All About Canadian English and the Canadian English Accent! 🍁 (Compared Mostly to American English)

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  • Опубликовано: 24 авг 2024

Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian
    @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian  4 месяца назад +10

    🌻🌼💐 Jen has a RUclips channel too! Come and see: youtube.com/@myflowerfarm

  • @amyroberts5445
    @amyroberts5445 2 месяца назад +43

    I dated a Canadian for a few years, long distance, and I'll never forget the night he told me over the phone that he thought he had a "moose in his house" and i laughed hysterically and said that i thought it would be pretty obvious if he did, which confused him a bit and said "well i keep the place fairly tidy, but it's cold outside and that brings them in" to which of course i erupted hysterically "THEM?!?! You think you might have more than 1 in there??? How big is your place?!" And, in true Canadian fashion, he started to get a little annoyed with me and snapped back that it was "... just a 1 bedroom apartment on the third floor" and in tears now i asked "how do they fit their antlers inside the elevator... or do they just take the stairs?" And that's when it hit him and he blurted out "MOWSE OK?! GEEZ GIRL IT'S A MMMOWWWSE NOT A MOOSE!" And from that night on, the phrase, "So, you think there might be a moose loose in your hooouse eh?!" became our reference for when we weren't quite understanding each other's slang😂😂😂😂.

  • @kenmoore45
    @kenmoore45 5 месяцев назад +138

    Hydro is used to indicate power in places like Quebec, Ontario and BC because their power comes from a water source. People on the Prairies use "power" to describe a power pole.

    • @rodneyferris4089
      @rodneyferris4089 5 месяцев назад +10

      and Manitoba

    • @vernonmcphee6746
      @vernonmcphee6746 4 месяца назад +4

      @@rodneyferris4089And the Maritimes.

    • @koshka02
      @koshka02 4 месяца назад +3

      that's what I was thinking.
      I have no problem saying "power" or "power outage"- but we rely on hydroelectricity.

    • @oilersridersbluejays
      @oilersridersbluejays 4 месяца назад +3

      Saskatchewanian here. Hydro sounds weird and doesn’t really make sense. Hydro means water, and not all electricity comes from hydroelectric sources. Electricity is a power source so it makes more sense to say power.

    • @lalylunssporadicchronicles6404
      @lalylunssporadicchronicles6404 4 месяца назад

      I was so confused about colour and color and the other 3 thanks😊

  • @adscri
    @adscri 5 месяцев назад +217

    All true - but what you fail to mention that Canadian English and accent varies considerably by region.

    • @TheSkyfolk
      @TheSkyfolk 4 месяца назад +15

      What might be considered a "pure" canadian accent is pretty consistent through most of the country geologically. Rural Ontarians and Rural Albertans tend to use the same kinds of slang and have very similar accents. The different accents you might think of are focused on higher population density areas around cities. GTA, Ottawa Valley, Montreal, Edmonton, etc. Of course there's the maritimes and the territories which are very different in general.

    • @oilersridersbluejays
      @oilersridersbluejays 4 месяца назад +12

      @TheSkyfolk that’s not true at all. Rural Ontarians don’t sound like rural Albertans, Saskatchewanians, or Manitobans. I live in rural Saskatchewan and I don’t notice a difference between us and Albertans at all, whether rural nor urban. Manitobans round their vowels a little more than we do but not anywhere near what rural Ontarians sound like.
      Rural Albertans, Saskatchewanians, and Manitonans sound much more like Montanans or North Dakotans (Midwestern US accent) than we do anyone from the rest of Canada.
      The slang is also different sometimes. We have words like slough (a pond out in a field), bluff (a grove of trees on the otherwise bald prairie), and bunnyhug (a hooded sweater) that the rest of Canada has no clue what we are saying. If someone is from Ontario (especially a rural part) I immediately know they’re from eastern Canada.

    • @peterbeninger7068
      @peterbeninger7068 4 месяца назад +16

      Hoo boy, go to small fishing villages on the Nfld West Coast and I guarantee you won’t understand 10% of what is being spoken!!!!

    • @susyQ564
      @susyQ564 4 месяца назад +7

      So does USA so

    • @HerdItThruTheGrapeVine
      @HerdItThruTheGrapeVine 4 месяца назад

      @@peterbeninger7068right

  • @RandomNonsense1985
    @RandomNonsense1985 5 месяцев назад +76

    One big thing I’ve noticed that gives Canadians away is they’ll use long vowels in words where Americans use short vowels. For example, where I pronounce “process” like prah-cess, a Canadian might say “proh-cess”.

    • @pkguy3
      @pkguy3 5 месяцев назад +3

      It depends on where you grew up in Canada. Just as many like me say "prah-cess" and "proh-cess" sounds a bit weird. Watch the news like CBC,, where it can be heard both ways by their different anchors/guests. Same with Pro-ject and Prah-ject.

    • @solaveritas2
      @solaveritas2 4 месяца назад +1

      Even the word not, which sounds like nawt, when a Canadian pronounces it

    • @juliannorwich319
      @juliannorwich319 4 месяца назад +2

      @@pkguy3 Some Canadians do say "proh-ject", which is unknown in the UK and the US, whereas "proh-gress" and "proh-cess" are standard in the UK.

    • @davidbouvier8895
      @davidbouvier8895 4 месяца назад +3

      @@juliannorwich319 In UK English the noun 'project' has a fairly short 'o' with roughly equal emphasis on both syllables, (dada) but the verb 'project' has a longer 'o' and the second syllable is stressed (daDA) .

    • @mckessa17
      @mckessa17 4 месяца назад

      Funny you say that cause I find it's the opposite.

  • @James-lv8mw
    @James-lv8mw 3 года назад +363

    It doesn't matter how you pronounce most of the American words in English 😸 you're the best Canadian teacher!

    • @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian
      @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian  3 года назад +32

      Thanks a lot James! 😎🐕🍁

    • @mariaacosta7670
      @mariaacosta7670 3 года назад +13

      Yes. I agree with you.

    • @kellygonzalezsuarez
      @kellygonzalezsuarez Год назад +4

      Totally agreed

    • @veronicafigueroa8137
      @veronicafigueroa8137 7 месяцев назад +2

      Lol, you're right. He's an awesome teacher!

    • @davidbouvier8895
      @davidbouvier8895 5 месяцев назад +1

      These generalizations are of limited use. The much maligned alleged Canadian pronunciation of 'ou' in words like 'about' (which Yanks like to inaccurately mock as 'aboot') is entirely absent in Western Canada. Absolutely nobody would mistake a Newfoundlander from one of the outports for a Yank. Absolutely nobody would mistake someone from, say, Alabama or Louisiana for a Canuck. Both countries exhibit a range of regional variations. But most spoken Canadian English is readily understood by other English speakers. (Unlike the UK, eg the Brummie and Geordie accents.)

