The Many Accents of London: An Explainer

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  • Опубликовано: 2 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 577

  • @saracen888
    @saracen888 8 дней назад +8

    All hail the RUclips algorithm. This got suggested out of nowhere and was a fantastic insight into the accents of London.
    Keep up the good work

  • @MoodyWatters
    @MoodyWatters Месяц назад +51

    My word, your channel is nothing short of brilliant. Pure, pure pleasure. Cheers.

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад +2

      You are brilliant. Many thanks

    • @Suebee1988
      @Suebee1988 Месяц назад +3

      Can you tell me where in England "ground" becomes to my ear somewhere between "
      "grind" and "groind"?

    • @flowsnake8732
      @flowsnake8732 Месяц назад

      ​@@Suebee1988Never came across that anywhere in England, but I have heard it from people from Belfast. Probably also the surrounding area, although I wouldn't like to guess what radius. :)

    • @Suebee1988
      @Suebee1988 Месяц назад +1

      @@flowsnake8732 It's something I've noticed in the speech of actor Tim Curry and Digging for Britain host Dr. Alice Roberts...if that's helpful at all. :D

    • @monicawarner4091
      @monicawarner4091 Месяц назад +1

      ​​@@Suebee1988 • I used to associate it most of all with the Royals, especially Prince (now King) Charles. It was very pronounced in his younger days. He also says "Pelliss" not Palace, and "hice" for house. Nowadays I associate it with Alice Roberts who I enjoy watching, but not listening to. I know that she was born and brought up in Bristol, and have read that her accent is "soft Bristol," but I only know one person from there, and he doesn't say "groind" when talking about the ground. 😁

  • @Westlake72
    @Westlake72 Месяц назад +170

    Another interesting phenomena is that it is very common in London for male siblings to adopt a working class accent while the sister adapts a more middle class accent.

    • @AndreiBerezin
      @AndreiBerezin Месяц назад +11

      Good girls like bad guys

    • @annabizaro-doo-dah
      @annabizaro-doo-dah Месяц назад +2

      YES!! THIS^^^^^

    • @_InTheBin
      @_InTheBin Месяц назад +35

      east end boys and west end girls 🎶

    • @megb9700
      @megb9700 Месяц назад +2

      This is true in Boston MA USA too.

    • @YouTubingz
      @YouTubingz Месяц назад +16

      Both are self-defence

  • @bernardmaasdijk734
    @bernardmaasdijk734 Месяц назад +19

    Well, there may be one or two commenters griping or trying to rattle your chain, but I love your videos. They're all made with such love for the English language in all its weird and wonderful varieties.

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад +7

      The only comments I remember are ones that touch my heart such as this one. Thanks

  • @waynekerr5645
    @waynekerr5645 Месяц назад +12

    Very interesting Gideon, thanks. I’m a West Londoner in my 60s who moved to East Anglia ten years ago. In my village there’s someone of a similar age, who grew up a mile or two from me and has retained his accent whereas I’ve largely lost mine. It’s quite funny listening to him.

    • @helenking8297
      @helenking8297 8 дней назад +1

      My family grew up in West London and my Gran never lost it, even though they moved out in the 60s.
      My dad also still has a west london twang.
      I've lived in West London myself for 25 years, and just have a bog standard estuary accent
      My daughter was born in West London and has somehow developed an almost RP accent.
      She is so well spoken, no idea where she gets it from

    • @LeafBurrower
      @LeafBurrower 6 дней назад +1

      @@helenking8297 Her peer group? Most people speak like the other kids they grew up with.

  • @lorjon68
    @lorjon68 Месяц назад +20

    Really enjoyable 30 minutes, thanks! I'm one of those people that can distinguish between different London accents and I would be able to do impressions for you but very hard to describe on paper (I guessed number 2 easily)
    I grew up by Southend Airport; the Son of a Scottish Mother and Geordie Father. My Mum always retained her Aberdonian lilt but my Dad found that no one could understand a bleedin word he said at work in Basildon New Town in the late 60's. He was a keen amateur actor and great at accents so he just spoke old RP to get by. Somewhere along the line he stopped speaking Geordie altogether an always sounded like David Niven. My local Essex mates thought he was posh but he was born on the platform of Northumberland mining town railway station.
    I'd say we had a lower middle class upbringing as both my parents worked in office jobs and they bought their semi-detached house. Interestingly my little Brother who made it to university and 100% middle class now thinks he's working class but speaks like an 80's actor (he's another am drammer) I on the other hand ended up in a working class occupation and talk like a typical Essex boy; I was heavily influenced by my peers and adopted the fashion, accent and attitude to go with it. I'd say most families in my small town had a real Essex accent and the few ex East Enders that moved there really stood out to me. Southend main town had a much higher percentage of Cockney migrants and it was no accident that West Ham supporters club was right outside Central Station.
    When I moved to London in the early 90's I noticed a few times South Londoners particularly though I was Australian. My girlfriend at the time was from East Ham and thought I sounded like a nice North London boy. We used to go drinking a lot in pubs from Brick Lane to Bow and back then the real East End accent was there in all it's glory when you got chatting to the regulars. If I had to try and differentiate the sound I'd say their pronunciation was more deliberate and less mumblecore than my East Essex estuary English. The ladies would have a real twang but the gents had a more rounded, enunciated sound. Very different in old Elephant and Castle or Bermondsey pubs, they sounded a bit flatter if that makes any sense on it. My mates who came from out past Hammersmith way sounded different again, sort of like they were in an old Ealing Comedy.
    You can still hear the old East End Cockney dialect every other Saturday at the "London Stadium" but you have to be on a train arriving from Essex to hear it. I think you'd be fascinated. I agree that London accent is now near impossible to pin down as no one sticks to their areas anymore. As for MLE; it will keep spreading the way Estuary did until it becomes uncool for a generation somewhere down the line.
    I guess we all choose our accents according to how we identify ourselves.

  • @davidsterry786
    @davidsterry786 Месяц назад +79

    I grew up in Dagenham with parents from Lambeth and Bermondsey, so should have had a standard working class accent . However, I had a speech defect and had five years of state ‘RP’ speech therapy. This had two effects, the first was no one at school believed my Dad was a docker (some fights ensued) and the other was it was very easy to move into the middle classes and become a Chartered Architect.

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад +21

      A speech defect led you to becoming a Charted Architect. That's a fascinating story.

    • @shryggur
      @shryggur Месяц назад +11

      Not sure what is the moral of the story for me: more kids should have speech defects, dockers' kids should have certicates of their fathers' workplace to keep them out of fights, or I should be very polite with Chartered Architects.
      I'm glad your story had a good ending nonetheless 👍

    • @davidsterry786
      @davidsterry786 Месяц назад +14

      @@shryggur The moral is that you should be polite to everyone as you do not know their circumstances and that no one should be judged by their accent.

    • @richiehoyt8487
      @richiehoyt8487 Месяц назад +1

      Did it make you a better fighter, though?! 😉

    • @strictlyyoutube6881
      @strictlyyoutube6881 Месяц назад +4

      @@shryggur He is showing us what privilege actually is. All you need is an accent upgrade and you become Middle Class.

