Americans Anna and JT React to the different variations of the english language and dialects in the United Kingdom! . #americanreacts #britain #british #uk
Жүктеу.....
Пікірлер: 945
@sgthree Жыл бұрын
Not the clearest examples of any of the accents. The poor recording quality of many of them don't help.
@wallythewondercorncake8657
Жыл бұрын
Half of them are just old blokes from the countryside, so they just sound like they have a soft West Country accent, rather than a thick local accent.
@SweetBrazyN
Жыл бұрын
Indeed, the scouse, brummie, manc and geordie are the ones even British people have trouble understanding and on this video they all sounded the same aha
@flowerofscotland1 Жыл бұрын
The Scots have way more accents than what was shown. Love from Scotland!
@Sam.Gaming
Жыл бұрын
Aye we do i am from North Ayrshire so we are like half Glaswegian and half our own language
@jaydee_83
Жыл бұрын
The one that said Scots sounded closer to Doric than Glasgow
@Julian-1984
Жыл бұрын
That's for sure I struggle with my boss talking and he's glaswegian, Edinburgh are easy to sorta understand
@Sam.Gaming
Жыл бұрын
@@jaydee_83 What?
@neilharris8210
Жыл бұрын
Yeah I honestly can’t understand Glaswegian! Duncan Banatyne on Dragons Den used to really confuse me! No offence 😊
@j0hnf_uk Жыл бұрын
Those 30 dialects aren't a true reflection of the variety of accents/dialects in the UK. They covered some of the cities, but when it comes to counties, there's a huge variation depending on where within the counties people are. As an example, there's a huge variety of dialects/accents within Yorkshire, depending on the location being east, west, north or south.
@halcyon289 Жыл бұрын
Wales has dozens of dialects / accents. English is the main language. Living in South East Wales , there's at least twelve accents in a ten mile radius.
@stuartcollins82
Жыл бұрын
If you live in the area, you can even guess what valley people are from based on their accent.
@neilharris8210
Жыл бұрын
Yes my Dad lives in Wales so I spend a lot of time there. I can certainly detect the different accents 😃
@neilharris8210
Жыл бұрын
My Dad lives in Aberystwyth - I love it there!
@NathanWELSHY
Жыл бұрын
Correction. English is the main language in South Wales.*
@neilharris8210
Жыл бұрын
@@NathanWELSHY Yeah that’s true. I used to spend weekends in Barry Island
@sidneygriffiths5737 Жыл бұрын
These are all extremely tame versions of the accents! Extremely Tame!
@kieronimo1 Жыл бұрын
These soundbites are from old people from about 30 or 40 years ago.....so these dialects are out out date by 50+ years (I think). Accents have changed, but the regions are still distinguishable. Just like anywhere, people from these places don't always have heavy accents. With TV, multimedia and immigration, younger generations are influenced by all sorts of accents and cultures. It depends on your upbringing and also your attitude. Some people just prefer to use local dialects, where as others choose to speak more estuary.
@CeleWolf
Жыл бұрын
Not true
@kieronimo1
Жыл бұрын
@@CeleWolf Which part? It is absolutely true. I'm English. I live here. I can switch between my local accent and a more estuary one because I travel, teach English and have international friends. I know many people who can do this from all over the UK. I also know people who grew up in the same town who have vastly different accents based on the influence of their family and people around them. I even know siblings with very different levels of local accent.
@Ozzpot
Жыл бұрын
I agree completely
@leesamurphy1110
Жыл бұрын
I agree not many speak like the older generation now. At least from where I live. Growing in in Barnsley the accent was really strong not so much now
@skechyassmofo
Жыл бұрын
@Bonita Q As someone from Cambridgeshire, it sounds nothing like that example. And I now live in Cornwall, which that accent has changed a bit as well as being less pronounced.
@HolderOfLife Жыл бұрын
You'll be surprised at how close Newcastle (geordie) and Sunderland (mackem) are and how different these accents can be. 30min drive makes a lot of regional difference.
@zoemn24
Жыл бұрын
I agree I hadn’t really noticed as a Brit myself until last years I’m a Celebrity Get Me Out Of Here! when Jill Scott (Sunderland native) and Ant and Dec (both Newcastle natives) were talking to each other.
@samuelgarrod8327
Жыл бұрын
But very few people not from the North East have a clue...
@billydonaldson6483
Жыл бұрын
@@zoemn24 The accent in north Sunderland is different from that in the south.
@backupwhatever8928
Жыл бұрын
Yh, me dads a mackem and me mum is geordie. They sound similar but they can be very different. My school is a mixture of the two and you have never heard the confusion between me and me geordie friend with the slight dialect and slang differences trying to figure out what the other means.
@PolarBear4
Жыл бұрын
Dialect too. I'm from Newcastle, I have family from Sunderland and Teesside and a friend from County Durham. To people not from the region they can all sound very similar but we all have very different words for things at times along with distinct accents! My elderly relative from Sunderland has such a strong accent I can barely understand her when she uses dialect too, and despite having lived in Boro, my Dad struggles to understand people just up the road in Hartlepool. My friend and I often end up using words when talking to each other that confuses the other (she doesn't call the extra batter you'd get with chips "scraps" so had no clue what I meant when I asked for scraps with my chips once - just 1 example of many). You'd think with how close we are we'd at least have heard of the other's words but nope. Some are totally new to me. My accent is pretty mild as I've lived in a few places and my Dad was born elsewhere so has a more "neutral" accent but I'm still asked if I speak English at times or people ask if I'm Welsh, Scottish or Irish(?!). My accent is noticeably different enough from most in the area I've had locals point out it's different and ask which other bit of the city (there's a difference in each part of it) I'm from/if I'm from elsewhere.
@richardh3761 Жыл бұрын
There’s a tv series called 'Creature Comforts' which is Plasticine animated British conversations, using animals! Has lots of accents, and clever stop-animation. Nobody else has reacted to this, so I don’t know if it’ll be copyrighted.
@Jawa1604
Жыл бұрын
That is a fantastic idea!
@rickygrimshaw1255
Жыл бұрын
I remember it was originally started on the The British Gas adverts before becoming a tv show.
@richardh3761
Жыл бұрын
“They’ve got to be easily turn off and onable” 🐢
@pimpozza
Жыл бұрын
@@richardh3761 Yes!! That's the one I loved best, Richard!! "I don't have much time. I'm a very busy person..."_ 🐢😁👍
@richardh3761
Жыл бұрын
@@pimpozza 🤣 and the way he does the deep swallow, tapping his fingers 😂 🐢
@johnm8224 Жыл бұрын
Hahaha! As soon as you said "I'm just waiting for a really thick / distinctive" one, I immediately thought "Wait for Geordie / Tyneside", and so it turned out! I love the Geordie accent/dialect. It's so unique and almost musical. For the record, even though I'm originally from Scotland, my accent is a bit of a mix of RP and "Southeast", as they call it here.
@garyskinner2422
Жыл бұрын
I'm a Londoner my fav is Geordie,Scouse ,Scottish
@wessexdruid7598
Жыл бұрын
And the closest to 'the Queen's English' was always supposed to be Inverness.
@whitecompany18
Жыл бұрын
Funny you say it sounds musical because I think that was Brian Johnson from AC/DC talking .
@TheGeordiePoet1
Жыл бұрын
Gotta say this is a bit refreshing, my experience is most people like to take the piss out of our accent or say they can’t understand us like we are speaking mandarin 😂
@garyskinner2422
Жыл бұрын
@@TheGeordiePoet1 Pardon?
@duelroadknight737 Жыл бұрын
Northern Ireland has a different accent to Southern Ireland 😅😅😅😅
@stevetaylor8698 Жыл бұрын
There isn't just one accent in Yorkshire (unless you are the BBC). What is known as "broad Yorkshire" with its "thee and thou" was mainly spoken in the the West Riding but even here there were marked regional differences. The accent in Hull is very different as are the accents in North and East Yorkshire, particularly as you get to the far north in places like Middlesbrough.
@staceynoir1988
Жыл бұрын
Definitely. Im from Sheffield and my uncle is from Middlesbrough and we sound nothing alike . He sounds almost geordie
@paleobolt8069
Жыл бұрын
Yeah it is a big problem with these videos that they pretty much ignore every country other than England And ignore the more obscure English accents and dialects like for example Wales has so many accents and dialects also as far as I'm aware none are called welsh-english.
@martinwebb1681
Жыл бұрын
@@paleobolt8069 ... I think that was just a reference to show it wasn't a part of England.