  • @aladdin_everyday
    @aladdin_everyday 3 года назад +133

    Hello.
    I'm japanese.Before I studied English for long time.But I can't speak naturally.
    When I was depressed, I was motivated to watch your channel.
    Thank you very much.
    I'll do my best🙋‍♀️

    • @eigobenkyoushimasu6547
      @eigobenkyoushimasu6547 Год назад +6

      日本人だ!私はまだ聴き取るくらいしかできないけど、Bobと一緒に頑張りましょう!!
      いつか貴方のように英語を話したいな。

    • @WilliamEvans-py4gq
      @WilliamEvans-py4gq 10 месяцев назад +6

      Many respects 🇯🇵 from 🇬🇧

    • @AgxntAqua
      @AgxntAqua 6 месяцев назад +5

      Hello from 🇨🇦 Hope you kept learning 👍

    • @vincentperratore4395
      @vincentperratore4395 5 месяцев назад +1

      When I was kid I was afflicted with the accursed habit of stuttering.
      Thank God, that's all over but in the interim I became very sensitive to not only the sound of my own voice but the voices of others and the way in which they pronounced words. As a result, I noticed immediately your own pronunciation of Canadian English, not to mention that I'd always liked it. So, you may continue speaking as long as you like!

    • @RichardDCook
      @RichardDCook 5 месяцев назад +1

      There's a tongue-twister for Japanese learning English: "Rory Leary's yearly yule lull". A Japanese guy told me "you can't imagine how difficult that is for us."

  • @thomassciurba5323
    @thomassciurba5323 4 месяца назад +18

    I live near the Canadian border and I find them easier to understand than Southerners. “Eh” is simply the Canadian equivalent of “right” and is used the same way. I also love their slang like “toque” and “two four”. One of my favorite TV shows when I was younger was SCTV - love those hosers! And they have great beer too.

    • @starfishsystems
      @starfishsystems 2 месяца назад

      The use of "eh" has some subtle but distinctive differences from other mild interjections such as "right," "you know," and "like."
      All of them can be overused, of course, but the judicious use of "eh" can add a charming note of color to a narrative, drawing attention to important turns of the story and setting up a kind of cadence or punctuation. You can't just pepper it in anywhere and expect to get the right effect.
      I've often though that it's closer to the use of "là" in Québécois French. You must use it intentionally, yet ironically this takes such a lot of practice that it becomes ingrained. It reminds me of that Zen saying,
      "If you want to become a perfect painter, first become perfect, then paint naturally."

    • @rconger24
      @rconger24 2 месяца назад

      Take off eh!

    • @fonebonedon
      @fonebonedon Месяц назад

      Yes it's easier to understand Canadians than Southerners. I too grew up close to the border.

    • @Ventryx
      @Ventryx Месяц назад

      Come on man our beer sucks hahahaha coors and molson, are you kidding me

  • @gordonbergslien30
    @gordonbergslien30 2 месяца назад +5

    Years ago my employer sent me, a Los Angeles boy, to a conference in Winterpeg, Manisnomba. It was November and starting to cool off on the prairie. The locals were wearing sweaters and windbreakers. Coming from Southern California, I was bundled up like an arctic explorer. I saw a t-shirt on the trip that l wish I'd bought. Across the front it said in bold letters, "Canada, eh?*" Along the bottom, in much smaller type it said, "*Because it's better than saying huh! I now volunteer in a museum that has many international visitors. Our Canadian guests are usually amazed when l ask what province they're from after they say a sentence or two. They laugh whenn l direct them to the washrooms. It bothers me that our neighbors to the north know plenty about the U.S. but most Americans know little or nothing about Canada. Bob, you are helping to bridge the gap! Well done, eh?

  • @cat-boy1357
    @cat-boy1357 4 месяца назад +11

    My favorite Canadian word is "pencil crayons." Every American I talked to calls them "coloured pencils."

    • @Ventryx
      @Ventryx Месяц назад

      I'm Canadian and say pencil crayons as well and I just realized how weird it is to say that lmfao

  • @tjade6
    @tjade6 4 месяца назад +2

    Metre-term of measurement. Meter -like parking meter
    Centre-centre of a circle. Center-physical building or structure

    • @normg2242
      @normg2242 2 месяца назад +1

      Over-engineered buildings give me anxieties. I have a complex complex complex... lol

  • @leslie-annepepin8927
    @leslie-annepepin8927 5 месяцев назад +88

    Thank you for saying ‘about’ and not ‘aboot’. I am 69, have lived and travelled coast to coast and NEVER heard a Canadian say ‘aboot’. The only time I hear that is when an American says it trying to imitate Canadians.

    • @solaveritas2
      @solaveritas2 4 месяца назад +5

      Indeed, that's such a weird thing.

    • @CBX-en9lc
      @CBX-en9lc 4 месяца назад +1

      The problem is Americans mispronounced about. They sort of add an a in, about.

    • @CBX-en9lc
      @CBX-en9lc 4 месяца назад +2

      Damn spell corrector, "abaout"

    • @footLogic
      @footLogic 4 месяца назад +7

      Its because we shift from o to u like about. Americans don't have that sound. They shift from a stright to u in ab-a-oot. They hear we are doing something different but the don't have the sound so they are not sure what we are doing.

    • @iconofvril9025
      @iconofvril9025 4 месяца назад +5

      When you say about like "abat" as Americans do, then pronouncing it more in line with its actual spelling sounds like "oo" by comparison. Basically, from the perspective of Americans, it sounds like oot, but thats because they pronounce it oddly themselves

  • @Orbald
    @Orbald 11 месяцев назад +36

    I'm discovering the "eh" thing. It's pretty funny because in France we use the very same trick to get an implicit agreement with "hein ?" "This pizza is pretty good, eh?" --> "Cette pizza est plutôt bonne, hein ?"

    • @RichardDCook
      @RichardDCook 5 месяцев назад +6

      And many people in London England use "yeah?" the same way. "So first we're going to the shop, yeah? and then to the restaurant, yeah?"

    • @johndennis177
      @johndennis177 4 месяца назад +9

      I was actually wondering if eh might not have been an influence from Quebec French where “hein” is (just as in France) commonly employed to obtain acknowledgement.

    • @solaveritas2
      @solaveritas2 4 месяца назад +8

      I speak several languages and they all have such a word. In Italian slang it's nè (or at least that's how it sounds, never seen it written), in German dialects it's usually nee, and in the Swiss dialects it's gell

    • @solaveritas2
      @solaveritas2 4 месяца назад +3

      @@johndennis177 This makes sense as origin of the Canadian eh

    • @ericturcotte3131
      @ericturcotte3131 4 месяца назад +2

      Il est commun d'utiliser le "hein" au Québec. Est-ce que le "hey" anglo a des racines francophones?

  • @IGnore_MEguys
    @IGnore_MEguys 11 месяцев назад +21

    As a Canadian, I can say he aced it sounds exactly how I talk sometimes 😁

  • @pbasswil
    @pbasswil 5 месяцев назад +22

    Just to point out that our accent varies considerably. As a Montrealer, I can tell instantly that this guy was not raised around here - his accent is closer to the stereotypical Canadian one that Americans try to imitate. Go east of Montreal and it diverges more. Most of us across the country do, however, constrict our 'ou'/'ow' sound more than most Americans do.

    • @ericturcotte3131
      @ericturcotte3131 4 месяца назад +7

      There is various Canadian accents, as there are various US accents.

    • @Dustandfuzz
      @Dustandfuzz 4 месяца назад +1

      @@ericturcotte3131 Alberta’s accent the words are clipped and very distinct and proper sounding. In the Maritimes our words are more lazy and informal. One example is running words together such as “lotsa” for lots of, “kinda” for kind of. We drop the “g” saying “I’m runnin’ late”. “We’re “goin’ now.” If we talked properly people would think of us as high falootin’.