  • @PakiRaja
    @PakiRaja Месяц назад +12

    18:00 is spot on, given the variety of people you meet as a Londoner, most people have multiple accents, as a child of immigrants the way you speak with your parents is usually more deliberate and towards a ssb accent, when your with your friends you speak MLE, however as you work and interact in more professional environments you modify your MLE to become more "recievable" to non MLE speakers. its not just the vernacular, which commonly changes across other places too, but the accents itself, which i think is fairly unique to London.

    • @t.p.mckenna
      @t.p.mckenna Месяц назад

      'Multiple accents' very true.

  • @leod-sigefast
    @leod-sigefast Месяц назад +35

    A form of MLE is even taking hold in the inner city of other English cities. I am from Manchester and noticed some teenagers speaking in that London MLE twang rather than Mancunian . Maybe it will have its own regional twists but it is definitely spreading. In the suburbs the Manc accent still survives and with people over, say, 30 everywhere. Provisos, like in this video: socio-economic reasons, level of multiculturalism in school, which fashion, subculture or music tribe you adhere to etc., will affect the child's degree of adopting a certain accent.

    • @dariusdoodoo
      @dariusdoodoo Месяц назад +1

      speaking MLE is the mark of an idiot

    • @overlordnat
      @overlordnat Месяц назад

      Absolutely, there are MLE speakers, or at least those heavily influenced by MLE, in both Coventry and Birmingham. You can often tell if someone is white, black or Asian too by their voice (that’s not to say that there aren’t many white people who sound ‘black’ or black people who sound ‘white’ but there are differences).

    • @benfisher1376
      @benfisher1376 Месяц назад +5

      I don't like that accent at all. But you're right it is prevelant

    • @darenn71
      @darenn71 Месяц назад +9

      I hate it. It's prevalent in Luton, and I've heard it in certain parts of Nottingham. Seems to be spoken by "wannabe" gangster youths.

    • @benfisher1376
      @benfisher1376 Месяц назад

      @@darenn71 so sad 😂

  • @Westlake72
    @Westlake72 Месяц назад +43

    17:56 This point is absolutely crucial to understanding how Londoners speak - apart from the very, very working class or even underclass (horrible term I know) or the very upper upper middle class pretty much ALL Londoners code switch depending on context, mood, and social situation.

    • @AnnaAnna-uc2ff
      @AnnaAnna-uc2ff Месяц назад +6

      We need a video on code switching!

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад +9

      I agree on that point. Many linguistic chameleons in London.

    • @annabizaro-doo-dah
      @annabizaro-doo-dah Месяц назад +3

      In South London we have people that couldn't code switch if they tried😂 They also use words most people wouldn't understand (rhyming slang but new ones arrive all the time). Funny thing is these "under class" South Londoners are richer than the people like me who they would term posh with my (white)kids speaking the multi cultural London accent which many youngsters speak picking it up off their mates.(Example Aks for ask which began 60 years back in the Indian community & Carribbean kids picked it up from them)

    • @proximacentaur1654
      @proximacentaur1654 Месяц назад +2

      Yep thank you that is so very true. I code switch in the same sentence to keep everyone on their toes.

    • @hythekent
      @hythekent Месяц назад +3

      @@annabizaro-doo-dah ‘Aks’ for ask is older than that. Aks was correct and common pre-Chaucer. It stems from Germanic/Saxon/(choose your invader). Originally it was ‘aksen’. People criticise the current use of ‘aks’ instead of ‘ask’. But the criticism is not valid

  • @guillaumeromain6694
    @guillaumeromain6694 Месяц назад +1

    Brilliant content! I always feel good when watching your videos Gideon! Thank you so much !

  • @yahouallavoix4512
    @yahouallavoix4512 24 дня назад

    ever so brilliant. Thanks a lot for all these enlightening bits of information. I‘m German and have loved English since early childhood 💚

  • @prof.emanuelpaiva
    @prof.emanuelpaiva 27 дней назад

    It is quite good to pay attention in each word you say. Thank you so much. ❤

  • @isabelatence7035
    @isabelatence7035 Месяц назад +5

    Excellent fruity metaphor, Romanian people are a surprise in London for me, Portuguese people are from Portugal and Brazil? I'm practicing pronunciation on the ELSA app, I bit my tongue twice, the cool thing about the app is that we can use English from England and American, I really like it, your grandmother is quite angry, legitimate grandmother 😍 I'm curious about London's cultural mix, amazing video, the best you always produce. Gideon thanks a million!🤗

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад +1

      I just checked the stats. About 60,000 Brazilian residents in London. Probably a lot more if you include those studying and passing through. I hope the Elsa app is working for you. I added an extra bit of the video with a family story on the Patreon page. Many thanks as always.

    • @isabelatence7035
      @isabelatence7035 Месяц назад

      ​@@LetThemTalkTVI didn't imagine this number of Brazilians😮 Running to Patreon now!

  • @torpedience
    @torpedience Месяц назад +13

    Brilliant video...chimes with 45 years of collecting accents. A couple of things: I think it's an over simplification to say Cockneys moved out of the East End and immigrants moved in. In fact migrants settled, and still settle, all over London, the South East, the UK. Secondly, MLE as spoken in the clip, retains some cockney features, but surely is most notably influenced by Caribbean dialect. The vowels you mentioned are very Jamaican. I'm 60, speak a variant of SSBE, and can "access" cockney as a credible second dialect. Now, I hardly hear cockney and everyone I know under 40 is moving towards MLE. Although John B is a Londoner (Peckham, I believe) variants of MLE are common around the UK and I wonder whether, like "posh", it is not necessarily a regional dialect, but one associated with youth, music cultures and diversity. My white kids are bi- or tri-dialectal: SSBE, Cockney, MLE. My black son, a few years younger, is MLE through and through, with access to SSBE for formal situations...

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад +1

      Very interesting insight. Thanks

    • @jackiedelvalle
      @jackiedelvalle Месяц назад

      He's wrong. What he describes as a London accent is what we South Londoners (Croydon) would call a Cockney accent. Very different vowel sounds from us.

  • @QueenofKuti
    @QueenofKuti Месяц назад +8

    Great breakdown. MLE deffo originated from the multicultural (predominantly Black) working class council estates in south London and was heavily influenced by Jamaican patois. I was born in the early 80s and privileged to have seen this go from a form of English that was once looked down upon and stereotyped to now being 'cool' and acceptable especially in sports and entertainment. I believe the rise in internet access in the 90s and Social Media in 00s has a big part to play in the spread of MLE.

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад

      Thank you for your insight.

    • @laus7987
      @laus7987 9 дней назад

      MLE is definitely influenced by Jamaican patois where some Asian groups have adopted in East London etc

  • @julezyme
    @julezyme 17 дней назад +2

    My Saaaf London archetype is Danny from "Withnail and I" and his Camberwell Carrot. I was in a band with a guy who, to my ear, sounded just like Danny and later learned that he grew up working class in Balham and then moved over to Streatham by way of Denmark Hill.