@mattwainwright9198
Жыл бұрын
Quite right, I'm from East Yorkshire and most of my family migrated over from West Yorkshire. As a result I speak completely differently to the older generations of my family and often get made fun of by them (all in good humour of course). Being from East Yorkshire my accent is sort of like a toned down Hull accent and I do find myself occasionally saying strong Hullisms but if I go into Hull people can tell immediately I am not actually from there because it is not strong enough. However, if I visit West Yorkshire I often get people guessing I am from Hull because of the similarity.
@martynnotman3467
Жыл бұрын
@@staceynoir1988 as someone who grew up in Teesside and lives in Sheffield the Teesside "Smoggie" accent is NOTHING like Geordie!!!
@MrGearoid65 Жыл бұрын
Haha guys! Greetings from Dublin, Ireland. I enjoy your videos. For a country the size of a postage stamp, you'd be amazed at the variety of accents in Ireland. Every thirty miles down the road there's a new accent. It's great fun! Stay well.
@martinhutton66 Жыл бұрын
They were all spoken by an older generation, most places nowadays have a lot more accents/dialects, if you could find one spoken by a younger generation, then your get a more realistic sound of the places, London for example you can tell the difference between north south east and west London, And it's the same everywhere. Peace and Love ❤️🙏❤️
@eleanorlyndon865
Жыл бұрын
And not just the 4 corners of the compass, but the Boroughs! I can tell if a person is from Hackney from a mile off!
@kieronnarbett6141 Жыл бұрын
Most people from Wales speak English, the Welsh language almost died out at one point. On a general basses South and North accents are very different, South is soft and flowing whereas in the North the accent is a mixture of Welsh/scouse and sounds quite groggy, the Rhondda Valley’s have a strong accent and from there down to the south west of Wales the accent becomes less prominent in welsh and has more of an English influence to it. I hope you find this interesting. It would be awesome if you could find a video on the Regional accents of Wales. Also the language between North and South are slightly different too with spelling and pronunciation of words. Love the videos 😊 you guys always have me laughing 😂👌🏼
@ticketyboo2456
Жыл бұрын
Correction. Scouse is mixed with north Wales not the other way around.
@kieronnarbett6141
Жыл бұрын
@@ticketyboo2456 thank you for the correction. My bad, I almost had it 😂 haha
@wallythewondercorncake8657
Жыл бұрын
"South is soft and flowing" You've obviously never been to a pub in Devon
@ticketyboo2456
Жыл бұрын
@@wallythewondercorncake8657 As long as you put the cream first then pour the beer and finish with a lovely dollop of jam everything is soft and flowing in Devon. Great county.
@seeyouanon2931
Жыл бұрын
Ehhh! I thought scouse was influenced by the Irish? Because the Irish used to dock at liverpool.
@theeccentricmilliner5350 Жыл бұрын
You mention Winnie the Pooh in Kent, it was actually written about 30 miles away, next door in Sussex (where my family comes from) 🙂Unfortunately the genuine Sussex accent started dying when the railways came from London in the 1830's. The Yorkshire accent (where I've lived for more years than I care to admit to) was not very clear, but then there are multiple variations in the Yorkshire accent. But "Tint in't tin" (it isn't in the tin) as they say to us off-comed-uns (somebody from somewhere else).
@winclouduk
Жыл бұрын
Well here in Rochester we got Charles dickens
@gleadhill79
Жыл бұрын
@@winclouduk yes, It's a competition... I'm from Notts/Derby... I win! Haha
@winclouduk
Жыл бұрын
@@gleadhill79 ok I’m from mablethorpe I win ha ha ha
@gotoparkaftermosqueinnit316
Жыл бұрын
Southern ponce
@cheman579
Жыл бұрын
Yeah it's mad cos where I'm from in West Yorkshire, we'd say that as "it int in't tin", and wouldn't say any of the Ts except for the one at the start of tin.
@themartinebunny Жыл бұрын
I was born and raised in London. I cannot understand Geordie accents for the life of me. Once I was in a queue behind two Geordies who were chatting away for ages before I even realised they were speaking English. I was there trying to figure out what language they were speaking for a good 5 minutes or so. 🤦🏼♀️
@carolinesconcertvids860 Жыл бұрын
My brother's girlfriend is from South Wales and only speaks English. I love her accent. It's awesome. I'm from the West Country and not many people here have that accent anymore
@fayesouthall6604
Жыл бұрын
English speaking welsh people have lovely accents. I know because I have one. I’ve been told.
@rossmckeon8487 Жыл бұрын
The Scots one covered far to much area the people at the top left of the red shaded area sound completely different from the people at the bottom left 😂😂 Love your videos, keep them coming 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
@paleobolt8069
Жыл бұрын
Yeah it is a big problem with these videos that they pretty much ignore every country other than England (And even the more obscure English accents and dialects) like for example Wales has so many accents and dialects also as far as I'm aware none are called Welsh-English.
@Jamie_D Жыл бұрын
Midlands probably has the most individual regional accents because people tend to come here from all over the country as housing etc often cheaper
@Donkeh245 Жыл бұрын
North welsh and south welsh accents are soo different, im not too sure about north welsh but in south wales there are loads of accents, like valley accents, swansea, cardiff, Breacon and loads more
@EvilSoupDragon Жыл бұрын
It sounds like some of those who were recorded are speaking to someone not native to their area, as the pacing is slowed down. For example Geordies not only have a very distinct dialect but they generally speak very quickly For the Midlands there’s no single accent that represents the region. For example the distance from Coventry to Wolverhampton is around 35 miles, but within that distance there are many distinctly different accents and dialects such as Coventry, Solihull, Brummie, Tipton, Smethwick, Dudley, Gornal, Aldridge and Wolverhampton.
@torreyskidd Жыл бұрын
theres sooooo many accents in Wales, i cant believe they showed just 1 🤣🫣 also the majority of Welsh people speak English lol
@RobertHeslop Жыл бұрын
Oi oi, Geordie is my hometown! Mind, I have to change to RP when its with someone from either down South or not from the UK otherwise they struggle to understand. As for Scots, it is considered by some linguists as a separate language, and it's about 90% mutually intelligible to those of us from Newcastle (Geordie) in northeast England. I recommend a singer called Iona Fyfe, she recently released a song called 'the cauld' which is in Scots, also did a cover of Taylor Swift's song All Too Well in Scots too, she's really good.
@billydonaldson6483 Жыл бұрын
People from the north of a town can sound different from those in the south of the same town. The recordings you were listening to were taken many years ago as an attempt to preserve local dialects. I believe most of the participants were serving soldiers.
@bentulip4547 Жыл бұрын
coming from Durham i knew the geordie would be the belter.
@craigjackson8376
Жыл бұрын
Snap 😂
@Jawa1604 Жыл бұрын
Brilliant reaction. The pair of you plus the dogs area joy to watch. I have a West Country accent and he was basically talking about which beer he liked and what brewry it was from. The Bristol accent is where the pirate accent comes from!
@Mirily Жыл бұрын
Hello, Brit here! I think the reason that the people in those sound bites are all so old is because a lot of these accents aren't quite the same now! Where I live in the Westcountry, people don't talk with a Wiltshire accent anymore! It's much more Chav sounding in the youth! 🤷♀️🤣 Technically it's Estuary English, a more London sounding accent that has spread out from the Thames Estuary. This is me finally putting my English Language A-Level to good use!! 🤣
@j800r_aswell
Жыл бұрын
Oh god. Let them keep their innocence. Don't expose them to chavs. Besides, chav speak is a "fake" accent/dialect. They are trying to sound like something they're not.
@aaranross952 Жыл бұрын
I'm a 41 year old man from Kent and born here and never heard anyone from Kent sound like that🤔
@TmHudsonArt Жыл бұрын
As somebody in the Uk who speak Yorkshire, I can tell you that these are all old versions spoken by old people and that dialects have changed and evolved a lot in recent years. In Yorkshire, we don''t sound much like the guy they played in this at all these days and we also have various dialects in Yorkshire alone so the different ridings of Yorkshire sound quite different to each other. I recall when I went to US and Canada, many people struggled to understand me.
@martinwebb1681
Жыл бұрын
I'm cockney from East London, when I first went to the US (Portland Oregon) back in the late 1970s no one could understand a word I said you would think I had just landed from mars or something, I literally had to talk in slow motion just so people could understand what I was saying.
@_joerooney
Жыл бұрын
Exactly, between Sheffield and Barnsley there are entirely different dialects despite being 30 mins apart, then you drive 20 mins from Barnsley to Doncaster and that's entirely different again.
@TmHudsonArt
Жыл бұрын
@@_joerooney Yes it is the same just in Rotherham alone.