    • @swagmund_freud6669
      @swagmund_freud6669 4 месяца назад

      As an Albertan I can tell you, that ain't necessarily the case. Maybe just when talking to outsiders.
      ​@@Dustandfuzz

    • @bonniebluebell5940
      @bonniebluebell5940 3 месяца назад +1

      @@ericturcotte3131 Old-Stock Canadian here...I would venture to guess that the majority of English Canadians do not use "eh"....depends upon the region, I guess. I heard quite a bit down East when I was growing up. (I am in my mid sixties)The pronuniciation of the other words he mentioned is pretty much the case for all of us.

    • @ericturcotte3131
      @ericturcotte3131 3 месяца назад

      @@bonniebluebell5940 I know people that say it often, others that don't.

  • @Olpossum53
    @Olpossum53 4 месяца назад +10

    Over the years I have noticed a distinctiveness in the way Canadians pronounce the flat “a,” as in “that.” It’s very subtle and hard for me to describe, but as soon as I hear it I know the speaker is Canadian.

  • @theresemalmberg955
    @theresemalmberg955 5 месяцев назад +6

    "Eh" is also used in Michigan's Upper Peninsula a lot. In fact "Yooper" English is very similar to Canadian English, especially in the eastern part of the UP.

    • @suesudman6840
      @suesudman6840 4 месяца назад +1

      Definitely! My parents were Yoopers (on the western side) and I think the only difference between them and Canada is “sorry.” I call it Almost Canada. 😊

    • @foamer443
      @foamer443 Месяц назад

      Oh so that's how the Lagina's get on so well out in Nova Scotia, eh!

  • @johndennis177
    @johndennis177 4 месяца назад +10

    Growing up in Quebec and having learned English as a second language, it was only in my late teens that I started noticing the differences in American and Canadian English accents. It’s too subtle for the untrained ear to distinguish. Today, I’m 100% bilingual and can easily recognize Canadians by ear when I go to say, Florida. First I overhear, then I look over and see the person wearing a Jays t-shirt!

    • @june.w.1288
      @june.w.1288 4 месяца назад

      Hi! I'm from Hungary. Could you pls explain what a Jays T-shirt signifies? Thanks in advance!

    • @june.w.1288
      @june.w.1288 4 месяца назад +2

      I was so curious, I googled it, now I know it refers to Toronto Blue Jays, a baseball team. Cheers 😉

    • @rconger24
      @rconger24 2 месяца назад

      ​​@@june.w.1288professional Baseball team.

  • @josephdenor8305
    @josephdenor8305 10 месяцев назад +47

    I will admit that Canadians describe their facilities more accurately. I’ve never taken a “bath” in a public restroom. I do wash every time, however.

    • @Sal.K--BC
      @Sal.K--BC 5 месяцев назад +8

      As a BC native, I would usually call it a bathroom when it's inside a home, but a washroom in public (like in a mall, gas station, restaurant etc). Altho bathroom is still acceptable for either one. Canadians don't really use the term restroom, except when influenced by Americans.

    • @LairdKenneth
      @LairdKenneth 5 месяцев назад +1

      Washroom should be adopted by Americans. It is a way better term, eh? In fact I use it all the time, even just a few minutes ago. I recommend all of y'all do the same

    • @Mr._Fit_Atheist
      @Mr._Fit_Atheist 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@Sal.K--BC In Ontario, we just say we're going to the john

    • @sirjohneh
      @sirjohneh 5 месяцев назад +1

      yeah, but only as a deliberate slang. The rest of the time it's a washroom@@Mr._Fit_Atheist

    • @RichardDCook
      @RichardDCook 5 месяцев назад +4

      Here in California we say "bathroom" in a home (whether it has a bath or a shower) and "restroom" for a public facility (which has neither bath nor shower). British people ask for the "toilets" and Germans ask for the "WC" and Australians sometimes ask for "the dunnies".

  • @denisewiebe820
    @denisewiebe820 5 месяцев назад +15

    In western Canada electricity is called power... (a power pole)

    • @Dustandfuzz
      @Dustandfuzz 4 месяца назад +1

      In New Brunswick we have or had a hydro electric dam so we call it hydro.

    • @judypountney9648
      @judypountney9648 4 месяца назад

      In Nova Scotia we call them power poles.

    • @Pkeats817
      @Pkeats817 4 месяца назад

      Newfoundland too.

    • @RichardDCook
      @RichardDCook 4 месяца назад +2

      Here in California people generally call them "telephone poles" though the phone lines are buried and the poles in question only carry electricity.

    • @susiesunshine4982
      @susiesunshine4982 3 месяца назад +1

      Except in the westest part of the west. My power comes from BC Hydro.

  • @rherchenreder
    @rherchenreder 2 месяца назад +4

    A generation of Americans enjoyed the clear pronunciation by Peter Jennings, lead anchor for ABC World News Tonight.

    • @MrPerfesser
      @MrPerfesser Месяц назад

      I worked with Peter on occasion, and he would occasionally joke about slipping back into Canadian English. Once, when recording something for radio, he accidentally began to pronounce the word schedule "shed-ule." He laughed, went into a riff about "oat and aboat," and did a retake. He and Barrie Dunsmore (who was born in Saskatchewan) would remark on occasion about the differences between Canadian English and American English. And Ted Koppel - who was born in England and came to the US while in grade school - once told me about the time he asked his American teacher for a rubber -- meaning an eraser -and his new American classmates laughed at him. He and Dunsmore explained to me what "shinny" was and the various meanings of "Newfie," et cetera. I was blessed to work with those three gentlemen, who all spoke perfect American English, even though it was their second language.

  • @fho85
    @fho85 3 года назад +21

    Hello dear teacher! I have never actually thought about the accent you speak. Your clear prononciation together with calm and smooth manner of speach that was what I needed a year ago besides you have more logical and organized you tube channels

    • @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian
      @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian  3 года назад +4

      I think because I'm a teacher during the day my speaking is naturally quite clear as I speak to communicate instead of trying to speak quickly! 😎🐕🍁

  • @Cydda13
    @Cydda13 3 года назад +205

    What a great lesson!
    We Brazilians say a lot of "né" in the end of most of the sentences! 😂
    It's kind of the same way you Canadian use "eh". We want the person listening to agree to the statement.

    • @jonfriedman779
      @jonfriedman779 2 года назад +4

      That's totally true. Haha very similar

    • @yrooxrksvi7142
      @yrooxrksvi7142 2 года назад +18

      Funny, since in Italian, in the Piemontese dialect, they do say "né" often at the end of a sentence too hahaha
      Then again, Brazil is (next to Argentina) the biggest hub of Italian migrants in South America.

    • @tracycameron2580
      @tracycameron2580 2 года назад +1

      Yes it means yes/no? A question do you agree? I assume you agree. Are you listening? Am I wrong?....

    • @chatgptquatro
      @chatgptquatro 2 года назад +6

      @@yrooxrksvi7142 Brazilian is the largest number of people with full or partial italian ancestry outside Italy, São Paulo being the most populous city with Italian ancestry in the world.

    • @ThiagoVsky
      @ThiagoVsky Год назад +9

      @@yrooxrksvi7142 in Japanese they use "ne" a lot too. But in Portuguese "né" is a contraction from "não" and "é". In a question, saying "né?" here is like saying "isn't it?" In english.

