Top 10 Hardest UK Accents To Imitate

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  • Опубликовано: 9 май 2024
  • Top 10 Hardest UK Accents To Imitate
    Subscribe: bit.ly/2tVCcUH
    These British-based vocal tones are really difficult to recreate. For this list, we're counting down the UK accents that can prove especially tricky to imitate - from Geordie enthusiasm to well-rounded Welsh. How many of these accents can you pull off??
    Check out these other brilliantly British videos from WMUK:
    Top 10 Worst Fake British Accents in Movies - • Top 10 Worst Fake Brit...
    Top 10 Actors Who Nail the English Accent - • Top 10 Actors Who Nail...
    Special thanks to our user RichardFB for submitting the idea on our interactive suggestion tool: WatchMojo.com/suggest
    #10. Cockney
    #9. Mancunian
    #8. Ulster English
    #7. West Country
    #6. Scouse
    #5. Glaswegian
    #4. Received Pronunciation
    #3, #2, #1: ???
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Комментарии • 7 тыс.

  • @WatchMojoUK
    @WatchMojoUK  5 лет назад +1561

    What accent does everyone find hard to imitate?

    • @linakoh4206
      @linakoh4206 5 лет назад +142

      Geordie accent. Thank you for your picks, as always enjoy them

    • @jackaylward-williams9064
      @jackaylward-williams9064 5 лет назад +58

      Pretty much any regional accent. Despite being a born and bred Lancastrian and having a mix of Liverpudlian and Kentish relatives, I just seem to be stuck with a half RP and half Northern accent

    • @amy7807
      @amy7807 5 лет назад +7

      Jack Aylward-Williams I’m a Lancastrian too

    • @heliotropezzz333
      @heliotropezzz333 5 лет назад +5

      Try 1:32:18 on this film which was set in East Anglia.Mr Tom's character speaks with the local accent ruclips.net/video/eYJBkfKtCvM/видео.html

    • @BTthis
      @BTthis 5 лет назад +13

      Jeremy Brookes, aye doric is a well spoken accent in the north east of scotland

  • @josehernandezpachon2475
    @josehernandezpachon2475 5 лет назад +8231

    can you just keep it quiet,, and let us hear the accents?

    • @xiam.
      @xiam. 4 года назад +53

      Jose

    • @eremophila
      @eremophila 4 года назад +20

      Technoblade never dies Oh my gosh your name is so great
      Pig that can kill youtubers

    • @kenzieaugustcorder5235
      @kenzieaugustcorder5235 4 года назад +12

      dude literally every video on this and it's associated channels have commentary. That's the while idea of these type of videos

    • @omp199
      @omp199 4 года назад +158

      @@kenzieaugustcorder5235 Commentary is all well and good, but if the commentary replaces the thing that is being commented on, what is the point? It would be like going into an art gallery and seeing descriptions of the paintings plastered over the top of the works of art themselves, so that no paint is actually visible. Nobody would go to such an art gallery. It would be ridiculous.

    • @whitesimurgh6363
      @whitesimurgh6363 4 года назад +45

      That's the problem with watchmojo

  • @silenceseppo7079
    @silenceseppo7079 5 лет назад +3761

    It’s crazy how in the U.K. you can drive for about ten mins and get a different accent. Especially when crossing the English/Scottish border.

    • @vancemccarthy2554
      @vancemccarthy2554 5 лет назад +171

      Of course. There are villages of people who only talk with each other - for centuries - and so make up their own dialect and phrases.

    • @martaevabetakova483
      @martaevabetakova483 5 лет назад +91

      It's like this in a lot of European countries. It's because from late Middle Ages up to 18th / 19h century (early Middle Ages were more tolerant in this aspect), most people weren't allowed to move to a different region without the consent of the local gentry. So every region was pretty much isolated and the language there developed separately (with the exception of travelling merchants, musicians, artisans and the like).

    • @GreenGaslight
      @GreenGaslight 5 лет назад +26

      Very true, an hour in the car from my house we here noticably different accents.

    • @rain_down_
      @rain_down_ 5 лет назад +35

      Love the Berwick accent - a funny mixture of Geordie and Scottish.

    • @indiemissimi_
      @indiemissimi_ 5 лет назад +18

      yeah. In Belgium my town has a very distinct dialect. Neighboring cities are different. And just 20 minutes away, it's a completely different dialect.

  • @welshpete12
    @welshpete12 3 года назад +453

    I'm Welsh , I was in a cab in New York . Chatting to the driver while we were stuck in traffic . He asked where I was from . When I said Wales , he said that's in Denmark isn't it ? Sometimes you just can't win ! 😂

    • @MorganTC
      @MorganTC 3 года назад +12

      HAHA that's actually quite funny

    • @poppyhodgson8928
      @poppyhodgson8928 3 года назад +22

      I'm cumbrian, and on holiday they didn't think I was English either 🤣 and when explained they thought South England 😂😂😂

    • @randalthor1955
      @randalthor1955 2 года назад +5

      that reminds me of an anecdote in Ireland. Also an american customer. my co-worker was finnish. the american asked him where he was from(they expected everybody in Ireland to be irish). He said: Finland. they answered: yo don't look finnish....by the way, where is finland?

    • @chaosinsurgency6636
      @chaosinsurgency6636 2 года назад +1

      Cumbrian

    • @UnbelievableEricthegiraffe
      @UnbelievableEricthegiraffe 2 года назад +4

      I lived in California for a year then Texas for Another 2 years,The only Person who realised I was English in the whole time was a Taxi Driver from Mongolia in Houston
      Who had lived in London while at University And had Visited my home City Manchester.

  • @sapphirewhistlewind
    @sapphirewhistlewind 4 года назад +1874

    10. Cockney
    09. Mancunian
    08. Ulster English
    07. West Country
    06. Scouse
    05. Glaswegian
    04. RP
    03. Brummie
    02. Welsh
    01. Geordie
    Yep. I listed all of ‘em lol

  • @ifandafydd7432
    @ifandafydd7432 5 лет назад +2108

    More accurate title:
    "Ten most well-known British accents with bad impressions of each"

    • @lillymai2428
      @lillymai2428 5 лет назад +74

      Agreed it didn't help the examples were by actors instead of actually using people who talk with those accents every day. The actors have to learn to copy the accents so they aren't even authentic anyway.

    • @sofakingwhat4798
      @sofakingwhat4798 5 лет назад +10

      ..."that most people, up to a point, can imitate"

    • @christopherdale8201
      @christopherdale8201 4 года назад +2

      Expect Ozzie and Sharon Osbourne they have got the classic Birummy accent.

    • @JulieWallis1963
      @JulieWallis1963 4 года назад +6

      Christopher Dale Sharon Osbourne is *not* a Brummie, not even Black Country. She was born in London.

    • @christopherdale8201
      @christopherdale8201 4 года назад +6

      @@JulieWallis1963 I meant Ozzie not Sharon. Forgive me Julie it's been close to 35 years since i lived in Birmingham full time. Yes I've been back on and off living in all parts from Liverpool,Leeds and Newcastle and it gets harder to pick up those nothern acsents from Lancashire to Newcastle you only have travel less then 15-20 miles and it changes a Merseyside to a Jordanian and you dont want piss them off either or will cop it hard either from suburbia to the pub and of course a football game.

  • @Confusius.
    @Confusius. 5 лет назад +3180

    They speak 3 words and get interrupted by your explaining. Impossible to watch

    • @BintyMcFrazzles
      @BintyMcFrazzles 5 лет назад +73

      Watch Mojo do it all the time. All their top tens are just them talking through it all.

    • @FriedEgg101
      @FriedEgg101 4 года назад +11

      Yeah well, automated copyright strikes exist.

    • @AA-hg5fk
      @AA-hg5fk 4 года назад +14

      All the watch mojo videos are pretty much unbearably bad!

    • @omp199
      @omp199 4 года назад +8

      Why are there more "likes" than "dislikes" on this video? It makes no sense. The video is absolutely awful.