    • @julezyme
      @julezyme 17 дней назад

      It's like Cockney with a mawf fuw a mahbuws

  • @Coco-vx2nr
    @Coco-vx2nr Месяц назад +3

    Had no idea about the RP connotation vs SSBE. Thank you from Florida

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад

      Thanks for your comment. I'm not saying what others should say but personally I don't like "RP".

  • @sugerbear586
    @sugerbear586 Месяц назад +2

    Grew up on the border of Hackney / Leyton and i had no idea that the sound of the bow bells could be heard that far away. Amazing

    • @stevehaddon151
      @stevehaddon151 Месяц назад

      Back when Samuel pepyes was roaming around you could hear the boss bells at Highgate

    • @t.p.mckenna
      @t.p.mckenna Месяц назад

      The science on this is very dodgy. There were once 23 churches in the city of London from the Strand to Poplar. They'd all have chimed at the same time.

    • @grahamjonathan762
      @grahamjonathan762 Месяц назад

      ​@@stevehaddon151Boss?😂

  • @jafar4marva
    @jafar4marva 19 дней назад +2

    MLE is much more widespead now in all of London and beyond, than East London. It also has a bit of a posh twang a lot of the time.
    You might like to do a survey on the increasing use of the random interjection 'like' and to a lesser extent 'wo-lah'.

  • @mrebk3358
    @mrebk3358 18 дней назад +3

    11:32 quick distinction here for you to maybe research. Even amongst MLE speakers, the MLE speakers from East London have always been distinct to those from South or North London. For example comparing the rappers Wiley(East) & Dizzee Rascal(East) compared to Stormzy(South) & Giggs (South). There is a clear vocal difference, even proving there is in fact an East London cockney accent, one that even bleeds into MLE speaking East London natives.

  • @InstrumentalsBeats
    @InstrumentalsBeats Месяц назад +21

    MLE developed in South London (home of the largest Afro-Caribbean & African communities) as much or moreso than in East London

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад

      Thanks for your comment.

    • @orbtastic
      @orbtastic Месяц назад +4

      I find it interesting listening to a lot of the old DJs from the rave/DnB scene, particularly old interviews. Goldie famously is not from London but his accent has changed a little over the years but he still has that brum twang mixed with MLE. I had family that were from Surrey (inside the M25) that sounded London to me but they ended up speaking differently to each other. The MCs in the scene mostly came from Dancehall so there was a lot of Patois mixed in but if you listen to them speaking now I wouldn't call it MLE but it has what I would class the genesis of it in there.

    • @THuk44444
      @THuk44444 Месяц назад +5

      The older 2nd or 3rd gen black guys in London mostly just speak with the standard local accent they grew up in.
      Then at some point say under 40s or under 45s you get everyone (not really related to any particular community) speaking with this new accent or dialect even.
      West Indians had been here for decades by then so I don't know where it came from, possibly from the US and how some people started talking there as much as anything around here

    • @annabizaro-doo-dah
      @annabizaro-doo-dah Месяц назад

      @@InstrumentalsBeats 100% that was my first thought, it comes from Jamaican (with a bit of Indian ie Aks for Ask is originally Indian picked up by Carribbean kids) I don't know where he got east London from. In fact in the last 30 years it's been the preserve of the wealthy.

    • @annabizaro-doo-dah
      @annabizaro-doo-dah Месяц назад

      @@THuk44444 It's a mixture of Carribbean and Indian, with the Australian question mark thingy at the end of sentences. I very much grew up around it's genesis.

  • @bordershader
    @bordershader Месяц назад +2

    Fantastic! First vid of yours I've come across - top class sir, top class!
    I'm a big language and accent fan, and have lived all my life in the South East (50+ years). I've heard directly the effects of the "Blitz migration" in Bucks, Berks, Surrey and Kent accents - thousands and thousands of Londoners were displaced and shipped out to the Home Counties and now each of those counties bears the imprint in their accent.
    I remember reading a thing about where EastEnders actors were from, and after then could tell the Essex actors from the real Londoners. Essex is what I'd call Estuary, it's hard to describe but it's almost like an exaggerated, put-on Cockney accent. Real Londoners do pronounce their Hs, for instance - not as crisply as a posh person, but it's there, like your clip of Michael Caine.
    I loved your description of the L disappearing into oo as well, the Lipoostree made me crack up! At the other end of the scale is the voice announcer on the Central Line who is so dainty when she pronounces Leyton 😆
    New subscriber for sure.

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад +2

      Many thanks for your interesting comments. I'm glad you liked the video. Essex may well have a unique accent I'd just like to see it defined as they sound quite similar to other working class Londoners.

    • @overlordnat
      @overlordnat Месяц назад

      @@LetThemTalkTVmy sister’s ex is from Essex and he said that while people in both London and Essex say ‘mental’ as ‘men’oh’ the stress is on the second syllable of the word in Essex and the first one in London. There’s a vast difference in syllable length between hoe he said it normally and the impression he gave of a Londoner (I don’t know how accurate his theory is though, personally)

  • @willhovell9019
    @willhovell9019 3 дня назад

    Brilliant. I grew up in a lower middle class North West London and it sounds similar to your accent. Are you from NW London too? Good advice on the use of terms RP and Estuary.Far more complex than one thinks. Well done

  • @Patricio_Marcel
    @Patricio_Marcel 23 дня назад +5

    The census at 21:05 is super interesting. I speak English, Spanish and Portuguese and what is great about some pockets of London is that I can legitimately spend 24 hours here, shop, eat and party without having to speak a word of English! Also great breakdown overall!

  • @Syl-Vee
    @Syl-Vee Месяц назад +7

    Before the 1950s many 'Cockneys' I knew were born at home. So the presence of maternity hospitals is probably somewhat irrelevant to chances of being born within the sound of Bow Bells. There was a Cockney 'language' and culture in addition to an accent. I guess that's all either been appropriated or vanished along with longstanding families in the area, and as the sound of Bow bells got drowned out.

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад

      Thanks for your comment. Yes, that's really my point. You may have got a lot of babies being born within the sound of Bow Bells in the past but it's not really relevant in the 21st century. Sure the East End was a whole culture but there is far more mobility these days.

  • @stonewbie5981
    @stonewbie5981 Месяц назад +1

    A fantastic video! I truly enjoy these types of topics. I'm American and I the accents in London, and the UK in general, are completely alien to me. I only know what I've been exposed to in classic black-n-white films or BBC comedy (or the classic Dr Who series.) Excellent video!

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад +3

      Thanks glad you liked the video. I hope the London accent are a little clearer now.

  • @skydelight
    @skydelight 27 дней назад +1

    23:25 again, bare in mind, John Boyega is a British-Born person from South London with Nigerian parents, and the most MLE is heavily influenced by the Jamaican accent and Patois, along with various Pidgin and Creole languages, as well as Asian, mainly Indian, accents.
    Linguistics is so fascinating and nuanced. I love it.