@cheman579
Жыл бұрын
@@TmHudsonArt Yeah same with Leeds then going into Wakefield district, there's even slight differences between towns like I can tell apart people from South Elmsall, Pontefract, and Castleford cos we all speak the same but there's slight different words that each place uses.
@brandonkelly5520 Жыл бұрын
As a geordie, it sounds totally normal to me and strange to see your reaction 🤣🤣
@supersnebz392 Жыл бұрын
I’m a geordie and I just knew you’d struggle on that one 😂
@danmaughan4524 Жыл бұрын
There's actually so many more accents than shown here, I'm from northeastern Cumbria but the Cumbrian accent displayed here is more of a west Cumbrian, can literally drive about 10 miles in any direction from where I live and you'll hear several different accents.
@staticbuilds7613 Жыл бұрын
There are a lot more than that. They just showed some common ones but each town or city has it's own
@jantomas4706 Жыл бұрын
You should look into Scottish dialects and Glaswegian is honestly one of the best 😂
@Kazza_8240
Жыл бұрын
I live about 25 miles from Glasgow, and I speak differently, like different slang words, slightly different pronunciation with different words. I'd like to see JT and Anna watch some Limmy clips, if they can make him out, it would be hilarious!
@MoJo-dj8qb Жыл бұрын
Really wish you could/would find a video about all the different dialects in Wales. We don't all sound the same! The Welsh language changes too depending where in Wales you are.
@judithhope8970 Жыл бұрын
In the south, we have trouble understanding Geordie, but Northumberland and Newcastle is a fantastic place to visit. Lovely people.
@Believer3_
Жыл бұрын
Cleary never been lol. Its a shithole, especially places like the newcastle west end and byker
@judithhope8970
Жыл бұрын
@@Believer3_ I haven't been for a number of years, sixty I'd say, so that's a shame. It used to be nice. You had a great natural history museum, I do know if that's still there. My sister moved there and I'd come up to visit as a schoolgirl. In my head it's still nice. Northumberland is awesome though. I come regularly, Alnwick gardens, Hadrian's wall, Vindolanda, sycamore gap, Kielder, lovely towns like Hexham, The Sill. Amazing place.
@judithhope8970
Жыл бұрын
@@Believer3_ Yeah? That's a shame. I haven't been there for about sixty years but I remember having a nice stay back then. I love Northumberland though, that really is pretty although, you aren't Northumberland are you. I remember visiting the natural history museum, was it the Hancock? It was a long time ago now.
@donnasnowdon3459 Жыл бұрын
Loved your confusion at Pitmatic and Geordie - there's actually a lot of crossover between the two and Northumbrian because it's related to the north east coal miners. I'm from a mining village and grew up with it. 'The gallower got a gliff' that the old men were talking about means 'the horse got a fright'.
@jenscee7679
Жыл бұрын
I’m from South Northumberland and the number of different variations in pitmatic accents is huge. Blyth, Ashington and Bedlington sound different, despite being within 5 miles of each other.
@chuckyboy6977
Жыл бұрын
When the pitmatic came on, It was strange as that very near my accent. It’s strange as I’m from Aylesham in Kent, Aylesham was a purpose built village to house coal miners from about 1902ish, it’s about half way between Canterbury and Dover. The village was built with a street layout to resemble the winding gear on the nearby Snowdown pit, Those originally from from the village like myself have a this northern Pitmatic type accent, as the miners moved to the Kent coalfields from across the north, wales and Scotland. The people from the villages 1-2 miles away have the kent accent.
@TheOldBlackShuckyDog Жыл бұрын
Tbf most Welsh people do speak English, but there has been a revival on the past couple of decades of their native tongue. I still wouldn’t have thought it’s anywhere close to a majority though
@angiew1841 Жыл бұрын
The reason lots of the voices were of older people, is because this is a obviously a record of different dialects that is unfortunately being lost because of diversity, so it’s mainly the older generation who still speak that way , it’s a way of preserving our dialect heritage,
@doobiedootwo3517 Жыл бұрын
Just one for Yorkshire, Wales and such a huge area of Scotland is crazy. In Yorkshire you can hear if someone comes from Hull, / East Riding or the DearneValley, Barnsley or North Riding.
@PiersLawsonBrown1972 Жыл бұрын
I come from Norfolk, and there are properly 5 or 6 dialects here alone. Someone from the West of the county sounds nothing like someone from the East coast area, and down on the Norfolk / Suffolk boarder you sound completely different from the North Norfolk coast, and then the county City of Norwich is a mixing pot of them all.
@pauldurkee4764
Жыл бұрын
I do like the Norfolk accent myself, lovely place Norfolk. Best Wishes from Wales.
@CeleWolf
Жыл бұрын
Hello from a fellow Norfolker
@lindieb5278 Жыл бұрын
You would get a much better understanding if you listened to 'Anglophenia' who does 17 different accents and explains where they come from and why. She is also quite amusing!
@Pjs1882 Жыл бұрын
Sitting drinking my cuppa, smiling while I watch and listen to your reactions. Lovely!
@RabbitTeaPot Жыл бұрын
I really enjoy the videos of the two of you together ❤ for sure should do more
@Biketunerfy Жыл бұрын
I’m a Geordie and even though our accents are hard to understand the whole of the British isles understand each other because we’ve lived with each other for thousands of years. I mean this isn’t my normal writing lingo either I’d write differently to my mates so I’m using colloquial English here to tell you about the north east. They are more than one north eastern accent in the north east we all sound the same to someone from the south but to each other in the north east we can tell the subtle differences in which region in the north east you belong just by the slight difference in the accent.
@graemew7001
Жыл бұрын
That's so true, I'm from the South of County Durham and I can understand everyone in the North East......even Macams 🤣. Thing is though, you're right, you get to Wetherby Services and start talking and everyone thinks you a Geordie, I just say yes cos it's easier than ganin through the whole County Durham spiel!!
@Biketunerfy
Жыл бұрын
@@graemew7001 Aye, we went on holiday once to Lanzarote and I had a mate from Teeside with me and we got talking to a few lads from Croydon and they could not tell the difference in our accents lol, they said we all sound the same. To us though there’s a difference.
@graemew7001
Жыл бұрын
@@Biketunerfy Haha a massive difference to us, my mates from Stockton sound nowt like my mate from Gateshead! I like confusing folk tho cos I was born in Dumfries and moved here as a kid so when they say "you're a Geordie?" I just reply with na mate am Scottish, them looking confused isn't in it 🤣
@Biketunerfy
Жыл бұрын
@@graemew7001 I know lol. I find it strange may be they were just too hammered. They looked pretty pissed like. If these people think Geordies are hard to understand now then there’s f*cking no chance when we’re pissed lmao. A thick Glaswegian accent can be hard to understand as well especially some one who doesn’t live in the U.K.
@graemew7001
Жыл бұрын
@@Biketunerfy I'm not a drinker so even I struggle when others are pissed, talking too fast lol. I've seen videos of Glaswegians and I've said to others in the comments to watch a few episodes of Still Game to get the gist of what they're saying or if they not from the UK to just give up lol
@amajinjams6966 Жыл бұрын
I got to a college that is 10 miles from my house and we are in the same county (Yorkshire) but there are probably 3 different dialects/ accents, and I live in the suburb so there is only a few villages and then the town that my college is in. This video's recording are from years and years ago and they are only very small samples. Because even in the same city you might have two or three different types of a dialect or accent. We all sound very different from each other. There are some easier to hear videos of some of the more common accents from different areas.
@cheman579
Жыл бұрын
Yep I'm the same. Picture the scene; West Yorkshire, Wakefield district reyt, I live in one of the small villages (not saying which) basically next to Pontefract, I'll just say South Elmsall cos I lived there until I was a teenager so I sound like I'm from there. When I went to high school in Ponte, there would be people from Pontefract, Castleford, Airedale, Glasshoughton (cos in reality it's different to Cas) etc, and they all sounded slightly different. I then to go New College in Ponte and we have people from Wakefield, from outside the Wakefield district like Leeds and they all sounded different. Even now I can tell if someone is from Castleford, Pontefract, Airedale, or South Elmsall (and my current village) just because of the words they use, they're slightly different to each other even though each of the towns are probably between 5 and 10 miles of each other.
@ginibelle1416 Жыл бұрын
Liverpool has lots of variants on Scouse, different areas sound different . Love your videos Anna and JB💕💕
@bigkuriboh3814 Жыл бұрын
I live in Wales and the vast majority of people speak English mostly. I grew up with a friend who always spoke English, but one day, I went over to his house, and he was speaking Welsh with his family. He told me that they really only speak it together and when they are with certain people (who also speak Welsh), but as a general rule they speak English when out and about etc.