    • @stevens5541
      @stevens5541 4 года назад +2

      UNSUBSCRIBE AND DISLIKE ALL THIS GUYS VIDEOS

  • @ritachen3441
    @ritachen3441 3 года назад +166

    10. Cockney
    0:43
    09. Mancunian
    1:17
    08. Ulster English
    1:50
    07. West Country
    2:28
    06. Scouse
    3:12
    05. Glaswegian
    3:53
    04. RP
    4:35
    03. Brummie
    5:12
    02. Welsh
    6:00
    01. Geordie 6:45

  • @karunadang4916
    @karunadang4916 3 года назад +147

    6:34 me putting something too hot in my mouth.

  • @finnmccool7543
    @finnmccool7543 5 лет назад +4943

    Less explaining about the accents sound, and more examples of the accents!

    • @mirapohjalainen7156
      @mirapohjalainen7156 5 лет назад +186

      Agree, was so disappointed to see that a lot of the accents were imitations or done in a comedic way instead of clips of people speaking with their natural accents... :/

    • @philipmarsden7104
      @philipmarsden7104 5 лет назад +55

      The examples given were mostly useless and non-representative,so more of the same actors talking wouldn't have helped.

    • @jacopochiefjaco123
      @jacopochiefjaco123 5 лет назад +4

      I am not british, so for me it was cool that they talked about the history behind the accent.

    • @mirapohjalainen7156
      @mirapohjalainen7156 5 лет назад +33

      Yeah I liked hearing facts and history about the accents too, but really, more clips of the actual accents being spoken would've been nice. I'm sure they could've found news clips, interviews etc. to show us instead of the actors.

    • @jbo4547
      @jbo4547 5 лет назад +2

      That and it seems like number 1 is always shown the least on watchmojo videos..

  • @Revjiggs
    @Revjiggs 4 года назад +1261

    How did you miss the Yorkshire accent

    • @k.stewart007
      @k.stewart007 4 года назад +66

      They did show it, but said it was mancunian. 🙄

    • @AlexBell1991
      @AlexBell1991 4 года назад +131

      That hurts as a Yorkshire man.

    • @adam-uy6qg
      @adam-uy6qg 4 года назад +100

      @@k.stewart007 mancunian and yorkshire accent are nothing alike

    • @stephenmurphy9958
      @stephenmurphy9958 4 года назад +5

      Because it’s easy to understand and sounds like someone is constipated?

    • @adam-uy6qg
      @adam-uy6qg 4 года назад +27

      @@stephenmurphy9958 well I've met plenty of people not from Yorkshire who have asked a few times what I was saying as they didn't understand our words

  • @BerkayOner
    @BerkayOner 3 года назад +140

    When I heard the "West Country" 2:28 accent in real life for the first time, I had the exact same reaction and the most interesting part is they're making noises and understanding each other 😱

    • @Lil-Raven
      @Lil-Raven 3 года назад +12

      It surprises me sometimes 🤣 I‘ve noticed a lot of people up country don’t understand me

    • @jbarral6509
      @jbarral6509 3 года назад +4

      I didn't understand what he said

    • @ariumet_
      @ariumet_ 2 года назад +1

      yo i thought i was the only one in Turkey who knows English

    • @markleelover4556
      @markleelover4556 2 года назад +1

      😆that's hard to understand

    • @2jcward
      @2jcward 2 года назад +1

      It sounds so American to me. Out of all it’s the easiest to us understand.

  • @foxxcvii7170
    @foxxcvii7170 Год назад +24

    As an Australian it's mind boggling to hear so many variations of English coming from the UK, being such a small area in comparison with such variety! It's incredible to hear so much difference.

  • @Sir-Raph
    @Sir-Raph 5 лет назад +1243

    *_"Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch"_* had to be a Welshman's idea of a *practical joke.*
    _(I've had to edit that name about 23 times...)_

    • @adambuckley538
      @adambuckley538 5 лет назад +73

      In new zealand there's a place called Taumatawhakatangihangakoauauotamateaturipukakapikimaungahoronukupokaiwhenuakitanatahu (copied and pasted) 🤣

    • @Sir-Raph
      @Sir-Raph 5 лет назад +78

      @@adambuckley538 I could swear that was just you falling asleep on a keyboard...

    • @regraig6869
      @regraig6869 5 лет назад +15

      start typing the first part in google, it'll finish the rest, press ctrl C, then ctrl V wherever you want to type llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch
      BOOM

    • @ebberman7672
      @ebberman7672 4 года назад +11

      The postmark is LlanfairPG. It's good enough, and everyone understands it.

    • @amxjxn859
      @amxjxn859 4 года назад +9

      I live there 😂

  • @ArithHarger
    @ArithHarger 5 лет назад +648

    Ozzy Osbourne doesn't speak "Birmingham", he speaks "Ozzish-Bournish", something only he and his wife can possibly comprehend.

    • @exgren
      @exgren 5 лет назад +23

      Shaaaaaaaaaaron

    • @thomasbarnard7660
      @thomasbarnard7660 5 лет назад +1

      I just commented stating basically the same and deleted after scrolling, there accents are too neutral, I have bromie family and you can hear it in them not much ozzy more sharon out of the family

    • @andimatrus
      @andimatrus 5 лет назад +1

      LMAO that's so fucking right!...

    • @michaelholmes8226
      @michaelholmes8226 5 лет назад +2

      Shaz is a Londoner

    • @Aled1976
      @Aled1976 5 лет назад

      Or bad Yank when playing live ....

  • @cyclone1274
    @cyclone1274 3 года назад +21

    as a person from Ulster who speaks Ulster English I can tell you for definite that there's at least 10 variations of the Ulster English accent.

    • @arsoncat2146
      @arsoncat2146 2 часа назад

      Omg yes! Like wtf even is an "ulster english" accent

  • @YvieT81
    @YvieT81 3 года назад +81

    I’m Dutch. But several years ago I had a colleague from Glasgow with a slight Indian accent mixed into it. She also spoke really fast! That was probably one of the biggest English accent challenges I had.

    • @mattpryokra2245
      @mattpryokra2245 3 года назад +14

      Careful.... It’s a ‘Scottish’ accent, you can trigger a few Scots saying the speak with an English accent 😂

    • @YvieT81
      @YvieT81 3 года назад +1

      @@mattpryokra2245 you’re probably right 😂

    • @michaelhighlights1614
      @michaelhighlights1614 2 года назад +3

      watching indian coooking videos i realise theyr in english half way through the video

    • @misst.e.a.187
      @misst.e.a.187 2 года назад

      @@mattpryokra2245 Cause a flippin' revolution

    • @celticglasgow8448
      @celticglasgow8448 2 года назад +1

      I know your Dutch and your not that educated but don't get us mixed up with the English were rivals

  • @DavidFraser007
    @DavidFraser007 5 лет назад +318

    I don't have an accent, it's just everybody else who doesn't come from my town.

    • @jennyhorsburgh1078
      @jennyhorsburgh1078 5 лет назад +2

      Same lol

    • @danhendas6609
      @danhendas6609 5 лет назад +8

      That is because your brain recognises your own specific way of speaking as "the way of speaking" every human brain does it sadly

    • @memedojo5436
      @memedojo5436 5 лет назад +4

      @@danhendas6609 wooosh

    • @cameronmcneil236
      @cameronmcneil236 5 лет назад +1

      Trust me u do have an accent when ever I’m on Xbox with some American kid they always notice my Scottish accent I really can’t Hear it at all but I know other people can hear it

    • @madbangorlad8484
      @madbangorlad8484 5 лет назад

      You do
      Everyone does

  • @Bubbles17011
    @Bubbles17011 5 лет назад +124

    I’m Northern Irish and I’ve literally never heard it referred to as Ulster English before

    • @foreverandever5548
      @foreverandever5548 5 лет назад +13

      Bubbles17011 I'm Scottish and it's always the Northern Irish accent.

    • @KeanKennedy
      @KeanKennedy 5 лет назад +12

      Always referred to it as a Northern Irish accent here in London.

