Indian English. We pronounce circuit,cucumber,divorce,dough,interesting,quarantine,sour,squirrel,surface,taboo, colonel, cup-board, et cetera, jewellery, relative as same as, they are pronounced in British English.
It's really hard to say but our teachers doesn't focusing on pronunciation
Even my english teacher can't speak English properly
And sometimes she couldn't even translate sentance properly... ;(
Genuine question, since we have different pronounciation in British and American English/Accent how can we not call it "Indian Pronunciation"? As in who decides anything that is not Euro-centric is wrong?
Britishers and Americans were the English creators, same like when someone tries to speak Hindi, they can't create their own Hindi called British Hindi, there is only Indian Hindi, so when the pronounce something which is not similar to Indian Hindi, then their Hindi is wrong
Because they made the fuckn language eh ? Only native speakers have authority to approve arguments about their language. Same with indians, only indians can tell if foreigners are pronouncing it right or not. Don't you guys make fun of foreigners/south bombay/south delhi girls for speaking in hindi with english scent ? Yeah you can because it's your native language. Same way british have the right to correct their language.
@@khyatisrivastava3542 sorry to burst your bubble but the Britishers brought English to all its colonies. 🥱 Including America. English is not American but no one gives a crap when they modified the language. 🤣😂
@@bendover-bz4bc yeah well, correct Americans as well. 🥱 Or any other past British colonies.
@@khyatisrivastava3542 English was created by the British, but Americans and Australians don't speak the way Britishers do. if the language is spoken long enough it evolves according to the needs of the land if Hindi is spoken to the same extent as English, it sure will evolve with new accents.
Once i was speaking on stage on the topic dengue ...and i prounced it as dengi ... Every one in the front laughed at me. 🙂
He must be mispronounsing the word...👈 This thought must be for Indians... It's all because of mother tongue influence... Thanks both of you to correct 100 words ... 🤓🙏🏻🙏🏻🇮🇳
Please make More videos like this. Really helpful
We Indians don't mispronounce these words. The difference is in the accent.
5:49
Haven't seen anyone in India say Mayonnaise like that. Even a street food vendor don't pronounce is like that
In Kerala we say like that the indian guy is from Kerala So🤗
hope one day I will pronounce every single word in a correct way. But the worst thing for us is no one has the complete information. The teachers itself are pronouncing words in a wrong way in my school , and this is horrible. I know if we get the correct info. we will learn very quickly.
Agree
Exactly
istg, one thing that you can do is to watch British youtubers or tv shows with many seasons
@@89wings44
What country are you from?
@@Sri-it2gh India
Thank's for this information 🙏🏻..This video was really very useful for me ❤️
great video! It is interesting to read through the comments. Most people do not realise that they have an accent or mispronounce words. Everyone in India mispronounces certain words, be it bengali, punjabi, kannadiga or malayali. I have worked in a outbound center for around 3 years and the struggle to neutralise an accent is real for everyone. Just because you studied in a convent doesn't make your english perfect ( I am looking at you, you roys and das s in the comments). I am yet to meet a Indian either from the north or the south who doesn't mispronounce atleast a few words of english in their conversation.. this is what makes us Indian... So lets stop with the dissing sessions and just accept that we are different.
Thanks for correcting us, chris❤️❤️❤️
Your channel is so underrated
Thanks for your valuable informations
⭐⭐⭐⭐
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Say....pieces of information
I'm from West Bengal and I'm not from English background but still most of the pronunciations we do is correct don't know why many of them sounded so weird.. it's maybe from South so they have different accent..
Both North indian languages and English are Indo-European languages while south India languages are Dravidian languages.
IT'S BECAUSE OF DIFFERENT LANGUAGE FAMILY ENGLISH SANSKRIT BENGALI AND OTHER NORTH INDIAN LANGUAGES ARE INDO EUROPEAN LANGUAGES WHILE SOUTH INDIAN LANGUAGES COMES UNDER DRAVIDIAN LANGUAGE FAMILY MAY BE THAT'S WHY
Its was really informative. Could you please make more videos like this ?
Please put more videos . As I'm a teacher, need to change the pronounciation of my students.
All Indian's didn't pronounce English with Modern English RP, that depends their mother_tounge . So stop the competition between south Indians and North Indiana, all are equal. Any way thanks brother Chris
You're right, but some people do say things differently
Yeah... I'm fed up with replying to people commenting"This is South Indian accent", "Only South Indians have a bad accent" and so on. Everyone can make mistakes, and it's completely normal too. ✌🏻
@@mgA757 u r right, it's pretty pathetic
Great Job @Chris and @Manoj sir.
This video has been really helpful
Chris, Please check "Sadhguru" and comment on his English Accent. He is an Indian and has unique accent.
Teacher Chris the kind of videos I want again to develop my pronunciation skill strong... Thanks so much... 🙏🙏
This is british English and every country has its own accent in English or other .But,In India we follow simple English .Yes we follow british accent in our English but we don't follow same to same british accent .So don't compare between them
Meanwhile American's laughing on that British accent
Pass me some WohTah
Lots of love from India .🙏🙏
This is indian version of english....dude
Just chill
Very useful, do more of this kind
To be honest if you talk to a person who is beginner in English language, they will understand Indian accent more better than other accents as it is more precise and clear and we know that if there's a letter, we have to use it rather than skipping it to show off
This kinda makes sense. I never truly understand the need for silent letters. Why the heck are they there if they're not going to be used. 😂
Proud to be an Indian
Proud to be a keralite
You are lovely Chris I am learning a lot from you thank you . Love love
5:46 I heard it "maa ni aankh" which in Gujarati means mother's eye... 😂😂😂
🤣🤣🤣
👎
This video is really helpful.thankyou crish.
The another word which is mispronounced by Indians is -- schedule, they pronounce ''d''.
I'm not against anyone but why is everyone criticising Indians for having different accent. Why a french guy or a Chinese guy speaking different accent is normal and problematic if an Indian does the same .
We are not British people, we are Indians and we have our own accent. If any Indian have any problem with English accent, why don't they leave India and go where they'll find people who would speak British accent 😑😑