@ShaneCookeThatWelshGuy Жыл бұрын
There are different accents in wales to
@Sally4th_ Жыл бұрын
As others have said, these "regional" accents are just the broad brush. I was born and raised in the area shown there as "South East" but as a native of Southampton I can hear a difference to the way ppl talk just 20 miles away in Portsmouth, let alone the 60 miles north in Oxford. To me the really crazy thing is, though there are such huge differences across the island we can pretty well all make sense of what each other are saying.
@emmahowells8334 Жыл бұрын
In wales there is different dialects, that's stronger version, not all welsh accents are that strong. listen to other welsh dialects are you'll see the difference. From south to north from east to west. please react to other welsh dialects as we all don't sound the same. 🏴
@lilme7052 Жыл бұрын
These are pretty old. And you know they change within like 10 miles, not even joking. My niece has started college 8 miles away and we can tell she's picked up the accent! I'm from the Norfolk Suffolk border so it's a right mish mash.
@Isleofskye
Жыл бұрын
6 years ao,I spoke to someone fron Norfolk who said 30+ years ago everyone had a local accent but now you often hear an "Ilford" accent where people have moved out:)
@lilme7052
Жыл бұрын
@Isleofskye What? The hell is that? Moved in yeah, we had a lot of Londoners move up and especially the coast for second homes I suppose as everywhere does and I think the tv has made us speak less local but that's happened everywhere right?
@Isleofskye
Жыл бұрын
@@lilme7052 Er,er,er,right. I didn't mean to provoke you....😁
@lilme7052
Жыл бұрын
@Isleofskye Hahaha I don't think I over reacted or it wasn't meant to sound that way. 😅
@djdevilicious1 Жыл бұрын
In Yorkshire alone, you've got Leeds, Doncaster, Sheffield, York, Halifax, Barnsley, and Bradford - all of which have completely different accents!
@cheman579
Жыл бұрын
Even closer in and with smaller cities like Wakefield where we have a similar accent to Leeds, which is obvious based on where we're located, but we do say a lot of different things and use different pronunciations. So glad you mentioned this though, big up West Yorkshire
@fartzparker68912 ай бұрын
There is so many more too, these were textbook examples, when u are out and about there's a whole multitude of variations...ghetto, well spoken, somewhere in the middle, thick regional...it goes on 😊
@ryanclark3445 Жыл бұрын
Theres loads of welsh and scots accents 😢
@paleobolt8069 Жыл бұрын
Just a quick correction basically every one in Wales speaks English and about a third speak welsh most often as a second language also Welsh-English doesn't exist and multiple of these were just multiple languages mixed together (For example the "Welsh-English" one and the "Anglo-Cornish" one as well as the "Anglo-Manx" one also Scots as well as maybe some of the other ones listed here are just different languages) also every country in the UK has a huge amount of accents and dialects which these videos seem to like to ignore also please react to the languages of the British Isles it is a great video and would really help with some of your mistakes also they also ignored a bunch of English dialects and accents also some of these are just different languages.
@metromaher Жыл бұрын
Don't forget these are the dialects, not simply the different accents of the areas - so they are using local dialect slang as well as speaking with their local accents.
@charlotteperkins6903 Жыл бұрын
Big up Lancashire 🤙🏻 On average the accent changes about every 5 miles in the UK. To local people it's very noticeable
@enemde3025 Жыл бұрын
You CAN'T do a BRITISH accent as there is no such thing. Britain is a collection of 3 countries ! England, Scotland and Wales. As a Scotsman can I just say that this video has skipped over the very many dialects in Scotland. You can't just lump them all in to one and call it " SCOTS" or " HIGHLAND SCOTS" !
@openorwap5412
Жыл бұрын
Thank you!! My thoughts exactly. It winds me up when people say 'the British accent'. What does that even mean? 🤯
@enemde3025
Жыл бұрын
@@openorwap5412 To them, a "British" accent is Harry fecking Potter !!
@openorwap5412
Жыл бұрын
@@enemde3025 Haha, yes! That, or Hugh bloody Grant 🙄
@pauldurkee4764
Жыл бұрын
The Welsh /English accent featured is specific to the Snowdonia area of North West Wales, I'm a South Walian and I can pick that up straight away. Cardiff to Caerphilly, no more than 8 miles as the crow flies, totally different accent completely.
@robchissy Жыл бұрын
ah din knar, geordie as much as ah dislike em, sounds areet ta me
@halcyon289
Жыл бұрын
Why aye !!
@Isleofskye
Жыл бұрын
Don't get Lemon and come to The Smoke, Squire. I'm off to take my Trouble and The Saucepans down the rub-a-dub, now,mate..Laters,My Son..
@tmac160
Жыл бұрын
Al'reet bonny lad. Geordies are OK. It's the mags get me.
@halcyon289
Жыл бұрын
@@Isleofskye I'm just doing a Lambeth up the apples to put on my new whistle , then me and 'er indoors are going for a Ruby .
@Isleofskye
Жыл бұрын
@@halcyon289 I like it 😀 Halcyon is Bubble for The Kingfisher Bird....not a lot of people know that(probably, not even Michael Caine. lol)...
@TheJthom9 Жыл бұрын
Pitmatic (aka Yakka) always makes people laugh or smile. It was recorded from a news report about a dying dialect and they got two of the last remaining speakers to just go all out with each other. It was the dialect spoken by coal miners in the North East of England
@thestrategos4710 Жыл бұрын
Even on the little Isle of Man, we can generally tell where someone is from with their accent! And of course, like Scotland, Wales and Cornwall, we have our own language - Manx Gaelic (Gaelg).
@Aurochhunter Жыл бұрын
I remember a similar discussion on Twitch about Australian dialect, at the very least there's a rural dialect and an urban dialect.
@simov8chevy Жыл бұрын
There are towns in Scotland that have different accents depending on what area you are from, hell some can differ street to street.
@stever77327 ай бұрын
Some of those samples were extreme examples of the local accent. The accent is often more pronounced with older people.
@seanmc1351 Жыл бұрын
Im from the norh east, everyone knows the geordie, but 10 miles down the road os underland, where we have a different accent and known as makcems, the difference is we distinct
@88Switches Жыл бұрын
1:47 - even just in Kent you can hear regional differences in accents, whether it's South East London, London/Kent Borders, Medway Towns, Maidstone Kentish, Kentish Gypsy, Irish Gypsy, or just plain Kentish/Rural Kentish which sounds more like a West Country accent than anything else. People can even tell which individual town you're from by the way you pronounce certain words.
@ftumschk Жыл бұрын
The Welsh accent example was from North Wales, which is very, very different from the South Walian accent.
@JohnHMarsden Жыл бұрын
thank you great video
@kayleighfrazer4070 Жыл бұрын
Hey guys, love the channel.The majority of people who live in Wales speak English as a first language. Fluent welsh speakers are usually from North Wales, however there are some like myself from the south who also speak it fluently.
@bobbyscott2123
Жыл бұрын
Aye that’s a good thing you guys speak a lot of welsh 👍 Wish they would do the same up in Scotland with Scottish Gaelic
@stuartbutcher2642 Жыл бұрын
I’m glad you liked Suffolk🥹 I live in the town of Ipswich and we are called carrot crunchers and tractor boys🤣
@brigiddinsmore5 ай бұрын
I LOVE your dogs.
@MrKnowledge0014 Жыл бұрын
Anna's hair looks so lovely.
@axeami1354 Жыл бұрын
one thing to take from this is most of these are very old recordings and pretty much all of these places sound vastly different to this now. I have never once heard someone in the south east sound like that my entire life.
@pliashmuldba Жыл бұрын
There are / use to be dialects within little Denmark that other Danse would have a hard time just understanding partially. Generally these was northern and southern parts of Jutland, and then the people on the island of Bornholm.
@lynngoddard4050 Жыл бұрын
I'm from Coventry in the west Midlands and my nephew moved to Newcastle about 9 years ago and he talks with a Geordie accent now. Didn't take long for his original accent to go. Lol
@TheTommyw77 Жыл бұрын
There are way more than that. I can travel to the next town 15 mins and have trouble understanding some folk! Good video!
@johnloony68 Жыл бұрын
They have made an extra effort to find old recordings of old people with the most extreme versions of local accents. People who probably never left their village in 70 years. Very few people in real life have accents as extreme as these recordings.
@jonmichael6478 Жыл бұрын
You are listening to old regional accents, most of the south no longer have a country accent.