    • @cd1051
      @cd1051 5 лет назад +24

      Kean Kennedy its the norn iron accent

    • @sharnehawkins4702
      @sharnehawkins4702 5 лет назад +10

      Same. Never fucking heard of Ulster English

    • @DaddyDrummer007
      @DaddyDrummer007 5 лет назад +1

      Me neither.

  • @andreeaharabagiu8856
    @andreeaharabagiu8856 3 года назад +20

    6:30 - That might have been the highlight of his career.

  • @Ardjano234
    @Ardjano234 3 года назад +86

    Presenter also has something going on: we poblish a new video every day

  • @seencapone
    @seencapone 5 лет назад +404

    Would have loved to actually hear some examples of the accents instead of the three or four words we could hear over the V.O.

  • @dankyoutuber1853
    @dankyoutuber1853 4 года назад +605

    Cockney is literally the easiest accent to imitate even easier than red kneck

    • @niallfoley6711
      @niallfoley6711 3 года назад +23

      Cockney is but Essex, which is very similar, I never see imitated well

    • @yorgunsamuray
      @yorgunsamuray 3 года назад +11

      It's the rhyming slang that makes it hard. And that thing changes in time. Some gets irrelevant in time and some new ones are invented, as it goes with slang all over the world. I know there are classics like "apples and pears"...and that's the only one I know of, as a non-native.

    • @guido7095
      @guido7095 3 года назад +12

      what is red kneck?

    • @dankyoutuber1853
      @dankyoutuber1853 3 года назад

      @@guido7095 got me

    • @boredweegie553
      @boredweegie553 3 года назад +2

      What does kneck mean?

  • @UpinsmokeXVI
    @UpinsmokeXVI 5 месяцев назад +5

    I traveled nearly 1 thousand miles from one end of the uk to the other and it’s actually crazy how the accents change from area to area

  • @meuconsagrado
    @meuconsagrado 3 года назад +19

    Before this video the only UK accents I knew was Harry Potter, Beatles, Monty Python and Mr Bean. Um salve to UK people 🇧🇷🇧🇷

  • @malinbond1278
    @malinbond1278 5 лет назад +64

    The hardest one for me to understand is Cornish. As a Swedish person engaged to a guy from Worcestershire with grandparents from Devon and Cornwall, my fiancés 80yr old Cornish grandfather is utterly impossible for me to understand. I was so embarrassed when I met him, I had no clue what he was saying haha

    • @choughed3072
      @choughed3072 5 лет назад +19

      I'm Cornish and can still only understand about 50% of my grandparents say lol.

    • @revsin1886
      @revsin1886 5 лет назад +9

      I've no problem with how the Cornish speak, been living there for over 25 years now, though being a Belfast lad, its pretty easy to pick up. Now Geordies I haven't go a clue , as Dublin knackers ffs I still cant get my head round that one, and I lived there as well...

    • @thewheelieguy
      @thewheelieguy 5 лет назад +4

      @@choughed3072 Similar experience studying German in Austria (in the Steirmark, St. Radegund bei Graz). Had a local group give our study group a dinner, and could hardly understand the oldtimers welcoming us and giving local history - we talked with our young local friends and they affirmed they could barely manage to understand either.

    • @trevorcorso473
      @trevorcorso473 5 лет назад +5

      @@revsin1886 Was in a Belfast pub a few tears ago with my grand daughter and was joined by some gentleman who started a conversation. I could barely understand his accent and my grand daughter kept asking 'What did he say?" It was hard for me and impossible for her.

    • @JudgeMarmianWiZard
      @JudgeMarmianWiZard 5 лет назад +3

      @Malin Dansk...you should just say I don't understand they will speak more clearly for you being foreign,, I met a swedish girl once who spoke English with a Birmingham accent as her boyfriend was from there, I said you have picked the worst accent to mimic. The swedish accent (in english) is more clear and nice.

  • @PirateDogAMV
    @PirateDogAMV 5 лет назад +316

    I had a Glaswegian accent until around 12 years old andthen I developed the Newcastle Geordie accent (Ashington pit, accent) after moving and living here for a couple of years at the time. It mostly sounds Geordie but there is a tint of the Glaswegian still there. Apparently, I can sound aggressive even though I am just speaking normally in my eyes. I don't notice it. lol.

  • @daniel_dumile
    @daniel_dumile 2 года назад +6

    Thanks for the two words we get for each! Very generous of you

  • @theperson_in_thesuit
    @theperson_in_thesuit 3 года назад +180

    Any English accent cose I'm Ukrainian and try to learn English.

    • @electroskates2434
      @electroskates2434 3 года назад +10

      You did well writing this comment.

    • @aidank2108
      @aidank2108 3 года назад +14

      learn the American accent its probably the easiest. also some of these UK accents I can hardly understand, but everyone can understand a US one

    • @Kromiball
      @Kromiball 3 года назад

      @@aidank2108 Some parts are easy, but the American r sound is a nightmare to pronounce. This is why some kids pronounce the American r as a w sound, they haven't picked up on how to do the bloody sound.

    • @aidank2108
      @aidank2108 3 года назад

      @@Kromiball That sound strange to me since I'm so used to it, but I guess the r is a nightmare in many accents. I'm learning Spanish right now and the r is the hardest part of the accent.

    • @jiminsheartx4403
      @jiminsheartx4403 3 года назад +2

      Any English accent because I’m Ukrainian and trying to learn English. I’m guessing, you did well!

  • @Cerinaya
    @Cerinaya 5 лет назад +129

    Props to the weather guy for pronouncing that name.

    • @regraig6869
      @regraig6869 5 лет назад +11

      his boss is a dick, " so on today's weather report we want you to mention LLwanfairpwllgwynpfydllanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerydbscsbvufbjbvwtwfnfnfgn4ngngfngcnnrgnrngwnxqgfnamsnznqnwqfcxowllgogogogoggadgetweatherman and nowhere else"

    • @sentienttapioca5409
      @sentienttapioca5409 4 года назад

      Regraig ‘gogogadget’ 😂

  • @jsphat81
    @jsphat81 5 лет назад +431

    Liam Neeson speaks Ulster English in Taken? I thought it was just a bad American accent done by an Irishman.

    • @ReubenJames1000
      @ReubenJames1000 4 года назад +2

      jsphat81 😂

    • @ianwebster3489
      @ianwebster3489 4 года назад +5

      Norn iron

    • @johnjohnjohnjohnjohnjohnjo1267
      @johnjohnjohnjohnjohnjohnjo1267 4 года назад

      no he doesnt

    • @toomuch9762
      @toomuch9762 4 года назад +4

      flip inheck there’s no such thing as “Ulster scots” you idiot

    • @Londonfogey
      @Londonfogey 4 года назад +12

      @@toomuch9762 LOL Her Majesty's Government might disagree with you on that, as they produce all government information in Ulster Scots as well as English. www.niassembly.gov.uk/about-the-assembly/general-information/information-leaflets/ulster-scots/

  • @rebeccasaville2879
    @rebeccasaville2879 3 года назад +64

    The Yorkshire Accent:
    Am I a joke to you?

    • @RottingFarmsTV
      @RottingFarmsTV 3 года назад +5

      Somewhere between posh and poverty that one is

    • @leon.whitby7302
      @leon.whitby7302 3 года назад +1

      Mate I'll fookin tell ya know I'm from Yorkshire me sen and I tell you I'm no fookin Joke mate your a joke a dust bag

    • @rumdrinkinpirate6107
      @rumdrinkinpirate6107 3 года назад

      Dee dah deffo are a joke

    • @CbaDropDead
      @CbaDropDead 3 года назад

      @@leon.whitby7302 you're definitely a joke

    • @leon.whitby7302
      @leon.whitby7302 3 года назад

      @@CbaDropDead jeez how could I have made it any more obvious it was a bloody joke

  • @checkout5017
    @checkout5017 3 года назад +6

    6:33
    "Just up the road from **proceeds to drop a barrel full of pots and pans down a staircase**"

  • @jaycarrUK
    @jaycarrUK 5 лет назад +112

    So to learn a Mancunian accent I have to listen to David Platt from coronation street,even though the actor is from and speaks with a Yorkshire accent,ok then.