  • @raychat2816
    @raychat2816 Месяц назад +3

    Thank you for this exposé 😊, the first time I’d met the idea of different U.K. English accents, was perhaps in 1342, when I was 11 or so 😂 and I’d watched a live representation of Cats and noticed each character had a different accent as well as personality, and somehow didn’t think it was a character trait but this specific artist’s accent, it just clicked for me right there and then 😊.
    Today it’s quite interesting to see how accents we know evolve as well …

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад

      Interesting, thanks

    • @BritishBeachcomber
      @BritishBeachcomber Месяц назад +6

      If you were around in 1342, even Shakespeare would not understand you 😅

  • @keramiroberts6695
    @keramiroberts6695 Месяц назад +1

    Am a northerner, really enjoyed this

  • @alanbudgen2672
    @alanbudgen2672 Месяц назад +3

    Brighton is a funny one. Very much like London, but subtly different. In between the two cities of London and Brighton, Surrey and Sussex accents are quite different... but are only just clinging on.

  • @t.p.mckenna
    @t.p.mckenna Месяц назад +2

    I can't claim to be a Londoner, though I have lived here over fifty years, having arrived with my family when I was nine in 1972. So, some reflections ...
    ** 'Estuary' I actually consider as a good catch all term. It doesn't have to be as specific as people living on the river, because it suggests an accurate picture of the post-war spread of the city's population as the original Old Kent Road mob headed out to Gillingham and Rochester, while the Mile End/Commercial lot migrated to Romford and the new towns. I sometimes joke that the vowel sounds have become ever more elongated, the further out families have moved.
    Spare a thought, by the way, for the sad erosion of the original rural Essex and Kent accents, trampled underfoot by the fleeing Londoners, or should that be, in Kevin Livingstone parlance ... 'Lunnenners'.
    ** Now, this video has been fascinating because it has given me an insight into what I regard as a very changed London accent. In some quarters, I'd almost call it a parody of its former self, the obvious example being the 'Eastenders' patois. When I hear Danny Dyer, for example, I'm hearing trace notes of Dick Van Dyke. I'm not for a moment suggesting he's remotely inauthentic, but its an indication perhaps of later generations clinging to the lost sounds of their grandparents. Bob Hoskins was an early example of this phenomenon because he grew up in and about Islington, yet when my father once shared a dressing room with him, before his great fame, he claimed to be a son of Bermondsey. Well, you can't be both and I think his somewhat exaggerated 'sarf lunnen' persona was an act of rebellion from a strict lower middle class father who wanted to follow him into accountancy.
    ** So, if I say the London accent has changed, how was it different from when I arrived. One of the first things to say is that Londoners were far more reserved as a population than they have become. Way ahead of the mobile era, there were no loud conversations conducted on street corners, rows were confined to indoors, and commuters boarded buses and trains in the stoniest of silences. In shops, indeed, a 'thank you' at the till could be gotten down to a single syllable, 'q'.
    I should say this was growing up in the North London suburb of Finchley which was a very genteel kind of a place, though not especially posh, or smart. Then, as far as I'm concerned, there was a a North London accent. I know this because of listening to my older brother. You see, coming from Ireland, our accents made us stand out terribly, and he hated that. He wanted to blend in and speak the same as his new mates when he'd be on the terraces at White Hart Lane. Hearing on the phone, we thought it was hilarious, though understandable; but yes, the North London access was softer and more restrained, compared to across the river or the East End. It was also informed by the different ethic groups of the times which were Italians, Greeks, Cypriots and Jews.
    ** A final observation. One of the big changes to the London accent has to be the sheer volubility of Londoners these days. Accents, it seems to me, are almost projected as a form of identity tag. Like a badge, or in some cases where it is like an alternative identifier. The phenomenon of what has been called 'jafakin' is an example, though I think that's on the wain now.
    As for where the accent goes from here, I'd actually propose a return to elocution classes ... [INTERNET STANDS BACK AND SCREAMS IN HORROR] ... I say this because I think it is important for young Londoners who are heading into the work place to have the versatility of a more standardised and neutral accent. Equally, that they should be able to project with clear and articulate diction. It's nothing, by the way, to do with class. It's all about effective communication and connecting with as many groups as possible.
    ** PS. The Bow Bells business. Just about everyone needs to take a rain check on this one, because in the old city of London, there were some some 23 different churches. Usually with their own peel, but with all of them going at once (allowing for difference of clocks), could someone five miles away really have picked out Bow?

  • @user-cc2ux9ew1r
    @user-cc2ux9ew1r Месяц назад +1

    Cheers gaffer !
    Ave a good and proper weekend.
    Stay mellow .

  • @Westlake72
    @Westlake72 Месяц назад +10

    Re: North South East West London accents being different: It is definitely is a real thing. I hope someone does a youtube deep dive on the one but just as an instance think about how a South Londoner says the word South: 'Saaarf' - an extended 'a' sound and more of a pronounced 'r' sound than any other Londoner would use - so basically it has a hint of West country to it. Another example would be how the singer Jason Kay /Jamiroquai speaks - that is DEFINITY a West London accent and no one raised in any other part of London would speak like that.

    • @davidostrowski679
      @davidostrowski679 Месяц назад +2

      I'm from Feltham. I haven't lived in the UK for years. I went back to Feltham 2 years ago and got talking to a guy outside Tesco and my teenage accent returned, which is completely different from 'fancy' west London or places like Kingston. I can't even fake that accent anymore. My point is yes there's absolutely differences between different regions of London

    • @PhatInAHat
      @PhatInAHat Месяц назад

      That still depends where in South London - most people from Wimbledon or Dulwich would not pronounce 'South' like that.

    • @Westlake72
      @Westlake72 Месяц назад +5

      @@PhatInAHat Well yeah, I think the middle class southern accent remains pretty much the same - it's in more working class accents that have the different flavours.

    • @jlucie
      @jlucie Месяц назад

      I left London 20 years ago and could also detect some accent and slang differences between the London areas, lost it after a few years away from it. The London accent has probably become more homgenous now anyway.

    • @yogajaxx8299
      @yogajaxx8299 Месяц назад

      Agree! They are (or were) different. I would love someone to investigate this and find and compare south/north/west/east London speakers to assess the differences. That would be so fascinating. And not just the most pronounced working class accents either.

  • @allyburnett7189
    @allyburnett7189 16 дней назад +1

    I understand your objection to RP, my problem with SSBE is it assumes the talker comes from the South of England - in reality this accent increasingly spills into the North, Scotland even Ireland and beyond.

  • @nats2976
    @nats2976 Месяц назад +6

    MLE probably started in South London due to the large Jamaican community there and it spread out to the rest of London.

    • @grahamjonathan762
      @grahamjonathan762 Месяц назад +1

      It did

    • @tremarley9648
      @tremarley9648 Месяц назад +1

      Correct

    • @grahamjonathan762
      @grahamjonathan762 Месяц назад +1

      @@nats2976 let me expand on that.bThere were kids who were white speaking patois in the 70's

    • @studentoflife3501
      @studentoflife3501 Месяц назад +2

      Started everywhere in London. Harlesden Tottenham Hackney etc has more influences than 99% of south London. Be specific you mean Brixton. As Croydon Greenwich twickenham etc had no influence comparable to these communities outside of south London.