@heatherwilliams249 Жыл бұрын
It's way more than you realise, Wales and Scotland have accents that change every few miles. Between where I was raised and the Welsh capital Cardiff a distance of maybe 20 miles , there are at least four distinct accents.
@jkasaunder228 Жыл бұрын
Only about 1/5th of the welsh population speak welsh fluently, and there are very few that speak welsh primarily.
@Ashamanic Жыл бұрын
As others have said, many of these are pretty broad groupings. If you are from Yorkshire, you can tell the difference between Sheffield, Barnsley, Leeds and a few others.
@areyouserious3092 Жыл бұрын
Lol I'm from the UK and I can tell you that the voices you are hearing are from older people. If you were to listen to younger people you would definitely understand a lot more of what was being said.
@TheIconsofsin Жыл бұрын
haha i'm from Bristol and you two's reaction too it was great
@ronkelley5348 Жыл бұрын
There are many more accents/dialects than given here and few of them weren't very typical e.g. both Lancashire and Yorkshire accents. There's a big difference between North and South Wales, etc.
@spuddy1243 Жыл бұрын
It's a good introductory to the variety of our language. But 30 doesn't even scratch the surface
@marypettyfer4640 Жыл бұрын
Loved this thank you 😂😊👍🏻❤
@clivethewritermadenglishma404214 күн бұрын
Most of those recordings were so poor you couldn't hear the accents. We have many varied and beautiful accents across the UK
@mscommerce Жыл бұрын
As you folks point out,s everal of those accents from Southern England sound like authentic American accents in the South and Appalachia. I think that's because people emigrated from those places to America, and the isolation of smaller, rural communities in America meant that the accents were mostly preserved. Just my little theory.
@lanfeared Жыл бұрын
Also there are 3 or 4 accents in North Yorkshire, they missed Teesside in this too where I am from
@shinymcshineshine Жыл бұрын
Love the video. You two work well together. I’d recommend any interview with Brian Sewell. Very, very posh art critic from my youth. People often said he made the Queen sound common.
@tyrtheblackstar7659 Жыл бұрын
Y'all be saying your region has multiple accents. Dialect experts have identified that Hull has different accents by STREET. Rest of Yorkshire is also crazy diverse from rural accents to rougher areas and some especially posh ones. There's no patriotism like the British patriotism for their local region
@bcfcbennjy99 Жыл бұрын
Brummie here. It's crazy how many accents there are just down the road!
@tobias13100 Жыл бұрын
Hi. These recordings are about 90 years old I think. A lot of those dialects have or are disappearing from the UK now, sadly.
@gjclark2478 Жыл бұрын
My late dad a true Wiltshire moonraker, could speak, Wiltshire, Dorset and Somerset dialects. I have a book on West country dialects, a dag was a sheep, gallybagger a scarecrow and a hoss meaning horse. It was eye opening hear him talk and not understand a word. Many Wiltshire words made your vocabulary, from immigrants especially in the Virginia areas of there abouts. My dad spoke like Gerald from clarksons farm on prime
@stevehampshire8061 Жыл бұрын
Fun video (and good dogs). Some southern US accents are meant to come from various UK regions via settlers - mainly Devon/Cornwall and lowland scotts.
@bobbyscott2123
Жыл бұрын
Scot’s What’s with the double T
@stevehampshire8061
Жыл бұрын
@@bobbyscott2123 Sorry to steal your name. Scott's is a shop I used to see sometimes, so I guess it got into my head.
@richardcook591911 ай бұрын
The East Midlands speaker is Farmer Wink, from Lincolnshire.
@colinmorrison51196 ай бұрын
The two Northern Ireland accents were from Antrim and (I think) Tyrone. There's about a dozen more (or more depending how fine you slice it), including several in Belfast alone. The Belfast accents are very different to these two examples.
@patrickbriscall7934 Жыл бұрын
To be fair, a lot of these recordings are quite old and so the differences are more pronounced than they would be today. I’m in my early sixties and I remember my best mate’s uncle had never left the county of Hampshire so his accent would’ve been very particular. My father grew up in war time Oldham (Lancashire) and he used to say he could tell to within a couple of streets, where someone was from in the same town, just by the way they spoke. Oldham had a very distinctive accent even when I was a boy.
@internet.doctor Жыл бұрын
🏴 that was a very generic Welsh accent, there are many different types in Wales , for example North Wales sounds completely different to the accent in Cardiff or Swansea. Every town and city has its own accent 🏴
Пікірлер: 945
Not the clearest examples of any of the accents. The poor recording quality of many of them don't help.
@wallythewondercorncake8657
Жыл бұрын
Half of them are just old blokes from the countryside, so they just sound like they have a soft West Country accent, rather than a thick local accent.
@SweetBrazyN
Жыл бұрын
Indeed, the scouse, brummie, manc and geordie are the ones even British people have trouble understanding and on this video they all sounded the same aha
The Scots have way more accents than what was shown. Love from Scotland!
@Sam.Gaming
Жыл бұрын
Aye we do i am from North Ayrshire so we are like half Glaswegian and half our own language
@jaydee_83
Жыл бұрын
The one that said Scots sounded closer to Doric than Glasgow
@Julian-1984
Жыл бұрын
That's for sure I struggle with my boss talking and he's glaswegian, Edinburgh are easy to sorta understand
@Sam.Gaming
Жыл бұрын
@@jaydee_83 What?
@neilharris8210
Жыл бұрын
Yeah I honestly can’t understand Glaswegian! Duncan Banatyne on Dragons Den used to really confuse me! No offence 😊
Those 30 dialects aren't a true reflection of the variety of accents/dialects in the UK. They covered some of the cities, but when it comes to counties, there's a huge variation depending on where within the counties people are. As an example, there's a huge variety of dialects/accents within Yorkshire, depending on the location being east, west, north or south.
Wales has dozens of dialects / accents. English is the main language. Living in South East Wales , there's at least twelve accents in a ten mile radius.
@stuartcollins82
Жыл бұрын
If you live in the area, you can even guess what valley people are from based on their accent.
@neilharris8210
Жыл бұрын
Yes my Dad lives in Wales so I spend a lot of time there. I can certainly detect the different accents 😃
@neilharris8210
Жыл бұрын
My Dad lives in Aberystwyth - I love it there!
@NathanWELSHY
Жыл бұрын
Correction. English is the main language in South Wales.*
@neilharris8210
Жыл бұрын
@@NathanWELSHY Yeah that’s true. I used to spend weekends in Barry Island
These are all extremely tame versions of the accents! Extremely Tame!
These soundbites are from old people from about 30 or 40 years ago.....so these dialects are out out date by 50+ years (I think). Accents have changed, but the regions are still distinguishable. Just like anywhere, people from these places don't always have heavy accents. With TV, multimedia and immigration, younger generations are influenced by all sorts of accents and cultures. It depends on your upbringing and also your attitude. Some people just prefer to use local dialects, where as others choose to speak more estuary.
@CeleWolf
Жыл бұрын
Not true
@kieronimo1
Жыл бұрын
@@CeleWolf Which part? It is absolutely true. I'm English. I live here. I can switch between my local accent and a more estuary one because I travel, teach English and have international friends. I know many people who can do this from all over the UK. I also know people who grew up in the same town who have vastly different accents based on the influence of their family and people around them. I even know siblings with very different levels of local accent.
@Ozzpot
Жыл бұрын
I agree completely
@leesamurphy1110
Жыл бұрын
I agree not many speak like the older generation now. At least from where I live. Growing in in Barnsley the accent was really strong not so much now
@skechyassmofo
Жыл бұрын
@Bonita Q As someone from Cambridgeshire, it sounds nothing like that example. And I now live in Cornwall, which that accent has changed a bit as well as being less pronounced.
You'll be surprised at how close Newcastle (geordie) and Sunderland (mackem) are and how different these accents can be. 30min drive makes a lot of regional difference.
@zoemn24
Жыл бұрын
I agree I hadn’t really noticed as a Brit myself until last years I’m a Celebrity Get Me Out Of Here! when Jill Scott (Sunderland native) and Ant and Dec (both Newcastle natives) were talking to each other.
@samuelgarrod8327
Жыл бұрын
But very few people not from the North East have a clue...
@billydonaldson6483
Жыл бұрын
@@zoemn24 The accent in north Sunderland is different from that in the south.
@backupwhatever8928
Жыл бұрын
Yh, me dads a mackem and me mum is geordie. They sound similar but they can be very different. My school is a mixture of the two and you have never heard the confusion between me and me geordie friend with the slight dialect and slang differences trying to figure out what the other means.