    • @morkofork
      @morkofork 5 лет назад +3

      I came to comment this, he's from Leeds.

    • @Gayredheadbitch94
      @Gayredheadbitch94 5 лет назад +3

      My sister has developed a wierd accent due to attending high school in Harrogate and going to uni in Manchester. So it's a mix of those two and Leeds

    • @lindsayconnali6289
      @lindsayconnali6289 5 лет назад +5

      I’m so glad someone said it. I’m Manchester born and bred and literally no one talks like that here

    • @rihana21x
      @rihana21x 5 лет назад

      Yeah that annoyed me.

  • @trystangriffiths8448
    @trystangriffiths8448 5 лет назад +170

    It seems strange to talk about Cymru (Wales) without referring to the fact that Cymraeg (Welsh) is a separate language with much older indigenous origins than English.

    • @Rasperdan
      @Rasperdan 5 лет назад +12

      nope

    • @barbarahallinan1151
      @barbarahallinan1151 5 лет назад +5

      youdontknowme........english is mixture of french latin and old german. ( not your queen )

    • @Rasperdan
      @Rasperdan 5 лет назад +5

      Yip .... That is the perfect point. You know what you are talking about. Youdontknowme is cluless

    • @jethropike1964
      @jethropike1964 5 лет назад +9

      An early form of Welsh was once spoken across most of England, Devon and Avon are derived from Welsh words, England stopped speaking Welsh when the Anglo-Saxons settled in England in the 5th Century, after that all the Celtic languages were displaced and eventually became English,

    • @abbysmalworm6527
      @abbysmalworm6527 5 лет назад +5

      Barbara Hallinan English is based in Anglo-Saxon with an injection of French.

  • @maariahussain4414
    @maariahussain4414 3 года назад +6

    If you wanna learn British accents, go to
    Steven Gerrard (Scouse)
    Liam and Noel Gallagher (Manc),
    Gemma Collins (Essex),
    Jack Grealish (Brummie)
    Alan Shearer (Geordie)
    YUNGBLUD and Louis Tomlinson (Yorkshire)
    Andy Robertson (Glaswegian I think)
    Niall Horan (Irish)

    • @mattylamb9194
      @mattylamb9194 3 года назад

      Oli Sykes from bring me the Horizon a good example of a Sheffield accent

    • @maariahussain4414
      @maariahussain4414 3 года назад

      @@mattylamb9194 yessss

    • @Ladjgbsd6777
      @Ladjgbsd6777 Год назад +1

      YUNGBLUD! Yes bruv

    • @maariahussain4414
      @maariahussain4414 Год назад +1

      Oh my I completley forgot abt my YUNGBLUD phase😭

  • @--enyo--
    @--enyo-- 2 года назад +4

    I was waiting the whole time for Welsh, because it's genuinely the one that throws me the most. It's not necessarily the most difficult to understand, but the intonation is just very different and unexpected.

  • @Steamed
    @Steamed 5 лет назад +362

    English (US)
    English (UK)
    English (Big Shaq)

  • @Nosequeescribir802
    @Nosequeescribir802 5 лет назад +701

    did you just say "ulster english"?
    *THE IRA WANTS TO KNOW YOUR LOCATION*

    • @stephenmurphy7458
      @stephenmurphy7458 5 лет назад +6

      Yes they do....Cunting American's you know they can travel..

    • @laurensmiley9956
      @laurensmiley9956 5 лет назад +7

      Ahhaahah the provincial IRA will be giving you a house call haha

    • @stephenkirkpatrick357
      @stephenkirkpatrick357 5 лет назад +21

      Provisional you Mong fuck the RA Ulster’s BRITISH

    • @Alceste1977
      @Alceste1977 5 лет назад +8

      Yeah Gerry just called: he said the ceasefire's off.

    • @michelleflood8220
      @michelleflood8220 5 лет назад +1

      Stephen Kirkpatrick shows what you know only six out of the nine counties of Ulster are actually the state of Northern Ireland and its part of the UK but that doesn’t make it British many there identify as Irish and Northern Irish at that get over yourself unification is no longer a pipe dream and getting to be a inevitability deal with it or piss off to England then !

  • @pixwool
    @pixwool 4 года назад +180

    I find almost no uk accents hard because I’m British

    • @creature2479
      @creature2479 3 года назад

      Lol me too

    • @ieatmice751
      @ieatmice751 3 года назад +42

      Same, Americans always think they know the ins and outs of every single accent but really they sound cringe as fuck

    • @xddrippy9306
      @xddrippy9306 3 года назад +4

      Me there to easy, could do the if American, they always posh as fuck

    • @ACrimsonPhoenix
      @ACrimsonPhoenix 3 года назад +3

      @@ieatmice751 Same thing with most people imitating any accent that isn't theirs.

    • @Yournewboyfriend12348
      @Yournewboyfriend12348 3 года назад +1

      Same there so easy to understand even the really strong Scottish accent I can understand

  • @DaniHMcV
    @DaniHMcV 3 года назад

    Omg, that Egypt episode of The Ricky Gervais Show is my all-time favourite! I love how Karl says he doesn’t know what the washroom attendants do with the money given to them because “the place has never seen a mop”, major emphasis on the p!! Hahaha, hilarious.

  • @mariazahedi7444
    @mariazahedi7444 4 года назад +21

    I love the Yorshire accents. Someone from England called me by accident the other day and it was the highlight of my day!

  • @pathfinder1273
    @pathfinder1273 5 лет назад +91

    As far as Ozzy Osbourne goes, it should be called "Drug-Addled Birmingham".

    • @SwordOfHeimdall
      @SwordOfHeimdall 3 года назад +1

      My go to singer for a Brummie accent is Rob Halford :D

    • @GoyBenius_0901
      @GoyBenius_0901 3 года назад +1

      @@SwordOfHeimdall
      Rob Halford was a Walsall lad not a Brummie.

    • @allovdem
      @allovdem 3 года назад

      @@GoyBenius_0901 Lol, whats the difference

    • @mmedefarge
      @mmedefarge 3 года назад

      I knew someone from Birmingham and I had no problem understanding him. Not so much Ozzie who just sounds like generic druggie with brain-damage from wherever.

  • @GhostyVTOL
    @GhostyVTOL 3 года назад +5

    I’m a weird case, born in Newcastle but moved south young so never picked up the geordie accent however can understand their slang. Whenever I visit there, this makes them hilariously confused as I stand out sounding entirely like a posh southerner.

  • @kurteugenie6427
    @kurteugenie6427 Год назад

    I'm so impressed that the Meteorologist at the welsh part managed to say Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch so perfectly and without even repeating himself at that XD

  • @rushofblood994
    @rushofblood994 5 лет назад +26

    Best Geordie accent I’ve seen by an actor is Liam Cunningham who plays Ser Davos on Game of Thrones (a Fleabottom accent in the show). He’s actually Irish. I’m not a Geordie myself but from what I can tell it’s really good.

    • @stephenmurphy9958
      @stephenmurphy9958 5 лет назад +2

      Alistair Drennan
      Id agree, I’m from Newcastle and think he does a great attempt.

    • @thenorthumbrian9093
      @thenorthumbrian9093 5 лет назад +1

      He sounds more like a smoggy than a Geordie.

    • @AnusInTheMist
      @AnusInTheMist 5 лет назад +2

      Agreed! I'm from Newcastle and was shocked to find he wasn't! His is mild enough where it sounds like he's trying to tone it down for TV. Certainly seems very natural

    • @pitmatix1457
      @pitmatix1457 5 лет назад +3

      Agreed. It's a bit softer but he nails the tone and inflection beautifully. Apparently he got it from Neil Marshall who is a go-to Game of Thrones director (and the brilliant movie Dog Soldiers) and is a Newcastle native. I think Irish and Welsh actors probably have an advantage over most other English speakers because they have the natural rising and lowering 'melodic' tone already. Americans REALLY struggle because of their flat tone, look up the "Geordie" in the episode of 'Castle'. It's fucking painful.