    • @grahamjonathan762
      @grahamjonathan762 Месяц назад

      @@studentoflife3501 Brixton and Stockwell to be specific
      Both had older Carribbean communities than both Hackney and Tottenham

  • @pixie3458
    @pixie3458 Месяц назад

    So interesting.. And what a lovely voice your accent coach has

  • @DMC888
    @DMC888 Месяц назад +1

    Many years ago I started a new job in central London. I noticed the guy on the desk opposite me sounded just like my cousin. I later learned that he came from Rickmansworth and my cousin was just 4 miles away in Northwood, North West London.
    I think there could me many more regional nuances to the London accent.

  • @ConsHugs
    @ConsHugs Месяц назад +3

    I'd love someone to do an explainer on the difference between the "posh" accent described here and what I'd call the "new" posh accent spoken by posh people in their Mid-30s and younger. For example Josh Berry (instagram comedian) and anyone on Made in Chelsea speak differently to Boris Johnson and Judy Dench. The first two would pronounce "sick" in a way that is somewhere between "seh-k" and "suh-k", where as Boris and Judy would pronounce the "i" and "u" as most other southerners would ("sih-k" and "suh-k"). Anyone agree?

  • @MarkWhitter-qm6ef
    @MarkWhitter-qm6ef Месяц назад +1

    I grew up in a Hertfordshire new town in the ‘60s and ‘70s, long before MLE existed, but the working class accent was a lot like North London, as many moved there after the slum clearances. My brother lives in Wallington, on the London/Surrey border, and the accent down there is nothing like the same. “Ge’ ahht ov mahh pahhb”.

  • @tonybaker55
    @tonybaker55 Месяц назад +3

    I was born in Sutton, then in Surrey, but by the time I was a teenager, it became a London Borough. My accent is probably a local one to that area, as there were few people from other parts of the country living there. My sister was sent for elocution lessons and has a "posher" accent than I do, but not really SSBE.
    I ended up working with Americans, Aussies and Kiwis for a number of years and when I returned to visit the UK, my cousin told me I sounded like an Aussie! I found that people in Bedford sounded more Londoner than I did and when I moved to the Brighton area, again the accent was strange to me and sounded different to that I grew up with. I am sure there are subtle variations between major towns across quite a small area.

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад +4

      Fascinating insight. My own view is that there needs to be more research on variations between small towns. There may well be differences but it's difficult to put your finger on it.

    • @tonybaker55
      @tonybaker55 Месяц назад +2

      @@LetThemTalkTV I agree that these days, it would be far more difficult. I always think it is fascinating when you hear your own voice recorded. Our ancestors would never have heard their own voices.

    • @orbtastic
      @orbtastic Месяц назад +1

      An ex of mine was from Watford but her nan was from the East End. She had a proper gor blimey accent that she still had (this was late 90s) and she was rehoused there when bombed out in WW2. A lot of those places round there were highly populated with displaced East Enders during/after the war and a lot of these older villages/towns were massively enlarged as part of the post WW2 "new towns" planning. I used to live in Hemel (apsley), which was a weird mix of really old, old and new (ish). I can't speak for the other new towns in Hertfordshire and Essex but I assume the same thing happened. My ex's grandad was a local of Watford and had a completely different accent, she used to refer to it as "farmer" so I assume it was far more rural and had some "ooh aar" to it.

  • @chrisrovai9625
    @chrisrovai9625 Месяц назад +1

    Great vid. Finally someone confirms what I've told students for ages about Cockney- it is indeed just the working class accent of the whole of London, never bought the Bow Bells nonsense. I'm from south west London and in the 70s you heard hard-core Cockney everywhere but at school we were told to speak properly, though not everyone was able to as the Cockney was so strong. I still wince when I have to say butter etc properly for students.

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад +1

      Thanks for you comment. very interesting to read your thoughts. Same for me at school they tried to teach me "proper" English - with varying success.

    • @PhatInAHat
      @PhatInAHat Месяц назад

      While the accents are similar, or maybe even practically identical, to be 'a Cockney' was still a reference to being from the East End. Unless you were regularly using 'Cockney rhyming slang', then what you would have been speaking in at School in SW London would have just been working class London English spoken by SW Londoners (as opposed to, say, working class English spoken by Cockneys, or Cockney rhyming slang spoken by Cockneys).

    • @chrisrovai9625
      @chrisrovai9625 Месяц назад +1

      Agree, being a real from Cockney from the East End is one thing. I just meant that I don't see much difference from the working class London accent ( with the odd bit of rhyming slang) you hear or used to hear from all parts of London

  • @VesaGuardian
    @VesaGuardian Месяц назад +3

    For decades I've been working hard to become better with my RP. Now I hear that all the hardships I went through were in vain, it was SSBE all along. And nobody bothered to tell me before...

  • @jafar4marva
    @jafar4marva 19 дней назад

    Failed the 'clips' test.
    You are right. Dame Judy Dench is from Yawk.
    You referred to the incomplete glottal stop as in Bu'/Bu.
    MLE however tends to sound more like the "incorrect" glottal stop. In fact it is pronounced more like bo (as in top) than bu

  • @royphillips7435
    @royphillips7435 Месяц назад +4

    It's all Mockney now thanks to film directors , writers and musicians since the mid twentieth century!

  • @lornaoconnell5264
    @lornaoconnell5264 Месяц назад +6

    I'm an east Londoner and I always recognise it by the speed. It's faster than South or West and just a bit lower in pitch than North London

  • @markbriggs5531
    @markbriggs5531 Месяц назад

    I'm 35 seconds in and I'm so looking forward to watching this!

  • @archersreview
    @archersreview Месяц назад +1

    Really good video, I grew up in London in the late 70's/80's. The section on the London accent very closely describes the older people I knew growing up, however I would say I have lots of elements of MLE in my speach.

  • @nonsequitor
    @nonsequitor Месяц назад +1

    Born and raised inside the M25, still can't place your accent when you say "accent" 😂. Great video btw 🙏

  • @andyjay729
    @andyjay729 Месяц назад +2

    American here; when you said "Mohegan", were you referring to the hairstyle commonly referred to as a "Mohawk" here?

  • @ChrisWalker-fq7kf
    @ChrisWalker-fq7kf Месяц назад +1

    I think the London Underground station announcements are one of the last remnants of old RP. I swear she pronounces Warren Street as if it was Wharren Street (and of course pronounces the 'h' in the 'wh'). Must have been recorded a few years ago.

  • @Westlake72
    @Westlake72 Месяц назад +2

    Btw in Ian Nairn's 1966 classic Nairn's London he talks about having a drink with real Cockneys in Fulham. Disregarding what Fulham represents today it seems that Cockney then just meant a working class Londoner - so looks like the idea of Cockneys being East Londoners might be quite recent if so it would be really interesting to find out where this idea came from. I have a feeling it my have emerged from the blitz and though obviusly 1966 is a long time after the Blitz Nairn's understanding if the term of the term would have predicted it.

    • @lornaoconnell5264
      @lornaoconnell5264 Месяц назад

      I think it was a class perspective. Cockney meant sounding working class to other classes. But I was definitely brought up believing that it meant born within the sound of Bow Bells and still get slightly irritated when Michael Caine is described as a Cockney. To me he has a distinctive drawn out South London accent.