@PolarBear4
Жыл бұрын
Dialect too. I'm from Newcastle, I have family from Sunderland and Teesside and a friend from County Durham. To people not from the region they can all sound very similar but we all have very different words for things at times along with distinct accents! My elderly relative from Sunderland has such a strong accent I can barely understand her when she uses dialect too, and despite having lived in Boro, my Dad struggles to understand people just up the road in Hartlepool. My friend and I often end up using words when talking to each other that confuses the other (she doesn't call the extra batter you'd get with chips "scraps" so had no clue what I meant when I asked for scraps with my chips once - just 1 example of many). You'd think with how close we are we'd at least have heard of the other's words but nope. Some are totally new to me. My accent is pretty mild as I've lived in a few places and my Dad was born elsewhere so has a more "neutral" accent but I'm still asked if I speak English at times or people ask if I'm Welsh, Scottish or Irish(?!). My accent is noticeably different enough from most in the area I've had locals point out it's different and ask which other bit of the city (there's a difference in each part of it) I'm from/if I'm from elsewhere.
There’s a tv series called 'Creature Comforts' which is Plasticine animated British conversations, using animals! Has lots of accents, and clever stop-animation. Nobody else has reacted to this, so I don’t know if it’ll be copyrighted.
@Jawa1604
Жыл бұрын
That is a fantastic idea!
@rickygrimshaw1255
Жыл бұрын
I remember it was originally started on the The British Gas adverts before becoming a tv show.
@richardh3761
Жыл бұрын
“They’ve got to be easily turn off and onable” 🐢
@pimpozza
Жыл бұрын
@@richardh3761 Yes!! That's the one I loved best, Richard!! "I don't have much time. I'm a very busy person..."_ 🐢😁👍
@richardh3761
Жыл бұрын
@@pimpozza 🤣 and the way he does the deep swallow, tapping his fingers 😂 🐢
Hahaha! As soon as you said "I'm just waiting for a really thick / distinctive" one, I immediately thought "Wait for Geordie / Tyneside", and so it turned out! I love the Geordie accent/dialect. It's so unique and almost musical. For the record, even though I'm originally from Scotland, my accent is a bit of a mix of RP and "Southeast", as they call it here.
@garyskinner2422
Жыл бұрын
I'm a Londoner my fav is Geordie,Scouse ,Scottish
@wessexdruid7598
Жыл бұрын
And the closest to 'the Queen's English' was always supposed to be Inverness.
@whitecompany18
Жыл бұрын
Funny you say it sounds musical because I think that was Brian Johnson from AC/DC talking .
@TheGeordiePoet1
Жыл бұрын
Gotta say this is a bit refreshing, my experience is most people like to take the piss out of our accent or say they can’t understand us like we are speaking mandarin 😂
@garyskinner2422
Жыл бұрын
@@TheGeordiePoet1 Pardon?
Northern Ireland has a different accent to Southern Ireland 😅😅😅😅
There isn't just one accent in Yorkshire (unless you are the BBC). What is known as "broad Yorkshire" with its "thee and thou" was mainly spoken in the the West Riding but even here there were marked regional differences. The accent in Hull is very different as are the accents in North and East Yorkshire, particularly as you get to the far north in places like Middlesbrough.
@staceynoir1988
Жыл бұрын
Definitely. Im from Sheffield and my uncle is from Middlesbrough and we sound nothing alike . He sounds almost geordie
@paleobolt8069
Жыл бұрын
Yeah it is a big problem with these videos that they pretty much ignore every country other than England And ignore the more obscure English accents and dialects like for example Wales has so many accents and dialects also as far as I'm aware none are called welsh-english.
@martinwebb1681
Жыл бұрын
@@paleobolt8069 ... I think that was just a reference to show it wasn't a part of England.
@mattwainwright9198
Жыл бұрын
Quite right, I'm from East Yorkshire and most of my family migrated over from West Yorkshire. As a result I speak completely differently to the older generations of my family and often get made fun of by them (all in good humour of course). Being from East Yorkshire my accent is sort of like a toned down Hull accent and I do find myself occasionally saying strong Hullisms but if I go into Hull people can tell immediately I am not actually from there because it is not strong enough. However, if I visit West Yorkshire I often get people guessing I am from Hull because of the similarity.
@martynnotman3467
Жыл бұрын
@@staceynoir1988 as someone who grew up in Teesside and lives in Sheffield the Teesside "Smoggie" accent is NOTHING like Geordie!!!
Haha guys! Greetings from Dublin, Ireland. I enjoy your videos. For a country the size of a postage stamp, you'd be amazed at the variety of accents in Ireland. Every thirty miles down the road there's a new accent. It's great fun! Stay well.
They were all spoken by an older generation, most places nowadays have a lot more accents/dialects, if you could find one spoken by a younger generation, then your get a more realistic sound of the places, London for example you can tell the difference between north south east and west London, And it's the same everywhere. Peace and Love ❤️🙏❤️
@eleanorlyndon865
Жыл бұрын
And not just the 4 corners of the compass, but the Boroughs! I can tell if a person is from Hackney from a mile off!
Most people from Wales speak English, the Welsh language almost died out at one point. On a general basses South and North accents are very different, South is soft and flowing whereas in the North the accent is a mixture of Welsh/scouse and sounds quite groggy, the Rhondda Valley’s have a strong accent and from there down to the south west of Wales the accent becomes less prominent in welsh and has more of an English influence to it. I hope you find this interesting. It would be awesome if you could find a video on the Regional accents of Wales. Also the language between North and South are slightly different too with spelling and pronunciation of words. Love the videos 😊 you guys always have me laughing 😂👌🏼
@ticketyboo2456
Жыл бұрын
Correction. Scouse is mixed with north Wales not the other way around.
@kieronnarbett6141
Жыл бұрын
@@ticketyboo2456 thank you for the correction. My bad, I almost had it 😂 haha
@wallythewondercorncake8657
Жыл бұрын
"South is soft and flowing" You've obviously never been to a pub in Devon
@ticketyboo2456
Жыл бұрын
@@wallythewondercorncake8657 As long as you put the cream first then pour the beer and finish with a lovely dollop of jam everything is soft and flowing in Devon. Great county.
@seeyouanon2931
Жыл бұрын
Ehhh! I thought scouse was influenced by the Irish? Because the Irish used to dock at liverpool.
You mention Winnie the Pooh in Kent, it was actually written about 30 miles away, next door in Sussex (where my family comes from) 🙂Unfortunately the genuine Sussex accent started dying when the railways came from London in the 1830's. The Yorkshire accent (where I've lived for more years than I care to admit to) was not very clear, but then there are multiple variations in the Yorkshire accent. But "Tint in't tin" (it isn't in the tin) as they say to us off-comed-uns (somebody from somewhere else).
@winclouduk
Жыл бұрын
Well here in Rochester we got Charles dickens
@gleadhill79
Жыл бұрын
@@winclouduk yes, It's a competition... I'm from Notts/Derby... I win! Haha
@winclouduk
Жыл бұрын
@@gleadhill79 ok I’m from mablethorpe I win ha ha ha
@gotoparkaftermosqueinnit316
Жыл бұрын
Southern ponce
@cheman579
Жыл бұрын
Yeah it's mad cos where I'm from in West Yorkshire, we'd say that as "it int in't tin", and wouldn't say any of the Ts except for the one at the start of tin.
I was born and raised in London. I cannot understand Geordie accents for the life of me. Once I was in a queue behind two Geordies who were chatting away for ages before I even realised they were speaking English. I was there trying to figure out what language they were speaking for a good 5 minutes or so. 🤦🏼♀️
My brother's girlfriend is from South Wales and only speaks English. I love her accent. It's awesome. I'm from the West Country and not many people here have that accent anymore
@fayesouthall6604
Жыл бұрын
English speaking welsh people have lovely accents. I know because I have one. I’ve been told.
The Scots one covered far to much area the people at the top left of the red shaded area sound completely different from the people at the bottom left 😂😂 Love your videos, keep them coming 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
@paleobolt8069
Жыл бұрын
Yeah it is a big problem with these videos that they pretty much ignore every country other than England (And even the more obscure English accents and dialects) like for example Wales has so many accents and dialects also as far as I'm aware none are called Welsh-English.