    • @ladyfoxwf1075
      @ladyfoxwf1075 5 лет назад +2

      He sounded a little singsongy Welsh sometimes but he has done the best impersonation I've ever heard.

  • @weewilliewinkle
    @weewilliewinkle 5 лет назад +24

    Legend has it that the Northumberland Fusiliers are the only regiment in the British Army that employ their own interpreters. :rofl:

  • @PeterGaunt
    @PeterGaunt 3 года назад +2

    When I was in my teens (mid-1960s) I an old man in his 80s who spoke only mid-Cheshire dialect. Despite him living 10 minutes walk from where I grew up I could not understand him a lot of the time. The local accent since then has shifted towards a variety of Scouse.

  • @bokami3445
    @bokami3445 9 месяцев назад +1

    I was born and raise in Edinburgh. When I was 14 I emigrated to Canada and with in two years I'd lost my sottish accent and pick up a Canadian accent. Roll forward 10 years and I returned to Scotland for a death in the family. The plane landed in Manchester and developed mechanical problems so the airline arranged a coach to take the few passengers on to Glasgow (which was the original destination). So we arrive in Glasgow and I'm told I'll have to take the train from Glasgow to Edinburgh, needless to say I had no idea where the train station was and so proceeded to ask for directions from a local. To my utter SUPRISE & SHOCK!, the gentleman I asked (I'm sure) gave me directions but I had no idea what the hell he said to me. I did find the train station eventually and while shopping in Mackenzie's on Priness Street (Trainspotting anyone?) bought the box set of Rabb C Nesbitt. I periodically re-watch to keep my brain trained with the Glaswegian accent, just in case.

  • @janeikeliu
    @janeikeliu 4 года назад +63

    I find it hilarious when British people can't understand each other's accents. There's no hope for us Americans at that point!

    • @eline.k1373
      @eline.k1373 2 года назад +10

      Now imagine what it's like for people whose native language isn't english * nervous dutch laughing *

    • @Aron-ru5zk
      @Aron-ru5zk 2 года назад +1

      We all understand each other though?

    • @Milybrusee
      @Milybrusee 2 года назад

      As an Spanish speaker I’m agree with you

    • @y.tzgwala6306
      @y.tzgwala6306 2 года назад

      I’m British and water it’s said like wora

    • @robertbrandywine
      @robertbrandywine 2 года назад

      @@Milybrusee As A Spanish speaker I'm IN agreement with you.

  • @krisinsaigon
    @krisinsaigon 5 лет назад +163

    Fair play to that weather man, he nailed that

    • @ddemaine
      @ddemaine 5 лет назад +11

      Helps he's from Wales ;-) Though he tweets stuff in Welsh, I'm not sure if Welsh is his first language, or it's English

    • @boontime
      @boontime 5 лет назад +5

      Fair play to the man that spoke a word in his native language, he nailed it. Flay play to you also for spelling weather correctly, you nailed it :/ Though, neither should really be difficult and require celebrations. Do you congratulate the French when they speak something in French also?

    • @cumbdunt7139
      @cumbdunt7139 5 лет назад +2

      boon steson *fair play

    • @owendavies8252
      @owendavies8252 5 лет назад +1

      I can say it just like him

    • @KyleOzz
      @KyleOzz 5 лет назад

      Fair play to you Kris, i can tell you're Welsh just by the sentence structure in your comment, You nailed it. XD

  • @prva9347
    @prva9347 3 года назад +1

    My mother was a "true Cockney" i.e. born within the sound of the churchbells of Stratford-atte-Bowe AND before the bells were removed. But she knew her accent would hamper her and, coming from a poor working class family, she needed to get a good job to bring in a good wage after her dad died prematurely. So she left school early (had hoped to go on to further education) and took elocution lessons. The contrast in accent, speed of delivery and pitch was amazing - she'd do almost like a party-piece where she'd speak and constantly change from one to the other.

  • @tubefan10
    @tubefan10 3 года назад +15

    The example of cockney given didn't even sound like real cockney, and I'm not even British.

    • @imogenhermesgowar8948
      @imogenhermesgowar8948 3 года назад

      Bold that you think not being British somehow makes you MORE qualified to judge. In fact the clip is two men comparing their Michael Cain impressions, and they are both pretty good. Michael Cain is from Bermondsey, so cockney by the traditional definition of being born within the sound of Bow Bells not the East End gangster/estuary type. Or maybe the accent you are more familiar with is Dick Van Dyke's?

  • @robp1975
    @robp1975 5 лет назад +151

    Ironic that you claim the Manchester accent is "relatively unknown" and then use a character from Corrie with a broad LEEDS accent as an example!

    • @stevenbingham4828
      @stevenbingham4828 5 лет назад +11

      Half of them in Coranation street are from Leeds and Manchester looks nothing like Corrie and hasn't done for maybe 50 years.

    • @cbarclay99
      @cbarclay99 5 лет назад +3

      @@stevenbingham4828 Same true of Eastenders and East London.

    • @lordomacron3719
      @lordomacron3719 4 года назад +1

      I am from Birmingham the City and whenever I hear someone 'Trying the Brummie Accent all I hear is the Black Counrty Accent instead because the Vowels are more pronounced than the Brummie accent it is easier to imitate and ppl always seem to want to really make sure they are getting the Vowel right that they overdo it and it sounds like a Black Country accent

    • @Achilles1194
      @Achilles1194 4 года назад

      Lord Omacron brummie wtf is that

    • @lordomacron3719
      @lordomacron3719 4 года назад

      @@Achilles1194 you have access to google find out for yourself

  • @conjured_up_skeletons6178
    @conjured_up_skeletons6178 5 лет назад +81

    The day I learn to pronounce Worcestershire sauce that day will be victory.

    • @nicholascross3557
      @nicholascross3557 5 лет назад +11

      Wuh-stir-sher is how most Brits pronounce Worcestershire, best of luck. Mind you, I still have no clue how DeNiro's pronunciation of Hereford as 'Here-ford' rather than as 'hair-eh-furred' in Ronin was never addressed, since saying it that way was a dead giveaway he'd never actually been there himself.

    • @conjured_up_skeletons6178
      @conjured_up_skeletons6178 5 лет назад +1

      I learned the proper pronunciation in bartending school and then forgot it. It's there somewhere in the back of my tongue. Heard a lady pronounce it correctly in an episode of true blood, season 1 I think. Its embarrassing being a bartender n not knowing.

    • @nicogray7113
      @nicogray7113 5 лет назад +5

      I personally say it wus ta but that’s probably because of where I’m from

    • @ftumschk
      @ftumschk 5 лет назад

      @@nicholascross3557 I thought that Hereford was originally pronounced with two syllables (something like "Heer-ford") centuries ago, but that it gradually changed to be pronounced with three syllables later.

    • @gnomichome7492
      @gnomichome7492 5 лет назад +5

      I say it like wuster sauce, without the shire. I'M Yorkshire though and other may pronounce differently.

  • @alicehusband4077
    @alicehusband4077 3 года назад +4

    I find a lot of accents not too hard. I have lived in Bristol and South Wales, grew up up in London with maternal grandparents from Lancashire and Irish grandparent. I have lived in the Fens for 17 years and find it really hard to copy. Lots of people agree it is quite hard to get right.

  • @michaelrichardson2391
    @michaelrichardson2391 2 года назад

    Can’t believe you found the clip of Jo Guest bumming Ant/Dec with a satellite dish on Bo Selecta! Classic Television.

  • @the_bna5395
    @the_bna5395 4 года назад +70

    2:29 Sounds like, "The Lannisters send their regards."

    • @Edsnlopes
      @Edsnlopes 4 года назад

      I was trying to remember OMG

    • @sam_1516
      @sam_1516 3 года назад

      Catelyn: Walder, let my son go!
      Walder: 2:29

  • @krisinsaigon
    @krisinsaigon 5 лет назад +311

    None of the Geordie accents shown were done by geordies, they were all southerners imitating them, show a real Geordie accent

    • @kieranwilson2341
      @kieranwilson2341 5 лет назад +27

      kris wilkinson aye everyone that tries a Geordie accent sounds mackem or at a stretch, like they're from Durham.