  • @alanolson6913
    @alanolson6913 2 месяца назад +3

    I live on the US - Canadian border, on the US side. Canadian speakers are always around. I frankly don’t notice the difference in our speech much. I’ve never had any Canadian ever be rude or mean here and my wife and I are treated the same there.
    When we visit, I will seek out a currency exchange office and exchange our American currency for Canadian. For us, especially me since I’m rather dim witted about the exchange rates, it’s easier on both us and the one doing the sale. Also, the US coins don’t fit in candy or soft drink machines nor do they fit in parking meters.
    Such an interesting country, Canada 🇨🇦.

    • @fonebonedon
      @fonebonedon Месяц назад

      Yes I've seen signs on US vending machines. "No Canadian Coins."

    • @alanolson6913
      @alanolson6913 Месяц назад

      @@fonebonedon Yes, and I’ve seen the same thing about US coins

  • @randywatts6969
    @randywatts6969 2 месяца назад +2

    Being an eastern Canadian, I notice a quite distinct accent in the western provinces.

  • @edwarddavies8411
    @edwarddavies8411 5 месяцев назад +23

    The famous Canadian pronunciation of 'out and about' is more like West Country English in the UK.

    • @Evan490BC
      @Evan490BC 4 месяца назад +3

      I always thought that the "o" sound came from the Scottish accent (as in Nova Scotia).

    • @Pkeats817
      @Pkeats817 4 месяца назад +1

      My people are from West Country, England, and Ireland. Our mixed dialect was very intact 40-50 years ago..but, Americanized now. We used to say, “boaat”for boat. We don’t say coffee, we say it something like “cah-fea.”

    • @michellem3050
      @michellem3050 4 месяца назад +3

      Where in Canada do they say the "stereotypical" 'aboot'? I'm from Vancouver and no one I know says about that way.

    • @Pkeats817
      @Pkeats817 4 месяца назад

      @@michellem3050 NS

    • @judypountney9648
      @judypountney9648 4 месяца назад

      @@Pkeats817I am Nova Scotia and I don't say "aboot" for "about"" and a "boat" and neither does anyone I know! I have heard Nova Scotians tell the stories about going to Newfoundland and someone there is talking about the "boots" in the water and really all the Nova Scotia can see are boats with not a single boot in sight. I am sure not all Newfoundlands say "aboot:".

  • @aungmyatmin9509
    @aungmyatmin9509 3 года назад +39

    Bob is trying his best to help us in leaing english. That is why I'm always here!
    Thanks for precise facts,Bob! Stay safe and srtong!

  • @rexmyers991
    @rexmyers991 2 месяца назад +1

    As an airline pilot for just short of 30 years I spent many layovers in Canada. You are the best teacher of Canadian English. I made many friends North of the border. They always teased me about what you call the place to urinate. In the US it’s a bathroom or restroom (even thought there is no place to “rest or bathe in there) while Canadians correctly call it the lavatory or toilet.

    • @rconger24
      @rconger24 2 месяца назад

      UK "lew" or WC "water closet".

  • @brazilianacademy
    @brazilianacademy 3 года назад +26

    For those who are learning English, it is important to pay close attention, because Canadian and American English are very similar. We have those vowel different pronunciations here in Brazil as well, depending on the region you live. Great video!

    • @solaveritas2
      @solaveritas2 4 месяца назад

      Anyone learning Canadian English will be understood well in all other English speaking countries, there is no need to acquire an American accent

    • @jimgore1278
      @jimgore1278 4 месяца назад +1

      I help several Brazilians with their English via WhatsApp, etc. I try to point out different pronunciations or usages of words (American, Canadian, British) as they sometimes asked me about certain words back when we first started. They had heard the American version and I'm Canadian.
      One time I walked into a room at work and a Chinese-Cuban colleague (looked Chinese, spoke Spanish) was correcting a Taiwanese friend's pronunciation of English. However, her correction was just as wrong as what he was saying.

  • @fho85
    @fho85 3 года назад +9

    I forgot to mention your smile and beautiful flower farm and your brilliant stories that I love to listen to every Wednesday

    • @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian
      @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian  3 года назад +1

      I'm a triple threat! 😎🐕🍁 (You might have to look that one up!) Maybe I'll do my short English lesson about that phrase today!

  • @snazzy40
    @snazzy40 3 года назад +41

    Wow! Nice lesson Bob!👍
    Canadian is the very accent that I wanna adopt but right now I'm focusing more on the language and you're helping me with that a lot. Thanks a million.
    Lots of love❤️❤️❤️

    • @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian
      @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian  3 года назад +8

      I wish you all the best as you try to learn the Canadian accent! 😎🐕🍁

    • @ajs11201
      @ajs11201 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian Besides the few spelling differences and the intrusive "eh," I'd say the biggest difference between Canadian and American accents is the "o" vowel and the "ou" diphthong. In general, Americans tend to pronounce the long "o" as a more pure vowel, while Canadians tend to put an "u" hook at the end. And in America, the "ou" sound often rhymes with "ow" (so "out" has the same vowel as "cow" in America) and in Canada, the "ou" often has more of an "oo" sound (so in Canada, the vowel in "out" is more like the vowel in "boot"). If you want to tease a Canadian, say "out and about" like "oot and aboot."
      Someone learning English might not pick up on it, but a native speaker would also notice that Canadian vowels, in general, are tighter and more compact than American vowels. In other words, Canadians get through the vowels more quickly and move on to the next consonant quicker than their American cousins. And Americans, in turn, have quicker vowels than the Brits. These are generalizations, of course, but an interesting point to listen for.

  • @sararizza908
    @sararizza908 2 года назад +4

    Canadian ESL Teacher here! I NEVER use the first example of "eh", but I used the second one very often. It must be regional, eh?

    • @ronmcleod4717
      @ronmcleod4717 5 месяцев назад

      I live on the west coast near the CAN/US border and EH isn't something we would normally say or hear from others.

  • @smokesletsgo2374
    @smokesletsgo2374 Год назад +4

    "Eh" is a request for confirmation. "The weather is nice, eh?" means I think the weather is nice, now I want you to provide your opinion on the weather, to agree or disagree. It's not just thrown out there whenever you want

  • @mohdags420
    @mohdags420 3 года назад +95

    This teacher is really awesome, eh?The “eh” is music to my ears. Good job Canadians using it as a prompt, because I’d instantly pay attention once I hear it, even if the speaker was a million miles/kilometres away (sorry I used both systems 🍁) And Sorry Americans, the Canadian accent sounds cuter pretty much any way you slice it!

    • @samya7576
      @samya7576 3 года назад +2

      Yeah 😀

    • @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian
      @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian  3 года назад +13

      I prefer the Canadian accent as well. 😎🐕🍁 For good reasons!

    • @tracycameron2580
      @tracycameron2580 2 года назад +3

      Yeah sorry to say we are just nicer than Americans eh🇨🇦

    • @Turnip397
      @Turnip397 Год назад +2

      Well y’all Canadians better watch y’all’s backs because them there cowboys down south got guns!!!!