Midlands probably has the most individual regional accents because people tend to come here from all over the country as housing etc often cheaper
North welsh and south welsh accents are soo different, im not too sure about north welsh but in south wales there are loads of accents, like valley accents, swansea, cardiff, Breacon and loads more
It sounds like some of those who were recorded are speaking to someone not native to their area, as the pacing is slowed down. For example Geordies not only have a very distinct dialect but they generally speak very quickly For the Midlands there’s no single accent that represents the region. For example the distance from Coventry to Wolverhampton is around 35 miles, but within that distance there are many distinctly different accents and dialects such as Coventry, Solihull, Brummie, Tipton, Smethwick, Dudley, Gornal, Aldridge and Wolverhampton.
theres sooooo many accents in Wales, i cant believe they showed just 1 🤣🫣 also the majority of Welsh people speak English lol
Oi oi, Geordie is my hometown! Mind, I have to change to RP when its with someone from either down South or not from the UK otherwise they struggle to understand. As for Scots, it is considered by some linguists as a separate language, and it's about 90% mutually intelligible to those of us from Newcastle (Geordie) in northeast England. I recommend a singer called Iona Fyfe, she recently released a song called 'the cauld' which is in Scots, also did a cover of Taylor Swift's song All Too Well in Scots too, she's really good.
People from the north of a town can sound different from those in the south of the same town. The recordings you were listening to were taken many years ago as an attempt to preserve local dialects. I believe most of the participants were serving soldiers.
coming from Durham i knew the geordie would be the belter.
@craigjackson8376
Жыл бұрын
Snap 😂
Brilliant reaction. The pair of you plus the dogs area joy to watch. I have a West Country accent and he was basically talking about which beer he liked and what brewry it was from. The Bristol accent is where the pirate accent comes from!
Hello, Brit here! I think the reason that the people in those sound bites are all so old is because a lot of these accents aren't quite the same now! Where I live in the Westcountry, people don't talk with a Wiltshire accent anymore! It's much more Chav sounding in the youth! 🤷♀️🤣 Technically it's Estuary English, a more London sounding accent that has spread out from the Thames Estuary. This is me finally putting my English Language A-Level to good use!! 🤣
@j800r_aswell
Жыл бұрын
Oh god. Let them keep their innocence. Don't expose them to chavs. Besides, chav speak is a "fake" accent/dialect. They are trying to sound like something they're not.
I'm a 41 year old man from Kent and born here and never heard anyone from Kent sound like that🤔
As somebody in the Uk who speak Yorkshire, I can tell you that these are all old versions spoken by old people and that dialects have changed and evolved a lot in recent years. In Yorkshire, we don''t sound much like the guy they played in this at all these days and we also have various dialects in Yorkshire alone so the different ridings of Yorkshire sound quite different to each other. I recall when I went to US and Canada, many people struggled to understand me.
@martinwebb1681
Жыл бұрын
I'm cockney from East London, when I first went to the US (Portland Oregon) back in the late 1970s no one could understand a word I said you would think I had just landed from mars or something, I literally had to talk in slow motion just so people could understand what I was saying.
@_joerooney
Жыл бұрын
Exactly, between Sheffield and Barnsley there are entirely different dialects despite being 30 mins apart, then you drive 20 mins from Barnsley to Doncaster and that's entirely different again.
@TmHudsonArt
Жыл бұрын
@@_joerooney Yes it is the same just in Rotherham alone.
@cheman579
Жыл бұрын
@@TmHudsonArt Yeah same with Leeds then going into Wakefield district, there's even slight differences between towns like I can tell apart people from South Elmsall, Pontefract, and Castleford cos we all speak the same but there's slight different words that each place uses.
As a geordie, it sounds totally normal to me and strange to see your reaction 🤣🤣
I’m a geordie and I just knew you’d struggle on that one 😂
There's actually so many more accents than shown here, I'm from northeastern Cumbria but the Cumbrian accent displayed here is more of a west Cumbrian, can literally drive about 10 miles in any direction from where I live and you'll hear several different accents.
There are a lot more than that. They just showed some common ones but each town or city has it's own
You should look into Scottish dialects and Glaswegian is honestly one of the best 😂
@Kazza_8240
Жыл бұрын
I live about 25 miles from Glasgow, and I speak differently, like different slang words, slightly different pronunciation with different words. I'd like to see JT and Anna watch some Limmy clips, if they can make him out, it would be hilarious!
Really wish you could/would find a video about all the different dialects in Wales. We don't all sound the same! The Welsh language changes too depending where in Wales you are.
In the south, we have trouble understanding Geordie, but Northumberland and Newcastle is a fantastic place to visit. Lovely people.
@Believer3_
Жыл бұрын
Cleary never been lol. Its a shithole, especially places like the newcastle west end and byker
@judithhope8970
Жыл бұрын
@@Believer3_ I haven't been for a number of years, sixty I'd say, so that's a shame. It used to be nice. You had a great natural history museum, I do know if that's still there. My sister moved there and I'd come up to visit as a schoolgirl. In my head it's still nice. Northumberland is awesome though. I come regularly, Alnwick gardens, Hadrian's wall, Vindolanda, sycamore gap, Kielder, lovely towns like Hexham, The Sill. Amazing place.
@judithhope8970
Жыл бұрын
@@Believer3_ Yeah? That's a shame. I haven't been there for about sixty years but I remember having a nice stay back then. I love Northumberland though, that really is pretty although, you aren't Northumberland are you. I remember visiting the natural history museum, was it the Hancock? It was a long time ago now.
Loved your confusion at Pitmatic and Geordie - there's actually a lot of crossover between the two and Northumbrian because it's related to the north east coal miners. I'm from a mining village and grew up with it. 'The gallower got a gliff' that the old men were talking about means 'the horse got a fright'.
@jenscee7679
Жыл бұрын
I’m from South Northumberland and the number of different variations in pitmatic accents is huge. Blyth, Ashington and Bedlington sound different, despite being within 5 miles of each other.
@chuckyboy6977
Жыл бұрын
When the pitmatic came on, It was strange as that very near my accent. It’s strange as I’m from Aylesham in Kent, Aylesham was a purpose built village to house coal miners from about 1902ish, it’s about half way between Canterbury and Dover. The village was built with a street layout to resemble the winding gear on the nearby Snowdown pit, Those originally from from the village like myself have a this northern Pitmatic type accent, as the miners moved to the Kent coalfields from across the north, wales and Scotland. The people from the villages 1-2 miles away have the kent accent.
Tbf most Welsh people do speak English, but there has been a revival on the past couple of decades of their native tongue. I still wouldn’t have thought it’s anywhere close to a majority though
The reason lots of the voices were of older people, is because this is a obviously a record of different dialects that is unfortunately being lost because of diversity, so it’s mainly the older generation who still speak that way , it’s a way of preserving our dialect heritage,
Just one for Yorkshire, Wales and such a huge area of Scotland is crazy. In Yorkshire you can hear if someone comes from Hull, / East Riding or the DearneValley, Barnsley or North Riding.
I come from Norfolk, and there are properly 5 or 6 dialects here alone. Someone from the West of the county sounds nothing like someone from the East coast area, and down on the Norfolk / Suffolk boarder you sound completely different from the North Norfolk coast, and then the county City of Norwich is a mixing pot of them all.
@pauldurkee4764
Жыл бұрын
I do like the Norfolk accent myself, lovely place Norfolk. Best Wishes from Wales.
@CeleWolf
Жыл бұрын
Hello from a fellow Norfolker
You would get a much better understanding if you listened to 'Anglophenia' who does 17 different accents and explains where they come from and why. She is also quite amusing!
Sitting drinking my cuppa, smiling while I watch and listen to your reactions. Lovely!
I really enjoy the videos of the two of you together ❤ for sure should do more
I’m a Geordie and even though our accents are hard to understand the whole of the British isles understand each other because we’ve lived with each other for thousands of years. I mean this isn’t my normal writing lingo either I’d write differently to my mates so I’m using colloquial English here to tell you about the north east. They are more than one north eastern accent in the north east we all sound the same to someone from the south but to each other in the north east we can tell the subtle differences in which region in the north east you belong just by the slight difference in the accent.
@graemew7001
Жыл бұрын
That's so true, I'm from the South of County Durham and I can understand everyone in the North East......even Macams 🤣. Thing is though, you're right, you get to Wetherby Services and start talking and everyone thinks you a Geordie, I just say yes cos it's easier than ganin through the whole County Durham spiel!!
@Biketunerfy
Жыл бұрын
@@graemew7001 Aye, we went on holiday once to Lanzarote and I had a mate from Teeside with me and we got talking to a few lads from Croydon and they could not tell the difference in our accents lol, they said we all sound the same. To us though there’s a difference.
@graemew7001
Жыл бұрын
@@Biketunerfy Haha a massive difference to us, my mates from Stockton sound nowt like my mate from Gateshead! I like confusing folk tho cos I was born in Dumfries and moved here as a kid so when they say "you're a Geordie?" I just reply with na mate am Scottish, them looking confused isn't in it 🤣
@Biketunerfy
Жыл бұрын
@@graemew7001 I know lol. I find it strange may be they were just too hammered. They looked pretty pissed like. If these people think Geordies are hard to understand now then there’s f*cking no chance when we’re pissed lmao. A thick Glaswegian accent can be hard to understand as well especially some one who doesn’t live in the U.K.