    • @JohnKobaRuddy
      @JohnKobaRuddy 5 лет назад +6

      Exactly it's like that tit on big brother too. He's a smoggy and the film purely belter may have been about Newcastle and two Newcastle supporters but most the cast were mackems and ex byker Grove no hopers

    • @krisinsaigon
      @krisinsaigon 5 лет назад +5

      I'm not a Geordie myself like, I'm from Oldham, but I used to live in Newcastle- in Heaton- so I know how it sounds

    • @rbeswick88
      @rbeswick88 5 лет назад +7

      Roger Thornhill Gosforth is full of posh people

    • @joppadoni
      @joppadoni 5 лет назад +5

      gossy people posh? lmfao. thats like saying fawdons well to do..

  • @edsymington8546
    @edsymington8546 3 года назад +2

    I’m a Geordie and I wasn’t expecting it to be on here at number 1 because barely anyone talks about it 😂

  • @pstewart6537
    @pstewart6537 24 дня назад

    Thanks for this video. Even though I love language and pay attention to people's speech, I didn't realize until I viewed this video that, as a Canadian, I can barely distinguish these accents from each other. Very interesting topic.

  • @ohareair552
    @ohareair552 4 года назад +269

    Out of all of these the one I find hardest is welsh
    And I’m welsh

    • @therat1117
      @therat1117 4 года назад +2

      A's 'cause Cardiff, Valleys, and Wrexham, for example, 's as far apart of each other as Geordie, Scouse, an' Somerset, accent-wise (I's Cardiff, by-the-by). M' accent in Welsh is right Hwntw though.

    • @creature2479
      @creature2479 3 года назад

      Hahahaha

    • @Tsahalal
      @Tsahalal 3 года назад +2

      My 1st love was Welsh, but living in England, near the border, Ross on Wye.
      Funny, her twin sister became the #1 female golf player in Wales since.

    • @markp3624
      @markp3624 3 года назад +1

      not wrong there duck

    • @Robin-sf3gk
      @Robin-sf3gk 3 года назад

      As a german I‘d say it‘s easy to understand for a foreigner. To me it sound like posh English

  • @maxgonzo6155
    @maxgonzo6155 5 лет назад +61

    Also there is a new accent in England that has developed in London. It started with all the foreign people who have moved to London and it sounds like a mixture of Jamaican, middle eastern and London accent. Loads of English people talk like it now. Its the accent most rappers from London use.
    Some call it the 'roadman' accent.

    • @maxgonzo6155
      @maxgonzo6155 5 лет назад +10

      The Jaw Breaker That is very true. I have never seen a more multicultural place.

    • @aaaaaaaaaaaa_99
      @aaaaaaaaaaaa_99 5 лет назад +31

      The Jaw Breaker I know right? it’s now full of many interesting and beautiful cultures!

    • @tomk.williams1186
      @tomk.williams1186 5 лет назад +3

      Ali G style

    • @fatwomanniggs8416
      @fatwomanniggs8416 5 лет назад +20

      Emily Shadick yeah beautiful cultures that like to throw acid in your face

    • @tomboz777
      @tomboz777 5 лет назад +4

      U talkin' bout "roadman" blud?

  • @sherylyaseen6719
    @sherylyaseen6719 4 года назад +1

    I remember when I was watching Geordie Shore I had no idea what was being said for nearly the entire season. Took me two to sort of get the hang of it.

    • @Snaileychops1
      @Snaileychops1 4 года назад +2

      It is a hard dialect to understand. I'm a Geordie and sometimes I struggle haha!
      Nah what I mean like! Haha

  • @cpreston8996
    @cpreston8996 4 года назад

    "Ayy-up! 'Ya forget those from Yawrkshurr! Thurz trubble at 'th' mill, lads!". My Dad's West Yorkshire accent was as thick as the fog on the moors. I love hearing folks from Yorkshire speak. When we bought a house, the builder was a transplanted Sheffield fellow. I offered to translate Yorkshire talk into Canadian English for my wife.

  • @RB-NZ2
    @RB-NZ2 5 лет назад +33

    “Alright my lover” Skins also sticks the country accent onto the mainstream

    • @manollo1767
      @manollo1767 5 лет назад

      0121 in the house!

    • @joefrayling9263
      @joefrayling9263 5 лет назад +1

      I get asked all the time to say things like tractor and combine harvester all the time by non West country folk 0117 yer

    • @Laura_Norda
      @Laura_Norda 5 лет назад +1

      I'm from Leics and now live in Bristol, and my family notice I've taken on a Bristolian twang - words like burger and other r-containing words are where it's most prominent, because where I'm from we barely even pronounce the r's lol. Love it down eer though :D

    • @davidzof
      @davidzof 5 лет назад

      But Brissol is different from Swindon which is different from Bridport. At least to my ear.

    • @joefrayling9263
      @joefrayling9263 5 лет назад

      davidzof Bristol is different depending of which side of the river you are from but all the west accents are very similar with some small but noticeable differences

  • @robinm1299
    @robinm1299 5 лет назад +64

    I am from the West Country and I don’t speak bloody gibberish

    • @notanobviouschoice
      @notanobviouschoice 5 лет назад +10

      As someone who lives in the west country but wasn't born here, I promise you do.

    • @robair67
      @robair67 4 года назад +8

      Sorry, didn't get a word of that ;)

    • @Leyanna69
      @Leyanna69 4 года назад +1

      I am too, (Somerset) and Steve Merchant is Bristolian, which in my eyes is different to West Country

    • @gailknight3128
      @gailknight3128 4 года назад +3

      I used to live in Devon and people would rudely mock my accent. They don't seem to realise that they also have an accent. Nothing wrong with having an accent, it's what makes us British, with all the glorious variations.

    • @simoneingleson4280
      @simoneingleson4280 4 года назад

      Thing is, I’ve got a mild Cornish accent and always lived here. Any American friends I’ve ever made literally fawn over my accent because I “sound posh” so I can absolutely agree with you upon the fact that not all of us speak absolute nonsense.

  • @geraldwalsh6489
    @geraldwalsh6489 Год назад +1

    An Irishman doing a Brummie accent? Unreal. No one outside of Ireland can do a decent Southern Irish accent except Julie Walters. Her accent in the movie Brooklyn was spot on! She does a mean Scottish accent too in another movie

  • @omegajrz1269
    @omegajrz1269 Год назад +1

    All those accents seem like a delight to the ear. Greetings British brothers from Uruguay. You guys have a beautiful country.

  • @lionfire3359
    @lionfire3359 4 года назад +13

    I died with laughter when it reached the hot fuzz part.

  • @mmmoroi
    @mmmoroi 3 года назад +5

    As seen 1:16~(Mancunian), in many cases hardship in comprehending regional accent is exacerbated by the class-based diversity of accent. To comprehend What Liam Gallagher was saying here you must do some analytical dissection to see Juwymean= Do you know what I mean, which must be rather hard especially for a non-native speaker. Juwymean can be heard not only in Manchester but in a not so posh downtown everywhere in the UK, because it is not a regional thing but something specific to social class.

  • @christinescarff4920
    @christinescarff4920 Год назад +1

    This is hilarious cos my dad was a ‘posh ‘ scouser or so was said at his funeral, and he grew mould in coffee cups on the windowsill !!!

  • @steveray2529
    @steveray2529 5 лет назад +38

    It seems strange that, when showing examples of a Manchester accent and mentioning Coronation Street, you didn't choose to show someone like Kevin Webster or Tyrone, but instead choose to show David Platt. David Platt is played by Jack P Shepherd, who does, in fact, have a quite obvious Yorkshire accent, having been born in Pudsey!

  • @alextromagnetic
    @alextromagnetic 5 лет назад +23

    How is Yorkshire not on here? Anne Hathaway’s appalling attempt in One Day alone should be proof that’s a difficult accent to get right

    • @Luubelaar
      @Luubelaar 5 лет назад +2

      Most Americans just can't do UK accents. They suck pretty heavily at Australian accents too. They usually end up sounding Kiwi or South African.