    • @dzifachris7904
      @dzifachris7904 Год назад

      @@tracycameron2580 eh am Chris and you?can we link up🥰

  • @moorenicola6264
    @moorenicola6264 5 месяцев назад +3

    I'm Irish and we mostly speak British English with a few tweaks. Our native language is Gaelige (Irish) and we learn it until we leave secondary (high) school but only pockets of the country use it as their first language even though technically it is. We spell words like colour and honour the same but some of our sentence structure still goes back to the structure of Gaeilge. The th sound doesn't occur in Gaeilge and that is why, for the most part, we pronounce three as tree etc. Unless you're well to do that sound does not come naturally to us especially if you're adept at speaking Gaeilge.

    • @solaveritas2
      @solaveritas2 4 месяца назад

      The th sound is also the hardest to learn for native German speakers like myself. In German, the English th sound is a speech impediment of people who cannot pronounce a proper s, so there's a mental barrier to overcome when adopting that sound.

    • @Ventryx
      @Ventryx Месяц назад

      @@solaveritas2 it's a speech impediment in english too, we call it a lisp

  • @LostsTVandRadio
    @LostsTVandRadio 3 месяца назад +2

    Similarly, in British English we often use the word eh (or ey) at the end of a sentence to elicit agreement.
    However the pronunciation, timing and stress of the eh are subtly different.
    You can always recognise the distinctive Canadian usage.

    • @jackyf3505
      @jackyf3505 3 месяца назад +1

      In England (North & East Midlands esp) we have two similar but different forms... "eh?" for what/pardon? and "ay" as in "ay up!" as in hello or watch out.

  • @scottmcintosh2988
    @scottmcintosh2988 Месяц назад +1

    My grandmother was an English Professor at at McGill University I am from the states say z I am a duel citizen !
    Great video !!!

  • @jwolfe01234
    @jwolfe01234 6 месяцев назад +21

    American English has a lot of regional variation. The regions tend to be bigger than the regions in British English, generally because the US is a lot bigger than the UK. But much of the country does speak "Standard American". Actors and national newscasters have historically tried to "lose" their local accent to speak Standard American.
    I mention this because people from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan sound practically Canadian to me, and there's a Canadian influence in the Minnesota accent as well. Both are near Canada, but there are other areas near Canada that don't have any apparent Canadian influence (it's a long border).
    It's interesting to me that you had an issue with Don and Dawn, because in my accent, which is pretty much Standard American, they sound about the same. I have experienced confusion in not knowing whether the speaker was talking about a person (usually male) named Don or a person (usually female) named Dawn.
    In addition to the differences you mentioned between Standard American and Canadian, one big difference I notice is the pronunciation of the word "organization". In Standard American, the first I is pronounced as a schwa and the emphasis is on the ZA (ZAY). In Canadian, the first I is pronounced as EYE and the emphasis is on the EYE. I live in a town with an NHL team and I follow ice hockey, so when someone talks about the hockey club by calling it "the organization", I can immediately tell if they're Canadian. It happens more often than you might think. "In order to play better, we have to come together as an organization...." "Oh, I didn't know he was Canadian."
    Language is fascinating, eh?

    • @yelnats61
      @yelnats61 5 месяцев назад

      I don’t think there’s a standard American accent

    • @nickd4310
      @nickd4310 5 месяцев назад

      Canadian English isn't just a branch of North American English, it's a branch of general American on which standard American is based. Canadian raising has changed the pronunciation of out and about and the cot/caught and marry/merry/Mary distinction has disappeared, but it has in California as well.

    • @jusebacho
      @jusebacho 5 месяцев назад +2

      I don’t think exist a standard American accent but to me, the UK have greater diversity of accent despite being smaller, there are accents that seem like another language, I don't know if it is because it is the birthplace of English because the same thing happens with Spanish in Spain and German in Germany

    • @RichardDCook
      @RichardDCook 5 месяцев назад +1

      Linguists do call it "General American". There are many Americans I've met that from their accent I couldn't begin to guess where they're from. I could make some guesses as to where they're NOT from, say The Deep South or New York City. But I've met New Yorkers with no trace of a New York City accent, and Southerners with no trace of a Southern accent. Here in California, in the space of a month, we hired three people who had recently moved here from Texas. None of them had the slightest trace of a so-called "Texas accent" and no-one could distinguish them from Californians.

    • @nickd4310
      @nickd4310 5 месяцев назад

      North American accents had less time to develop. The two main English Canadian accents for example date back to 1755 (Atlantic) and 1775 (Western), when the original settlers arrived from the Ameircan colonies. Since they basically started with the same accent, it hasn't diverged very much.

  • @ern48
    @ern48 4 месяца назад +3

    Growing up only a few miles from Canada in NW Washington I thought I was very familiar with the few language differences until I was 18yo working at an autobody shop along side a Canadian guy. He looked and sounded just like Stan on "On The Busses" and the first time he said 'decal' I was lost for a moment.

    • @rconger24
      @rconger24 2 месяца назад +1

      "deck - ull" ?

    • @ern48
      @ern48 2 месяца назад

      @@rconger24 Yup, thats it !

  • @evansjessicae
    @evansjessicae 4 месяца назад +1

    My favorite Canadian word is "parkade." It's such a cute word for a parking garage. I wouldn't mind if we adopted it in the States.

  • @takaosensei
    @takaosensei 3 года назад +9

    Hey Bob, a huge thanks from Brazil. Your explanations are amazing and I definetely use them with my students.

  • @frankreyes2000
    @frankreyes2000 3 года назад +8

    Thank you Bob for your nice video. I have a lot of Canadian friends, so from personal experience I can say that you guys speak more clear that other English native speakers (I've heard so many English accents and dialects). I love the Canadian culture (including food and Tim Hortons coffee) and thank you for talking about it in your videos. I've learned from you so many useful expressions that I'm using now when speaking with my friends and other English speakers.
    There are two other English words that I heard Canadians pronounce in a different way. They're "organization" and "direction". Anyway, I appreciate your fine video content and keep up with the good work.

  • @teachersaadne3361
    @teachersaadne3361 3 года назад +5

    Definitely, you're one of my favorite native English teachers! Thank you so much!

  • @htmc2022
    @htmc2022 3 месяца назад +1

    I will always endeavour to spell these words with their much more beautiful looking “our” ending: splendour, honour, valour, vapour, harbour, colour, flavour, odour, rigour, rumour, armour, favour, neighbour, behaviour, demeanour, saviour, labour, humour.😂

  • @Jesse-.-
    @Jesse-.- 3 года назад +13

    I am learning english and I love how canadians speak! I can understand every single word and it makes feel so happy😍
    I got here by checking videos randomly when I noticed this is a canadian teacher got subcribed and shared with all my friends that are learning too...
    You don't know how useful your videos are Bob!
    Hope one day I can speak like you man!! 💪💪💪👌

  • @Daddy-R
    @Daddy-R Год назад +21

    Hi sir, one thing you need to mention is that how Canada is eternally confused about which date format to use.
    On grocery receipts I've seen every format being used

    • @jextra1313
      @jextra1313 5 месяцев назад +4

      as well as units. we can't quite switch over to metric fully for some reason.

    • @hilariousname6826
      @hilariousname6826 4 месяца назад

      There are still a lot us around who grew up with Imperial, and still think in that system.@@jextra1313

    • @istvanglock7445
      @istvanglock7445 4 месяца назад +1

      I've even seen different formats on the same library receipt for books I've borrowed.