  • @catmadwoman6317
    @catmadwoman6317 Месяц назад +1

    I'm originally from NW London (Essex for years now) and no good at spotting where other London accents come from but I can spot a NW London accent straight off the bat. Don't know why but it's music to my ears, though I'm guessing I'm talking about an accent from 1950s to 2000s. Accents are now all over the place.

    • @nattystable
      @nattystable 16 дней назад

      I’m exactly the same. I can’t explain why it’s so distinctive but as soon as I hear it, it’s so comforting to hear!

  • @bananenmusli2769
    @bananenmusli2769 Месяц назад +1

    English is a very diverse language and accents are still very common. I love English for that.
    Sadly in my native language (German), mostly old people still speak with an accent or dialect. It's dying out, especially in the cities.
    Only in some rural areas of eastern Germany or Bavaria young people grow up with their local accent but that will probably be gone in one or two more generations.

  • @dannystaples2832
    @dannystaples2832 Месяц назад +34

    To say that we Londoners couldn’t recognise different London accents is unfair. I grew up in Streatham, south London . In our teens , in the60s, ‘going up West’ of a weekend we could sort of tell north London, eastenders, and south London accents apart.
    If a linguist were to have asked us (unlikely) what were the differences , we would have had no idea how to respond.
    IT WAS INTUITION! - Maybe north London had a more nasel Mediterranean and Jewish twang, East? Old school Dickensian cockney, Sawf London? A higher pitched whine. Ha! Trubba not.

    • @andybaker2456
      @andybaker2456 Месяц назад +14

      I totally agree. I'm also a born and bred South Londoner and spent my formative years growing up in Battersea. I can hear different London accents, but couldn't describe how they differ! One thing I will say though is that as soon as you tell someone you're from South London, their first response is often to say, "Oh, SAAAF London". But I think the way we pronounce south is more like "saayuf", not "saaf".

    • @jlucie
      @jlucie Месяц назад +4

      Yea this is my experience too for the 90s and early naughties.

    • @lon3don
      @lon3don Месяц назад +1

      New Yorkers have similar accents between five boroughs and even within some boroughs and Noo Joisey.
      The immigrants that brought them come from the same places as Londoners.

    • @annabizaro-doo-dah
      @annabizaro-doo-dah Месяц назад +4

      @@dannystaples2832 I can still tell a real sarf London accent (not MLE which we also have

    • @annabizaro-doo-dah
      @annabizaro-doo-dah Месяц назад +6

      @@andybaker2456 Now THATS a real south London accent...Saayuf. Exactly! Also, what about all the nutso rhyming slang no one can keep up with?!!

  • @onelovepeace65
    @onelovepeace65 Месяц назад +1

    Moved from Manchester to Croydon “ Do you want a game of Paul, Paul” ? What ! You mean Pool

  • @mikes3756
    @mikes3756 Месяц назад +1

    Maybe there should be a collection of how railways announcers pronounce their station before being homogenized. My home town is Southampton and I’m long gone. But when I lived there the announcer said
    Thi i sow am un shtashun

  • @operationumbrella230
    @operationumbrella230 Месяц назад

    I enjoy your video every time. Fantastic work! I respect & admire how much work and effort you put in making your videos. By the way, I am guessing that “innit “ will be used worldwide very soon because you don’t have to think about subject, its number, time, or positive/negative etc, which would be perfect for young people ! lol . Japanese language has “deshou(writing)” or “janai(verbal)” for the expression and you add them at the end of a sentence regardless of subject/time/number just like “innit”. 30 years ago I learned the expression and the grammar in English class. I hated that I had to use the brain even to the end. I still hate it! I cannot remember what I was going to do a minute ago. I cannot remember what things are called and call everything “that one”. Speaking a sentence and remembering all those variants feel like too much work for me.

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад

      Thanks, I'm glad you liked the video. Personally, I use "innit" to mean "isn't it" that's fine but when it's used to mean "aren't you", "can't he" etc that's beyond the pale.

  • @mikes3756
    @mikes3756 Месяц назад

    I was born within the sound of bow bells. And Alan Sugar was clearly the answer. I speak standard southern with regional variations

  • @andyjay729
    @andyjay729 Месяц назад +2

    2:24 I didn't realize people said "oop" instead of "up" as far south as Oxfordshire.

    • @localboys7449
      @localboys7449 Месяц назад

      yep thats the Oxfordshire farmer accent

  • @dianahigham8944
    @dianahigham8944 Месяц назад

    thank you! very interesting!

  • @NelsonsAvenger
    @NelsonsAvenger Месяц назад +13

    I'm from inner South London and the number of different accents I hear are amazing. If I go down to the bottom of my street I'm surrounded by MLE and cockney, if I go up my street, just ten minutes from the bottom, it's all RP and posh accents. Maybe that's why my own accent is so weird...
    I'm a high-ranking cadet in the Sea Cadets, therefore when I'm speaking to officers I sound INCREDIBLY posh and middle-class without actively trying. But when I'm on the phone to my friends or in a corner shop I'm bog-standard working class (my friends all say I sound posh but I think that's psychological, because I'm from the 'city paved with gold' and all that, and they're largely not. They probably think everyone lives in like Piccadilly lol!). And when I'm pissed off my cockney roots come majestically to the surface!
    Fascinating video, thanks! :)
    PS My dad's grandmother was apparently very aspirational-middle-class, and he says that she pronounced Highgate (near where she lived) like the Tube announcer, more like Higg't than Highgate.

    • @NelsonsAvenger
      @NelsonsAvenger Месяц назад

      @@polpotman No, I am a high-ranking cadet
      (Or should that be no, I am an 'igh-rankin' c'det! Lolll)
      :)

    • @NelsonsAvenger
      @NelsonsAvenger Месяц назад

      @@The_white_adonis London

    • @breakfreak3181
      @breakfreak3181 Месяц назад

      I'm from the same area (birn and bred). My accents all over the place!

  • @ahartify
    @ahartify Месяц назад

    I picked no. 3. No 2 (Lord Sugar)was an ironed-over East London accent.

  • @PhatInAHat
    @PhatInAHat Месяц назад +1

    "There are no maternity hospitals within earshot of Bow Bells and there hasn't been one since the 1950s" - What's your source on that assertion? Royal London Hospital on Whitechapel Road has a maternity ward and is only 1.5 miles away. The map you showed displays only the sound with the wind from the south west. A wind from directly west could stretch it to there, as even on that view it is only just out of range.
    Plus the map is as of 2012 - quite a lot of the development of skyscrapers further east in the City like The Gherkin started in the 2000s, so it seems eminently believable that at least until the 90s the Royal London still fit the definition.

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад

      Ok thanks, that's a good point. Though even if you include it it's still a long way from the original 1617 quote about the sound of Bow Bells which would have carried 5 miles at that time.