    • @kittyhawk7031
      @kittyhawk7031 5 лет назад

      If you thought she was bad you should check out the Yorkshire accent Josh Hartnett tried to do in Blow Dry, lol

    • @edbadyt
      @edbadyt 5 лет назад

      Yorkshire is too vague. Narrow it down to 1 town because Yorkshire probably has around 30 distinctive accents.

    • @user_name_redacted
      @user_name_redacted 5 лет назад

      Luubelaar actual Australian actors in the US are required to "enhance" their accent too, so everyone ends up sounding like the chick from transformers, or the one from that stupid fucking Nurofen Zavance ad with the racecars.

    • @rml4289
      @rml4289 5 лет назад

      edbadyt yeah it pains me when I hear people do the typical farmer type Yorkshire accent when most people don’t even sound like that

  • @EntertainMeNow78
    @EntertainMeNow78 3 года назад +1

    Christ! That weatherman is my hero the way he just rattled off the name of that place. 😲

  • @joebutlersnr7017
    @joebutlersnr7017 Год назад +1

    I'm a Geordie born and bred but when I'm on holiday I try to hold my accent down because I have a ' broad Geordie ' accent, and I know most foreigners wouldn't understand me , but on a Caribbean cruise I got talking to an American who asked me what kind of accent I had , I told him I'm from the UK and a Geordie and he said it was a bit hard to understand me, I told him I was holding my accent down and that if I didn't he probably wouldn't understand a word, so he said try me, so I said ' after I finish my pint I'm going to go home and get some sleep ' in my normal accent, he looked at me and said he didn't understand a single word I said because it sounded like i was speaking in a foreign language, we both had a good laugh about it and had another beer.

    • @nathanadnitt
      @nathanadnitt Год назад

      I was getting a train home to the midlands from scotland and i had to stop in Newcastle, fk me man you lot have a different language

  • @khomol
    @khomol 5 лет назад +149

    Why did I watch this video

    • @jackdaniel8973
      @jackdaniel8973 5 лет назад +8

      i don't even speak english and i still don't understand why i'm here

    • @monstersince
      @monstersince 5 лет назад

      i'm of to watch an old b/w movie khomol love

    • @perspii2808
      @perspii2808 5 лет назад +5

      khomol I find the subject of The UK’s many accents fascinating. The problem being that WatchMojo manage to make everything awful somehow

    • @monstersince
      @monstersince 5 лет назад +1

      British accents are wonderful. great storytellers

    • @GregJoshuaW
      @GregJoshuaW 4 года назад +1

      Why did I start scanning the comments? lol

  • @dragonweyr44
    @dragonweyr44 5 лет назад +352

    How the HELL did a country the size of Indiana develop ssssssssssssoooooooo damned many accents is beyond me. It's like the accents and dialects change every couple of blocks in the city and every village in the country. America has several accents too but they change after hundreds of MILES not hundreds of FEET

    • @dragonweyr44
      @dragonweyr44 5 лет назад +43

      Well, I guess that it's true for most, if not all of Europe..
      America's regional accents are much, much more spread out.

    • @IncontrolgamingHD
      @IncontrolgamingHD 5 лет назад +110

      This theory is unsubstantiated but it may be due to the fact the British regions have been populated for a lot longer before it was possible to move any sort of great distance where as America was heavily populated when it was easier to get around so the dialect spread was more fluid and thus became less varied other than over great distances

    • @tiacho2893
      @tiacho2893 5 лет назад +17

      Most people were born, lived, and died in the same town village. In the middle ages, there were many different languages of which Welsh and Cornish are two of the remaining examples. if you have ever seen "Pygmalion" by Shaw or "My Fair Lady" the musical, it is a major theme and accents in cities like London/NYC would vary according to neighbourhood.

    • @TheLittletwitcher
      @TheLittletwitcher 5 лет назад +23

      You think that's amazing, where my family are from in the Yorkshire Dales, the accent and dialect used to vary from village to village! Smaller villages like where my family are from used to be pretty cut off from the rest of the UK and television had only become a thing for my family in the late 60's! Travelling was also difficult with few train lines or motorways. My Dad can remember the first 'A road' being built and travelling down it!

    • @Braun30
      @Braun30 5 лет назад +14

      My mum once smoked a bloke out who said he was a Scouse, she identified his as from Runcorn.
      Try and find the place on the map and see how far it is from Lyme Street Station.

  • @garethcumming667
    @garethcumming667 3 года назад +2

    Right.. I have studied British accents for many a year and my top 5 are these..1: Glasgow, 2: East Midlands, 3: Cambridgeshie 4: Kent 5: Lincolnshire

  • @davidharbron6907
    @davidharbron6907 2 года назад

    I live in London and met a guy from Yorkshire a few years ago. I couldn't understand a word he said, it took weeks before i could sort of understand him.

  • @jacksainthill8974
    @jacksainthill8974 5 лет назад +78

    My wife went to a Geordie hairdresser.
    He says to her, 'Would you like a perm, pet?' So, she says 'Yes, please,' and he says, 'OK, then,' - and then he starts going:
    'Uz wandered loonly as a clode...'

    • @TH3C001
      @TH3C001 5 лет назад +5

      Even in text (especially in text) I'm lost lol, what did he ask before telling his story?

    • @cyberdonblue4413
      @cyberdonblue4413 5 лет назад +19

      TH3C001 perm - poem(?) I wandered lonely as a cloud... make any sense now?

    • @TH3C001
      @TH3C001 5 лет назад +1

      +Cyberdon Blue yes, thank you lol.

    • @restojon1
      @restojon1 5 лет назад +2

      You've just enriched my day. Thanks for the smile :)

    • @justcheck6645
      @justcheck6645 5 лет назад

      Brilliant

  • @ianmacfarlane1241
    @ianmacfarlane1241 5 лет назад +430

    This is just a list of 10 accents. It has nothing to do with how "difficult" accents are - it's patronising, embarrassing and a poorly researched waste of time, with no real effort put into the production.
    A checklist of one Scottish accent, (the biggest city), a generic Ulster, and a catch-all Welsh accent, followed by an evenly spread tour of England.
    Where's Dundonian? How about the accents to be found in Lincolnshire, Suffolk, North Ayrshire & the Western Isles., and I'm sure that there will be others.

    • @TF2CrunchyFrog
      @TF2CrunchyFrog 5 лет назад +8

      And Essex. And Sussex.

    • @mcburnski
      @mcburnski 5 лет назад +4

      And Stranraer! Gretna? Carlisle? Aberdeen?

    • @ianmacfarlane1241
      @ianmacfarlane1241 5 лет назад +3

      @@mcburnski I wasn't going to run through the whole gamut of them - I'm sure that you understood exactly what I meant.

    • @mcburnski
      @mcburnski 5 лет назад +3

      @@ianmacfarlane1241 yes. I was agreeing with your comment and providing more examples.

    • @ianmacfarlane1241
      @ianmacfarlane1241 5 лет назад +3

      @@TF2CrunchyFrog I wouldn't know a Sussex accent at all, and I'm not too bad at spotting English accents.

  • @FirstnameLastname-dq5gu
    @FirstnameLastname-dq5gu 3 года назад +9

    For those who say that the manc accent and the yorkshire accent sound the same you’ve opened a whole new can of worms 🌹(but white)!!!

    • @limedickandrew6016
      @limedickandrew6016 2 года назад +1

      To outsiders it probably does. To the natives of those two areas, they will tell instantly who is who.

    • @misst.e.a.187
      @misst.e.a.187 2 года назад

      But both have vowels as flat as pancakes. The Yorkshire accent, however, is much wiiider, just as a good pudding should be.

    • @FirstnameLastname-dq5gu
      @FirstnameLastname-dq5gu 2 года назад

      @@misst.e.a.187 the people are wider too

  • @lenners9701
    @lenners9701 2 года назад

    I love how the thumbnail for this video is the guy with a load of guns from hot fuzz

  • @LDW88
    @LDW88 5 лет назад +15

    I'm fairly certain that David Platt in the Coronation Street clip is from Leeds.