    • @oilersridersbluejays
      @oilersridersbluejays 4 месяца назад

      @jextra1313 we despise metric as a rule in the Prairie Provinces. All of our farmland is surveyed on the squared half mile and mile, and our grid roads are two miles north/south of each other and one mile east/west of each other. We use acres instead of acres. Our crop yields are used as bushels. We use gallons and litres interchangeably depending on what we are measuring, and pounds and inches are used as much as as kilograms and tonnes, if not more so. The only strange one is Fahrenheit, but most of us can convert it with Celcius quite easily.

  • @user-mq4ll8yi1j
    @user-mq4ll8yi1j 9 месяцев назад +2

    Thanks Bob,you made me confidently,I’m very like your videos,I will still learn with you,always support you !

  • @davidsradioroom9678
    @davidsradioroom9678 5 месяцев назад +1

    Hey, this was fun! I have been to Canada several times, and I used to live in England for a time. There is move British English in Canadian English as opposed to American, but it is always fun to guess where people are from. The accent in the Maritimes, is more pronounced, though.

  • @masterb5683
    @masterb5683 3 года назад +3

    Hey, Bob! I just came from Lucy's channel and you were there with Rachel. Love your clear way of talking and I agree with you that I, as an outsider, don't notice the difference between Canadian and American English.
    New subscriber here.

  • @dympulls
    @dympulls 5 месяцев назад +12

    Re: 'eh'
    In western Canada, the tendency is to say 'hey' rather than 'eh'. I've noticed this since I moved west. 'Eh' is also an informal way of greeting people, especially in passing

    • @bigem2166
      @bigem2166 5 месяцев назад +3

      I live in Calgary and am from Winnipeg. I’ve never once heard someone say EH as a way to greet someone lmao.
      And no one out here really says hey, instead of eh. We all say eh and talk about how much we say it, eh

    • @dympulls
      @dympulls 5 месяцев назад

      @@bigem2166 I guess you're too precious then

    • @pbasswil
      @pbasswil 5 месяцев назад +1

      In Montreal we use both, in completely different contexts. Hey is a greeting, or an exclamation. Eh is a sentence ender/add-on, which serves to solicit agreement or social empathy. Never heard Eh as a greeting, not even once.

    • @kenmoore45
      @kenmoore45 5 месяцев назад +3

      I've lived almost all my life in Alberta and Saskatchewan with two years in Toronto when I was 18 and 19. I think people in the west say "hey" only to get a person's attention. But we use eh all the time. My brother uses eh once or twice in every sentence, I think. I use my ehs like Bob does.

    • @reggae-rock-roots
      @reggae-rock-roots 4 месяца назад

      Fortunately there are at least twice as many English speakers east of Manitoba.

  • @nicholasyoung9758
    @nicholasyoung9758 4 месяца назад +1

    1:17 One thing that you might bear in mind is that some regions in Canada, Alberta and Saskatchewan for instance, are much more Americanized, and 'eh' is not used. Parkade is used for parking garage, and there's no hydroelectric power! I should say that I live in Cold Lake Alberta.

    • @istvanglock7445
      @istvanglock7445 4 месяца назад

      Absolutely!

    • @swagmund_freud6669
      @swagmund_freud6669 4 месяца назад

      Cold Lake has a pretty distinctive accent compared to even the rest of Alberta. Like pronouncing "absurd" as "abzurd" while most Canadians say "apsurd". Also the O in 'college' is different for people from cold Lake, more like Coal-lege then cawl-lege with the second being more typical of Southern Albertan cities like Calgary and Edmonton.

    • @nicholasyoung9758
      @nicholasyoung9758 4 месяца назад

      @swagmund_freud6669 Do you live in Cold Lake, too?

    • @swagmund_freud6669
      @swagmund_freud6669 4 месяца назад

      @@nicholasyoung9758 No but I travel there a lot due to family members.

  • @RichardDCook
    @RichardDCook 5 месяцев назад +1

    At 6:59 as you probably know that's called "the cot/caught merger". I've only lived in two places- West Virginia and California- and both have the same cot/caught (or Bob/ball or Don/dawn or "pot of coffee") merger you do. But famously in New York City they don't have that merger, and cot, Bob, Don, and pot are pronounced with no lip-rounding and a lowered jaw, while caught, ball, dawn, and coffee with lip-rounding and a higher jaw.

  • @cmg3714
    @cmg3714 3 года назад +13

    Bob is always the funniest and cutest teacher ! 👨🏻‍🏫

  • @fumi4815
    @fumi4815 3 года назад +12

    Thank you for an intriguing lesson!
    It has been about 2 years since I started to watch this channel.
    But it’s first time to leave a comment.
    I thought English native speakers could imitate other English intonation or dialects .
    After think about it, it’s difficult for me to mimic different intonation of my mother tongue .
    By the way , I learn English as a 2nd language in Japan.

  • @mellyz601
    @mellyz601 3 года назад +1

    I live in Canada so I needed a Canadian teacher too. Thanks for your videos.

  • @timothyirwin8974
    @timothyirwin8974 5 месяцев назад +1

    Working on several construction projects in the states I found it funny how they pronounced FOYER. Them FOY Yerr. Us FOY Yeah like it is pronounced in French as it is originally a French word.

  • @carolpeterson6756
    @carolpeterson6756 2 года назад +7

    I grew up in the Detroit area and my parents were English~Finnish speakers. Hence, we also spoke with a very round sound, as Canadians do. Since then, I've lived all over North America, including five years in 🇨🇦. My daughter, grandson and still friend ex-husband all live in 🇨🇦. Many people in Minnesota, North Dakota and Michigan etc have Scandinavian routes and people ask them if they are Canadian. We lived in British Columbia and I found their accent quite different than the Windsor area. My mother-in-law was from an Irish~Canadian family in New Brunswick. Well you know, that is whole other ball game. I enjoyed your little lesson, eh Bob. 🇺🇸💞🇨🇦

  • @jvelhinha
    @jvelhinha 3 года назад +3

    I like this lesson, Bob. The sound is very important for me understand 👍👏👏

  • @hueyav8r
    @hueyav8r 4 месяца назад +1

    Root vs Route. Just one of those things that gets me to smile

  • @mitziserrano7645
    @mitziserrano7645 3 года назад +4

    Bob! I enjoy watching each video of yours, I love the Canadian accent in general, and watching these videos is just awesome. In Mexican Spanish, we use "eh" too to confirm something.

  • @pristinehorizon8375
    @pristinehorizon8375 3 года назад +4

    Dear Teacher Bob , What an amazing class it is..
    ... Beautiful River and that place too is enchanting ...Nature beauty at its peak...Really a dreamland .....👍❤️❤️ Grateful to you

  • @leatherjock2001
    @leatherjock2001 10 месяцев назад +1

    Being half Canadian with many Canadian relatives this is right on. Very good. My favorite word in the English language is GARAGE. It is spoken differently in the UA, Canada and the UK(and Australia).

    • @randywatts6969
      @randywatts6969 4 месяца назад

      I pronounce it “grawdge”, and I live in southwestern Ontario

  • @randywatts6969
    @randywatts6969 4 месяца назад +1

    In NJ, NYC and Long Island, “Florida” is pronounced “Flarida”🇨🇦

  • @KarinaHunter
    @KarinaHunter 2 года назад +16

    Hey Bob, just a note, we don't "add a u" they've dropped the u (the anglophones in out countries include descendants of Brits and that difference comes from us keeping things as the Brits write them where in the U.S. they've dropped the letters/changed how they write it).
    Wish you'd do a few videos about English dialects in Canada i.e. Southern vs. Northern Ontario, East Coast accents (all Canadians agree those are awesome), dialects in the prairies and B.C.