    • @joanneorwell9680
      @joanneorwell9680 Месяц назад

      There was the Maternity Hospital in Commercial Road

  • @wdazza
    @wdazza Месяц назад

    Having grown up in Devon and now living in Australia, I am fascinated by accents,. I remember someone telling me that Australians often using tripthongs instead of dipthongs in such words as sport which becomes spor-or-t.😀

  • @frankhooper7871
    @frankhooper7871 Месяц назад +5

    Sadiq Khan's accent (which doesn't sound working class to me) sounded most like my Nan's accent - Nan was born in Warren Street, St Pancras, and grew up just around the corner in Whitfield Street. My grandfather, however, had a much "posher" accent and a very erudite vocabulary, despite being born to a working class family.

  • @Nooticus
    @Nooticus Месяц назад

    Pretty nice video, though I dont fully agree about the Cockney thing. Nowadays, as you say, the Cockney accent has somewhat transformed into the ‘Essex Accent’ which is distinctly different to any of the ones you presented in this video. You can hear different variants of it in people like Tommy Skinner (from The Apprentice fame) and the tiktoker ‘Beavo’

  • @martinlaino7136
    @martinlaino7136 Месяц назад

    So interesting! Fascinating! I don´t know if you´ve already done one on the Mancunian accent. The other day I was listening to former Oasis singer Liam Gallagher and his accent is just wow. I couldn´t understand a single word of what he was saying lol
    Cheers Gideon!

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад +3

      Glad you liked the video. Liam Gallagher simply doesn't make any sense. It doesn't matter what accent he speaks.

    • @martinlaino7136
      @martinlaino7136 Месяц назад

      @@LetThemTalkTV lol🤣

  • @ChrisMetaFootballTV
    @ChrisMetaFootballTV Месяц назад

    Grea' stahf !!!
    What accent would I have if I mixed London with SSBE ??
    Fanks!!

    • @TheDestineyy
      @TheDestineyy 18 дней назад

      Just a London accent obviously

  • @DrWhoFanUK
    @DrWhoFanUK Месяц назад

    I think that there is a definite south London accent that has a particular strained, nasal quality to it (e.g. Jools Holland, Ken Livingstone). Michael Caine is an interesting one because even though he is from Elephant and Castle his accent seemed to be very Cockney especially in the 60s, which may of course have been deliberate.
    One of the best things about being a Londoner is that you are surrounded by millions of unique stories that go to make up this incredible mix. It can be exhausting but it’s never dull.

    • @jackiedelvalle
      @jackiedelvalle Месяц назад

      Yeah he's wrong. He's not distinguishing between the subtle differences in the vowel sounds. South Londoners do not pronounce house aas.

  • @erg-u9n
    @erg-u9n Месяц назад +1

    Mle is from south - lambeth-Southwark-Croydon

  • @helenamcginty4920
    @helenamcginty4920 Месяц назад +6

    Re Cockney. My mum from Stepney, near Middlesex Street said they were 'bloody' cockneys. Closer to the docks, so poorer and rougher, they were 'bleedin' cockneys.
    She was critiquing Shaw's Pygmalian's Eliza Doolittle's English. She held that she would have said 'bleedin' not 'bloody'.

  • @JonCookeBridge
    @JonCookeBridge Месяц назад

    I think it’s much harder to tell people apart these days. 30 years ago, when I first moved to London there was a very clear distinction between East-end and South London. Ray Winstone v Michael Caine, basically.

  • @walkfarm1
    @walkfarm1 Месяц назад +2

    I describe the last accent as people living I. Croydon who think they were born n the Caribbean. The young man on the Curry’s advert drives me mad.

  • @susanstein6604
    @susanstein6604 Месяц назад +5

    It was so hard to pronounce the r at the end of car that you had to use a rolling r sound which doesn’t exist in American English.

    • @ChrisWalker-fq7kf
      @ChrisWalker-fq7kf Месяц назад

      It is hard actually. It's one reason why English find it hard to do American accents convincingly. We just don't know how to end words on an 'r', we are used to having it lead into some other sound. When it's hanging off the end of a word it has to be a much smaller more subtle sound than we are used to. Just a hint of a 'r' really, you just start to form the sound and then stop. I can't do it.

  • @spraguesean
    @spraguesean Месяц назад

    I do like your channel! However, with this one it would have been nice to get more and longer examples of cockney, MLE etc, rather than just middle class speakers talking about those accents. Keep up the good works 😊

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад

      - 'lower' middle class, please! There are 7 clips in the video. I have to be careful about longer clips as they could be subject to a copyright claim. You walk a fine line when using media in RUclips videos. Thanks for you comment.

    • @spraguesean
      @spraguesean Месяц назад +1

      @@LetThemTalkTV I’d say you’re upper lower middle class (laugh emoji) !

  • @rjtf5
    @rjtf5 Месяц назад +1

    the more i hear this conversation the more i think about more things to say about it
    100% agree that there is a generic inner london accent that only differs from each other is with age and dialect depending on industry and local communities sayings etc
    dialect
    not accents themselves
    i’m from camden town but i couldn’t tell where another working class inner londoner comes from
    apart from characteristic of an area , example
    “i often can tell someone from south east london because of the speed …my experience
    they speak faster “
    to me ,east end stops at bow flyover but the accent doesn’t stop after mile end where the east end turns into East london
    i ignore the famous map of the range
    i cant see how for me , mile end is more working class inner london then camden town in accents
    as the latter is nearly two miles closer to bow bells then mile end
    like the yiddish influence of east end ,north londoners tend to speak the same accent but use more irish expressions
    or finsbury park might have more greek turkish gestures
    wether that’s to do with industry and community i don’t know
    like wise east end …when i was growing up , they tended to use more jewish/ yiddish expressions
    regardless of the background
    which later grew to include all of london
    i think home counties dialect is different but obviously related because they have normally parents or grandparents that came from london but it’s just not the same as inner london
    i can tell someone from say “ beyond the north and south circular rd as they speak with a country twang
    if they were born there
    but can’t tell if someone’s from either shepard’s bush or wanstead if they have working class inner london accent
    only by unique area characteristics as i said
    same accent but different dialects
    the influence of the accent will grow the more people move out but i feel the london accent will go altogether once my generation passed on as im in my 60s and am still living in somers town
    the only people talk like me are the older generation

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад +1

      Absolutely fascinating. Thanks for your insight.

  • @leo-tj3jw
    @leo-tj3jw Месяц назад

    Very interesting!

  • @AssoSanMicheleArcang
    @AssoSanMicheleArcang Месяц назад

    I beg your pardon, but the photos you showed are taken from the film "Pygmalion", by and with Leslie Howard as co-director and professor Higgins, and Wendy Hiller as Eliza Doolittle. Wendy Hiller was a British actress, born near Manchester, who won an Academy Award for Separate Tables, but everyone knows as the old Princess Dagomiroff in Murder on the Orient Express. Shaw wanted a complete different actor as Higgins, such as Charles Laughton... but had to change the script.

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад

      Thanks for your comment. Yes, I know I used the "wrong" photo. It just seemed more befitting. I love the film Pygmallion. Trevor Howard is amazing. I didn't know Charles Laughton was supposed to play Higgins.

  • @MENSA.lady2
    @MENSA.lady2 Месяц назад

    Thankfully I was brought up in Rural Surrey, not far from London. I learned to speak proper English. Very good when I worked abroad. Outside the UK foreigners learn "Oxford English" which is nothing near cockney London English
    As an aside the bells from bow church were stored in Lincoln cathedral during WWII So many cockneys could not have been born within sound of the bells.