  • @Mickyboi1
    @Mickyboi1 5 лет назад +369

    “Ulster english” dont let any irishman hear you saying that...

    • @johncusick5023
      @johncusick5023 5 лет назад +13

      I would have put the Strabane accent as the No1. Must be the fastest talking accent in all the English language all over the world.

    • @wertrocks123
      @wertrocks123 5 лет назад +8

      I was in Ulster last week and the accent is so much stronger than the example given(so it is)

    • @katiemcmanus4374
      @katiemcmanus4374 5 лет назад +16

      Oh god mate, we don't. Fuck the British and prods, a unified Ireland would be better than having no fucking government for like a year

    • @Andrew-yl7lm
      @Andrew-yl7lm 5 лет назад +3

      see, this is where dialect and accent need to be separate.

    •  5 лет назад +5

      truthseekerUK other than northern fenians everyone would agree like the actual Ulster people.

  • @lorrygeewhizzbang9521
    @lorrygeewhizzbang9521 3 года назад

    I'm from Ireland and the first time I met a Welshman was at my work.....finally after about 2 months I asked him where he's from "because he sounded like and Irishman that lived in England too long"☺

  • @Ash-yv2wu
    @Ash-yv2wu 3 года назад +12

    if anyone wants to learn Geordie just remember jade from little mix got that

  • @freyawwfc
    @freyawwfc 5 лет назад +36

    Don’t forget WillNE for being Geordie haha
    Also what about Black Country? It’s not rlly the accent but more of the words that you won’t understand (hands up if you’re from the Black Country lmaoooo) 🙋🏻‍♀️🙋🏻‍♀️

  • @dasgutz37
    @dasgutz37 4 года назад +37

    If I was going to make a video about regional accents, I'd probably be inclined to include some spoken examples of them. I'm seriously none the wiser as to what you're on about, but I definitely know what you sound like.

  • @minigrande1939
    @minigrande1939 2 года назад +1

    Liam Gallagher managed to say "know what I mean" three times In one sentence

  • @ohnono69
    @ohnono69 3 года назад +7

    They missed out Birkenhead - it's scouse taken to the maximum level

    • @n7issac94
      @n7issac94 3 года назад

      Birkenhead are plazzy fake wannabe scousers hahahhahahah woollybacks

  • @kellie5476
    @kellie5476 5 лет назад +155

    I like to quote jimmy cars "chicken an a canna coke" scouse accent, I cant do cockney though I'm too northern. Great video.

    • @StolenInsanity
      @StolenInsanity 5 лет назад

      'Ginger and community'

    • @tiacho2893
      @tiacho2893 5 лет назад +2

      "It's me gran's birthday. She's thirty." 😆😆😆 Americans and Canadians also rely on Liam Neeson or Mike Meyers in "Austin Powers" and his Scots in SNL/"So I Married an Axe Murderer".

    • @StolenInsanity
      @StolenInsanity 5 лет назад

      “I want some chicken and a can of coke"

    • @kellie5476
      @kellie5476 5 лет назад +1

      StolenInsanity ey! Calm down!

    • @HarryWessex
      @HarryWessex 5 лет назад +1

      I was born in the cockney part of London, my Dad has a cockney accent, my mums dad accent was described as one of the most cockney accents have ever heard., but I grew up in Hampshire and I can't do a cockney accent at all, while sober.

  • @tinevodopivec9692
    @tinevodopivec9692 5 лет назад +17

    Tune in for the next video, where we'll be counting down our list for the top 10 cars that start with the letter X and originated in Uganda.

  • @scottyweb5323
    @scottyweb5323 4 года назад +46

    The norfolk accent is always done wrong on tv, usually sounds like the west country accent...

    • @tobshhh230
      @tobshhh230 4 года назад +3

      Yeah it’s annoying 😂, ah ya gettin orn buh?

    • @LeanneModenPoet
      @LeanneModenPoet 4 года назад +1

      I came here to say this. So, thank you.

    • @fuzzilu
      @fuzzilu 3 года назад +3

      My poor daughter is a bit sad she talks Narfuk, but oi think ets a bootiful accent!

    • @skw1d338
      @skw1d338 3 года назад

      I’m from Norfolk and to us I really don’t see how it is

    • @youwot2430
      @youwot2430 3 года назад +1

      shame its getting rarer here, only really older people and proper faaaamer boys still have it. most kids from city end up with an atrocious fake london gangster accent these days 🤮🤮 u aint from south london ur from thorpe behave yourself

  • @nongthip
    @nongthip 3 года назад +1

    Became a bit fascinated by regional British accents after hearing loads of variations from gap year backpacker 18-22 kids in Australia of all places. So... eventually jumped on a bicycle and rode 1200 miles from Land's End to John O'Groats to see what's what. Aside from trying every sort of "real ale" place to place and a few single malt whiskeys in the Scottish highlands, I determined the least discernable accents were from the outskirts of Glasgow and a bit north around Fort William and Glen Coe. Some of the farmers up there, wholly fok could barely understand a word, but charming non the less. A particularly joyful moment also came when I plopped at York train station with my decorative rucksack and freshly tanned skin and bleached hairdo. Some fat bloke holding a tin of lager threw a 20p coin at me and said something like "Fuggin 'Strayin Coont". P.S. I'm not Australian ;-)

  • @ShuckleLord
    @ShuckleLord 5 лет назад +8

    That newscaster should get an Oscar for that pronunciation

    • @jays2877
      @jays2877 3 года назад

      how would anyone know if he'd got it wrong? :>>

  • @beckygriffiths
    @beckygriffiths 5 лет назад +82

    I'm afraid I find labelling "Welsh" as one accent unfair. Northern and Southern accents are utterly different and valley vs town accents are also different

    • @justamagnet5332
      @justamagnet5332 5 лет назад +14

      Atleast Wales got recognized as its own country. Northern Ireland got 'Ulster English'

    • @regraig6869
      @regraig6869 5 лет назад +2

      @@justamagnet5332 So THAT'S what it meant, thank you, I genuinely didnt know what he was on about. And of course the accents in Wales won't all be identical, but I'm guessing not enough for the common ear to differentiate, or if they do, wouldn't be able to identify where about in Wales. I'm sitting here in Aberdeen thinking "generic Scottish accent is hard enough without adding glaswesian speciffically" really? I reckon it's the go to for anyone outside of Scotland and is the easiest in Scottland, I'm sure I could find many non Scots that would try "Generic Scot" and it would be completely crap but closer to Glasgow than anything else, and god forbid anyone attempt Doric :/

    • @user-kq2do8mj9m
      @user-kq2do8mj9m 4 года назад +1

      Becky Griffiths literally live a few miles away from people and we have completely different welsh accents, you can hardly ever find two people with the same sounding accent so to even put us as 1 country is bad enough. At least south and north would’ve been better

    • @ebberman7672
      @ebberman7672 4 года назад +2

      It was clearly said that there are many Welsh accents.

    • @Earthfield-GeopolymerWorld
      @Earthfield-GeopolymerWorld 4 года назад

      jees je whizz, yachhyd da ! Loved going to the notrh west and first langauge is welsh, so many people dont know about Welsh outside, in Europe or elsewhere and I love to tell them about it, say a few words ( as I know some )
      have to look for a better documentary for that analytical detail tho ! it is the same in Norfolk ! Accents change around the whole region ! Also, people think Norfolk and Suffolk sound the same ( which they do to an outsider and in fairness, they are the most two similar accents in the whole of the UK ! BUT - obviously local people can easily spot the differences in pronunciation of some words, sentence structure and slang !

  • @shaunjones6049
    @shaunjones6049 Год назад +2

    Always loved the Bristol accent , as my favourite Bristolian was Cathy Barry the page 3 model, beautiful brown eyes and a full figure a Gorgeous lady.
    Bristol steeped in history, and have produced some of the best Pirates and bare knuckle fighters of all time .

  • @thatcookie4984
    @thatcookie4984 Год назад

    Yo I hope that weather guy got a vacation to recover from saying that word 😂😂😂😂