    • @ajs11201
      @ajs11201 9 месяцев назад +3

      Yes, those pesky American differences can mostly be attributed to Noah Webster in the 1800s when he attempted to "simplify" and standardize spellings. He gave us the "er" endings (instead of "re"), he dropped the "u" out of the "our" endings, he changed "cheque" to "check," and a few other notable differences. The differences are few and predictable enough that they shouldn't cause much stress for someone learning American English.

    • @DanWestonX
      @DanWestonX 5 месяцев назад +1

      Sorry, the -or comes from Latin, not the US. The French (not the English) inserted a u, then there was a neo-Latinization spelling movement in the US. Similarly, the -er comes from German, then the French flipped it to -re, and Americans flipped it back.

    • @istvanglock7445
      @istvanglock7445 4 месяца назад

      @@DanWestonX
      It wasn't any neo-Latinization spelling movement in the US that resulted in these changes. It was Noah Webster's dictionary, preceded by his classroom spelling texts, that attempted to simplify English language orthography and bring it more into line with pronunciation. He put forward many other changes, e.g. plow for plough, and still others that didn't catch on, e.g. dawter for daughter, thum for thumb, masheen for machine, etc.

    • @mandtgrant
      @mandtgrant 4 месяца назад

      We have not

  • @Aleksey_FE
    @Aleksey_FE 3 года назад +4

    So it doesn't matter what kind of English you learn. The point is what you read, what you listen to, who you talk to. Over the past year or so, I've listened to most of the lessons on both channels, trying to repeat out loud with Bob, mimicking his intonation. Hearing this, my wife once said, "You know, you sound English more politely than Russian, and I never thought that you could speak so quickly."😎

    • @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian
      @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian  3 года назад +3

      I'm super happy to hear that you're improving Aleksey. I'm also happy that I can help you not only learn the language, but to learn to speak it more quickly. It sounds like you're making good progress! 😎🐕🍁

    • @Aleksey_FE
      @Aleksey_FE 3 года назад +1

      @@LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian Progress is clear. Two and half months of transcribing also improved spelling and even punctuation. Thanks for the quality transcripts, by the way.

  • @andrewede7154
    @andrewede7154 4 месяца назад +2

    One of my favourites is "foyer." In Canada it is pronounced "foy-yA," while many Americans say "foy-yer."

    • @jaengen
      @jaengen 4 месяца назад

      Alot of Americans say Foy-AY too

  • @CR72024MM
    @CR72024MM 3 года назад +2

    You’re one of the best language teachers , we love you

  • @dmitrylubyanov7277
    @dmitrylubyanov7277 3 года назад +6

    Awesome lesson, eh?
    Now you can definitely redirect everyone who's curious about what the difference between these two languages is)
    Thank you, Mr. Bob!

    • @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian
      @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian  3 года назад +2

      I thought since this question comes up (Canadian vs. American English) quite often during my live lessons that I should make a lesson about it that I could tell people about when they asked this question! 😎🐕🍁

    • @dmitrylubyanov7277
      @dmitrylubyanov7277 3 года назад +1

      @@LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian you nailed it

  • @jxr.8568
    @jxr.8568 3 года назад +5

    Hello from Thailand.

  • @andreasrefe6209
    @andreasrefe6209 2 месяца назад

    We have the ”eh” in german too (ne, ge, gel) and in spanish ”eeh”. Really good word!

  • @cleanwillie1307
    @cleanwillie1307 Месяц назад

    I grew up in the 50s and 60s in Sault Ste Marie, Michigan which is on the border and is one of the few places were the Canadian side of the border is significantly larger than the American side. Sault Ste Marie, Ontario is about 5 times the size of the American side. When I was young the only TV station we got was a CBC station and we listened a good deal to Canadian radio stations as well. After high school I essentially moved away from home, only returning for visits. For several years it was common for people in various places I went in the US to ask if I was Canadian after hearing me talk. Eventually I apparently lost that Canadian tinge to my voice after several years living away from the border.

  • @coolsense5356
    @coolsense5356 5 месяцев назад +3

    Not all Americans sound the same when speaking English . Pronunciations differ from region to region.

  • @komalpreetsingh3505
    @komalpreetsingh3505 3 года назад +3

    I always enjoy your videos and l learnt very much from ur videos

  • @anitasteiner5733
    @anitasteiner5733 Год назад +1

    Great lesson! Thank you!
    Spanish speaker here.
    It took me over 20 years of exposure to be able to perceive what I've recently learned is called the Canadian rising. Even with some knowledge of English dialects and Phonology.
    Being bombarded by Hollywood in most of what I choose to consume, I couldn't really tell the difference... until the "out"s were really sounding more like an /ou/ and some of the otherwise aish "o"s in spelling were keeping what a Spanish speaking mind would consider their natural /o/ sounding quality.
    As you've said, you're imprinting a strong accent to your speaking. Sometimes, it takes me minutes to sound the Canadian alarm.😅

  • @various5709
    @various5709 7 месяцев назад +1

    Hello sir , I'm from Algeria and my native language is Arabic, but I learned French language before my native language for many reasons, anyway it was just an introduction to reach a point which is whatever you said on the video wasn't difficult for me to understand it , I think the Canadian English isn't that hard as many people think , I think it is because the how you did explain it 😊

  • @AmericanEnglishBrent
    @AmericanEnglishBrent 3 года назад +19

    Sorry some Americans laughed at you. "Don got up at the crack of dawn" sounds perfectly right they way you pronounced it. When you said, "I went to university in the US" that was pretty Canadian. We'd say, "I went to college in the US." Great work!

    • @mohdags420
      @mohdags420 3 года назад +1

      If only Mr. Bob went to college in the state of Maine. 🥲 I know someone from there who is polite and well-behaved. He would never laugh at anyone speaking with an accent. I’m sure many Mainers are the same!

    • @rosangelacarvalho6311
      @rosangelacarvalho6311 3 года назад +1

      We should respect the different accents. One day I met an English woman who said : " American accent is rubbish !" Needless to say I was shocked 😱 at her disrespectful words !!!

    • @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian
      @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian  3 года назад +5

      I think it's because I went to University in Michigan. The Michigan American accent tends to pronounce O's like they are A's sometimes. They used to call me Baaaab instead of Bob! 😎🐕🍁

    • @AmericanEnglishBrent
      @AmericanEnglishBrent 3 года назад +1

      @@LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian Ah! That's hilarious. I know exactly how that sounds.

    • @AmericanEnglishBrent
      @AmericanEnglishBrent 3 года назад +1

      @@mohdags420 Never. We're all very polite here in Maine.

  • @4june9140
    @4june9140 5 месяцев назад +4

    Big Scottish Influence

  • @kylegallagher2633
    @kylegallagher2633 4 месяца назад +1

    I have definitely used the phrase "Im sorry for saying sorry so much!" 😅😂

  • @m.r.3510
    @m.r.3510 2 месяца назад

    Here's one for you, Bob. I lived in central MN and had a job transfer to Missouri. Went to the grocery store to pick up some lunch meat and other items. The lady behind the meat counter wanted to know if i was a Canadian. I thought that was funny.