  • @manuel_winde
    @manuel_winde 26 дней назад

    Portsmouth is the one that gets me. Sounds like London but not quite.

  • @FifthCat5
    @FifthCat5 Месяц назад +1

    My mother-in-law was technically a Cockney but she sounded more like the Queen!

  • @tremarley9648
    @tremarley9648 Месяц назад

    The accents are similar but the words people use are different depending on where in London one is based.
    I grew up easily recognising which borough where people were from a lot of the time.

  • @simonround2439
    @simonround2439 Месяц назад

    Hi Gideon. From your voice I'm pretty confident that you spent a few years of your childhood in Camden, as I did 😉

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад

      Yes, you're absolutely right. Well done! From your writing style I'm confident you also spent a few years in Leeds. Am I right?

    • @simonround2439
      @simonround2439 Месяц назад

      @@LetThemTalkTV I did indeed! Brilliant deduction.

  • @AreaBoyz.
    @AreaBoyz. Месяц назад +3

    Working Class accent is the BEST

  • @RatelHBadger
    @RatelHBadger Месяц назад +1

    14:00 I would have said anyone in the film Snatch would be Cockney.

    • @RatelHBadger
      @RatelHBadger Месяц назад

      Would you class Ray Winstone's accent as Cockney or London?
      What about Danny Dyer?

  • @user-cc2ux9ew1r
    @user-cc2ux9ew1r Месяц назад

    Hey Gideon,
    I don't suppose you could make us a lesson about * The historical present, also known as the dramatic or narrative present * could you by any chance as long it's no trouble of course .
    I'll promise ya, I 'll be your friend till I kick the bucket.
    Greetings from Casablanca 😉

  • @moodyonroody5313
    @moodyonroody5313 8 дней назад

    I thought the difference between erm nawth/norf/noof and sowth/sarf/saaf was how you pronounce pencil ie pensoo = north, pensee-oo = south. Ami right? Edit - think north-east say pensee-oo too ... also posh 'draw-ing' v drawRing for everyone else (for a drawing).

  • @Floral_Green
    @Floral_Green Месяц назад

    Interestingly, there’s an unrelated phenomenon of people from Manchester, Nottinghamshire and parts of London alike pronouncing the ‘ou’ phoneme as ‘aah’.
    Grew up in the East Midlands and didn’t make the connection until recently.

  • @penelopeyoung4453
    @penelopeyoung4453 Месяц назад

    My cousin Charlotte who's always claimed to be a Cockney, was born in Queen Charlotte's hospital in (I think) 1956. Perhaps it was quieter in those days so that you could hear the Bow Bells from there. Of course not everyone is born in a hospital, as I wasn't.

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Месяц назад +1

      You're right. My point is that this "born within the sounds of Bow Bells" thing no longer applies in the 21st century (or indeed any time after the 1960s).

  • @michaelt8682
    @michaelt8682 Месяц назад +1

    you say 'the london' accent but there are differences in pronunciation between north and south london.
    ask a south londoner to say 'grenwich' and they will pronounce it 'grinitch/ grinidge' where as in north London we say 'gren-itch'
    there are other examples but i cant remember them at the moment.

  • @BritishBeachcomber
    @BritishBeachcomber Месяц назад

    Born and bred in London bording school at 10. Had to lose my London accent to fit in. Moved to Devon at 38. Leared a new accent. Now in Somerset, maybe I need to learn the Bristol L?

    • @bordershader
      @bordershader Месяц назад

      Bristol was originally called Bristow. But because of the L thing, it became Bristol.

  • @highpath4776
    @highpath4776 Месяц назад

    what would London sound like 200 years ago ? To my family say far less african heritage of course, likewise indian subcontinent didnt have influence , but they were not Londoners - they came to what is now zone 3 from Farnham (Surrey) and East Grinstead (Kent) as well as Ireland and Suburban Essex. The Accent of Mitcham is different to Morden , which I found different to East Ham which changed when you got to Barking. The faster you speak though , and more to friends you revert to a London or local accent. I was born within the sound of bow bells (1850s) and I can do a good cockney accent ( not much rhyming though ). I worked for an Italian company that set up in Central London and they turned down a receptionist from Bow due to having a commoner accent of proper east end sparra

  • @jagmarc
    @jagmarc Месяц назад

    There was a time when the moment someone spoke you could hear what part of town come from, almost to the street.

  • @angeljimenez3362
    @angeljimenez3362 Месяц назад +4

    Pretty interesting! This video has reminded me that this summer, at a swimming pool next to my parents' home in the south-east shore of Spain, a clearly brittish woman was playing with her kids (lots of Brits summer in that zone). During the game she was just counting something "one, two, three" and so on, and when she reached nine, she said something like "noin" instead. I was kind of shocked, it was completely unexpected. I had never heard that pronunciation. Now I've learnt that that may have been just Estuary accent...

    • @janegill8990
      @janegill8990 15 дней назад +1

      I live right on the estuary, Southend-on-Sea. I can confirm we do say Nine like noin. It's subtle, but it's definitely more like noin than nine.

    • @angeljimenez3362
      @angeljimenez3362 14 дней назад

      @@janegill8990 Thank you!
      However, it's not clear, because from other youtube videos, I've realized that there are other accents that have this feature. Brummie and West country may be examples. West country I doubt in this case, because it was clearly a non-rotic accent, but Brummie could perfectly be... This "noin" was very clear, not subtle at all...

    • @janegill8990
      @janegill8990 14 дней назад

      @angeljimenez3362 it may be because it's my accent that I think it's subtle 😂 I don't have a 'thick' Essex accent. It's not RP by any stretch of the imagination, although other people say I speak' posh'. To RP speakers I'm definitely very Essex. So, Maybe I'm just not hearing it as obvious as those who don't speak it?

  • @vikkirobinson4131
    @vikkirobinson4131 Месяц назад

    I come from Lincolnshire and began teaching 40 years ago in Eastern Essex, I had a problem when trying to understand the children saying ball, wall etc. They fell about laughing at my "grass" and "class"

  • @jamiestewart139
    @jamiestewart139 3 дня назад

    I was born in king's cross... but moved to Romford... so have a deep London working class accent...

  • @billTO
    @billTO Месяц назад

    😅 I found John's MLE completely incomprehensible, especially at that speed!!!!

  • @annabizaro-doo-dah
    @annabizaro-doo-dah Месяц назад +1

    So many middle class londoners have a 'mockney' accent though their comfortable, 'well spoken' parents own businesses etc whereas underclass people, like me and my kids, people would claim speak with a fairly posh london accent, if with a bit of multi cultural "MLE" twang.

    • @t.p.mckenna
      @t.p.mckenna Месяц назад +1

      It is the public school boys that are the biggest laugh, trying to disguise their posh boy upbringings with their faux-blokish banter.

  • @Brodricktucker
    @Brodricktucker Месяц назад +2

    Sidney St is not, in Mile End, it runs from North ot South at the junction of Whitechapel Road and Mile End Road down to the A13 Commercial Road and is in Stepney.