  • @komalpreetsingh3505
    @komalpreetsingh3505 3 года назад +3

    Thnx for this video

  • @rebelranger
    @rebelranger 2 года назад +3

    In the US, Don and dawn generally sound different east of the Mississippi River (except for Pittsburgh and Boston) and sound the same west of the Mississippi River, where the a vowel in both words sounds similar to how Darth Vader says father. This is because of the changes in American English with the cot-caught merger, with now about half of the country pronouncing them the same and still growing.

    • @richlisola1
      @richlisola1 Год назад

      I do hate that merger, glad it’s not part of my speech

  • @drpedos
    @drpedos 2 года назад +1

    thank you so much for useful video :)

  • @feisalthamkim
    @feisalthamkim Год назад +2

    From my experience, when i was worked at the airport. I was assisted Canadian Passengers and when they talked it's like combination of American and British Accent but i understand it, it's just sounds "New" to me at the time but now i've learned they are different. It's interesting, eh? 😆 I've learn another new lesson today. Thank you, sir 😊

  • @rosangelacarvalho6311
    @rosangelacarvalho6311 3 года назад +5

    I think this kind of difference is very commom. It occurs between Portuguese apoken in Portugal and in Brazil. The accent is completely different - I'm Brazilian and I have difficult in understanding Portuguese people speaking ! There are lots of words with different meanings as well. In Brazil there are also a great amount of regional slangs that they don't understand.

    • @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian
      @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian  3 года назад +4

      I find regional slang very cool and interesting. Even in Canada certain areas have little slang words that are unique only to the people that live there. 😎🐕🍁

    • @stiaininbeglan3844
      @stiaininbeglan3844 2 года назад +1

      It's the same with Spanish. I had a Spanish teacher from South America, and she emphasized that Mexico and the southern States DON'T speak the same Spanish as South America and Spain.

    • @Lovebliss22
      @Lovebliss22 Год назад

      As someone who speaks portuguese from Angola, I have a difficult time understanding Brazilian portuguese. Maybe because Portugal portuguese is the original portuguese.

  • @alexfabriciovaldez5979
    @alexfabriciovaldez5979 3 года назад +3

    Interesting!

  • @roses6396
    @roses6396 4 месяца назад

    Your English is very easy to understand and your voice and accent are very clear! Thank you make this video i learn new type of English today!❤

  • @rickncam3
    @rickncam3 3 месяца назад

    Well done. From Ottawa, but born and raised in the west.

  • @Aerosmith77
    @Aerosmith77 3 года назад +7

    Interesting: in Hungarian, we also attach an e sound in similar cases. This pizza is pretty good, eh? Izlett-e a pizza? (translation: Did this pizza taste well?) You can ask it this way: Ez a pizza jó volt e? The e is there in both of the sentences.

    • @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian
      @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian  3 года назад +2

      It's an interesting way of communicating isn't it? It's like you're asking the person to agree with you, not in a forceful way, but kind of just encouraging them to say yes! 😎🐕🍁

    • @mohdags420
      @mohdags420 3 года назад +2

      @@LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian I automatically read the first question as “It’s an interesting way of communicating, eh?”

    • @yusufi2542
      @yusufi2542 3 года назад +1

      @@LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian Ye exaclty

  • @satyaveersingh3008
    @satyaveersingh3008 3 года назад +3

    Hey Bob I learn english language.
    Your videos are help me.

  • @rossbabcock3790
    @rossbabcock3790 3 месяца назад

    English from 'Up Nord' Minnesota is more difficult for me....and I live here! Good video.

  • @kerstinwarda1831
    @kerstinwarda1831 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for that great Video 👍😊

  • @thanhngoms
    @thanhngoms 3 года назад +3

    The flowers behind you are so beautiful

    • @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian
      @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian  3 года назад +1

      It has been a good year for growing flowers! 😎🐕🍁

    • @thanhngoms
      @thanhngoms 2 года назад

      @David Scott I'm doing well. Thank you! How about you?

    • @thanhngoms
      @thanhngoms 2 года назад

      @David Scott I'm from Vietnam and you? Nice to know you ^^

  • @citroen143
    @citroen143 11 месяцев назад +4

    Hello Bob! Your English sounds enchanting just like your manners. I wish I could speak as you do. As you probably know the word "eh" is used in Australian English, Italian and Dutch!!!! You are not alone and thanks for your help, friendliness and kindness. You are the best 😃😃♥

  • @mitchmccrimmon1009
    @mitchmccrimmon1009 5 месяцев назад +2

    I lived in the UK for 20 years so I became very conscious of differences between British, Canadian and American English. Canadian and British English have some common elements such as the way we spell words like behaviour, favour, honour - same as British English. When I grew up in the 50's and 60's, Canadians also pronounced ALL of the works ending in 'ile' the same as the British. The Americans pronounce the one-syllable words like smile, tile, file, pile, guile the same as Canadians and British but Americans differ from the rest of the English speaking world in dropping the final 'e' for two syllable words so they say 'mobile' as if it were spelled 'mobil'. Same with missil(e), fragil(e), docil(e), they drop the ending 'e' while others in the English speaking world pronounce the endings of these words just as they would with smile, tile, file, etc. I emphasized when I grew up because, today, a lot of Canadians pronounce these words the same as the Americans do, because of the influence of US TV. But the British, Australians and others have kept the original British pronunciations of these words.

    • @hilariousname6826
      @hilariousname6826 4 месяца назад

      I've always given most of those words what you would call the American pronunciation, as did my parents, so I think what you're talking about is more regional than national pronunciation.

  • @klassikkat
    @klassikkat 4 месяца назад

    Good video. I am fascinated by accents so I had to watch your video. I grew up on the border in Windsor. I always laughed that we in Windsor played 'hockey' when just across the border they played 'hackey'. The same sound can be used for the word 'sorry'. Americans are 'sarry'. Bit of an exaggeration but it works. Thanks for a good video.

  • @Captain-abdi
    @Captain-abdi 3 года назад +3

    Hi teacher bob i always enjoy your videos
    And i appreciete it 🙏🙏🙏🙏💪

  • @Free99English
    @Free99English 3 года назад +3

    Haha I wasn’t paying attention and had to go back to watch the first part.

  • @robertstack5447
    @robertstack5447 4 месяца назад

    In provinces, without a lot of hydroelectricity, it’s not called a Hydro pole. Likely an electrical pole.

  • @kalinivanov7440
    @kalinivanov7440 2 года назад +1

    This accent is so interesting to me. I've heard how a lot of English accents sound like, but the Canadian one is the most interesting of all. Your explanation was the best I've ever heard. Thank you!❤❤

    • @awfan221
      @awfan221 5 месяцев назад

      There's not just one Canadian one. This man was talking about the more central provinces, and the West too. Eastern provinces have their own unique sayings too, as do our Northern territories

  • @Darye22
    @Darye22 3 года назад +3

    Oh, I love your lessons because I can understand you very well, yes, American accent too, but the British or Australian accent is so hard for me... 😕

    • @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian
      @LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian  3 года назад +2

      Some of those accents can be tricky when the person speaks quickly. I sometimes have trouble understanding people when I watch British television! 😎🐕🍁

    • @samya7576
      @samya7576 3 года назад +2

      @@LearnEnglishwithBobtheCanadian yeah I know that feeling 😟🙁🤨