@graemew7001
Жыл бұрын
@@Biketunerfy I'm not a drinker so even I struggle when others are pissed, talking too fast lol. I've seen videos of Glaswegians and I've said to others in the comments to watch a few episodes of Still Game to get the gist of what they're saying or if they not from the UK to just give up lol
I got to a college that is 10 miles from my house and we are in the same county (Yorkshire) but there are probably 3 different dialects/ accents, and I live in the suburb so there is only a few villages and then the town that my college is in. This video's recording are from years and years ago and they are only very small samples. Because even in the same city you might have two or three different types of a dialect or accent. We all sound very different from each other. There are some easier to hear videos of some of the more common accents from different areas.
@cheman579
Жыл бұрын
Yep I'm the same. Picture the scene; West Yorkshire, Wakefield district reyt, I live in one of the small villages (not saying which) basically next to Pontefract, I'll just say South Elmsall cos I lived there until I was a teenager so I sound like I'm from there. When I went to high school in Ponte, there would be people from Pontefract, Castleford, Airedale, Glasshoughton (cos in reality it's different to Cas) etc, and they all sounded slightly different. I then to go New College in Ponte and we have people from Wakefield, from outside the Wakefield district like Leeds and they all sounded different. Even now I can tell if someone is from Castleford, Pontefract, Airedale, or South Elmsall (and my current village) just because of the words they use, they're slightly different to each other even though each of the towns are probably between 5 and 10 miles of each other.
Liverpool has lots of variants on Scouse, different areas sound different . Love your videos Anna and JB💕💕
I live in Wales and the vast majority of people speak English mostly. I grew up with a friend who always spoke English, but one day, I went over to his house, and he was speaking Welsh with his family. He told me that they really only speak it together and when they are with certain people (who also speak Welsh), but as a general rule they speak English when out and about etc.
There are different accents in wales to
As others have said, these "regional" accents are just the broad brush. I was born and raised in the area shown there as "South East" but as a native of Southampton I can hear a difference to the way ppl talk just 20 miles away in Portsmouth, let alone the 60 miles north in Oxford. To me the really crazy thing is, though there are such huge differences across the island we can pretty well all make sense of what each other are saying.
In wales there is different dialects, that's stronger version, not all welsh accents are that strong. listen to other welsh dialects are you'll see the difference. From south to north from east to west. please react to other welsh dialects as we all don't sound the same. 🏴
These are pretty old. And you know they change within like 10 miles, not even joking. My niece has started college 8 miles away and we can tell she's picked up the accent! I'm from the Norfolk Suffolk border so it's a right mish mash.
@Isleofskye
Жыл бұрын
6 years ao,I spoke to someone fron Norfolk who said 30+ years ago everyone had a local accent but now you often hear an "Ilford" accent where people have moved out:)
@lilme7052
Жыл бұрын
@Isleofskye What? The hell is that? Moved in yeah, we had a lot of Londoners move up and especially the coast for second homes I suppose as everywhere does and I think the tv has made us speak less local but that's happened everywhere right?
@Isleofskye
Жыл бұрын
@@lilme7052 Er,er,er,right. I didn't mean to provoke you....😁
@lilme7052
Жыл бұрын
@Isleofskye Hahaha I don't think I over reacted or it wasn't meant to sound that way. 😅
In Yorkshire alone, you've got Leeds, Doncaster, Sheffield, York, Halifax, Barnsley, and Bradford - all of which have completely different accents!
@cheman579
Жыл бұрын
Even closer in and with smaller cities like Wakefield where we have a similar accent to Leeds, which is obvious based on where we're located, but we do say a lot of different things and use different pronunciations. So glad you mentioned this though, big up West Yorkshire
There is so many more too, these were textbook examples, when u are out and about there's a whole multitude of variations...ghetto, well spoken, somewhere in the middle, thick regional...it goes on 😊
Theres loads of welsh and scots accents 😢
Just a quick correction basically every one in Wales speaks English and about a third speak welsh most often as a second language also Welsh-English doesn't exist and multiple of these were just multiple languages mixed together (For example the "Welsh-English" one and the "Anglo-Cornish" one as well as the "Anglo-Manx" one also Scots as well as maybe some of the other ones listed here are just different languages) also every country in the UK has a huge amount of accents and dialects which these videos seem to like to ignore also please react to the languages of the British Isles it is a great video and would really help with some of your mistakes also they also ignored a bunch of English dialects and accents also some of these are just different languages.
Don't forget these are the dialects, not simply the different accents of the areas - so they are using local dialect slang as well as speaking with their local accents.
Big up Lancashire 🤙🏻 On average the accent changes about every 5 miles in the UK. To local people it's very noticeable
You CAN'T do a BRITISH accent as there is no such thing. Britain is a collection of 3 countries ! England, Scotland and Wales. As a Scotsman can I just say that this video has skipped over the very many dialects in Scotland. You can't just lump them all in to one and call it " SCOTS" or " HIGHLAND SCOTS" !
@openorwap5412
Жыл бұрын
Thank you!! My thoughts exactly. It winds me up when people say 'the British accent'. What does that even mean? 🤯
@enemde3025
Жыл бұрын
@@openorwap5412 To them, a "British" accent is Harry fecking Potter !!
@openorwap5412
Жыл бұрын
@@enemde3025 Haha, yes! That, or Hugh bloody Grant 🙄
@pauldurkee4764
Жыл бұрын
The Welsh /English accent featured is specific to the Snowdonia area of North West Wales, I'm a South Walian and I can pick that up straight away. Cardiff to Caerphilly, no more than 8 miles as the crow flies, totally different accent completely.
ah din knar, geordie as much as ah dislike em, sounds areet ta me
@halcyon289
Жыл бұрын
Why aye !!
@Isleofskye
Жыл бұрын
Don't get Lemon and come to The Smoke, Squire. I'm off to take my Trouble and The Saucepans down the rub-a-dub, now,mate..Laters,My Son..
@tmac160
Жыл бұрын
Al'reet bonny lad. Geordies are OK. It's the mags get me.
@halcyon289
Жыл бұрын
@@Isleofskye I'm just doing a Lambeth up the apples to put on my new whistle , then me and 'er indoors are going for a Ruby .
@Isleofskye
Жыл бұрын
@@halcyon289 I like it 😀 Halcyon is Bubble for The Kingfisher Bird....not a lot of people know that(probably, not even Michael Caine. lol)...
Pitmatic (aka Yakka) always makes people laugh or smile. It was recorded from a news report about a dying dialect and they got two of the last remaining speakers to just go all out with each other. It was the dialect spoken by coal miners in the North East of England
Even on the little Isle of Man, we can generally tell where someone is from with their accent! And of course, like Scotland, Wales and Cornwall, we have our own language - Manx Gaelic (Gaelg).
I remember a similar discussion on Twitch about Australian dialect, at the very least there's a rural dialect and an urban dialect.
There are towns in Scotland that have different accents depending on what area you are from, hell some can differ street to street.
Some of those samples were extreme examples of the local accent. The accent is often more pronounced with older people.
Im from the norh east, everyone knows the geordie, but 10 miles down the road os underland, where we have a different accent and known as makcems, the difference is we distinct
1:47 - even just in Kent you can hear regional differences in accents, whether it's South East London, London/Kent Borders, Medway Towns, Maidstone Kentish, Kentish Gypsy, Irish Gypsy, or just plain Kentish/Rural Kentish which sounds more like a West Country accent than anything else. People can even tell which individual town you're from by the way you pronounce certain words.
The Welsh accent example was from North Wales, which is very, very different from the South Walian accent.
thank you great video
Hey guys, love the channel.The majority of people who live in Wales speak English as a first language. Fluent welsh speakers are usually from North Wales, however there are some like myself from the south who also speak it fluently.
@bobbyscott2123
Жыл бұрын
Aye that’s a good thing you guys speak a lot of welsh 👍 Wish they would do the same up in Scotland with Scottish Gaelic
I’m glad you liked Suffolk🥹 I live in the town of Ipswich and we are called carrot crunchers and tractor boys🤣
I LOVE your dogs.
Anna's hair looks so lovely.
one thing to take from this is most of these are very old recordings and pretty much all of these places sound vastly different to this now. I have never once heard someone in the south east sound like that my entire life.
There are / use to be dialects within little Denmark that other Danse would have a hard time just understanding partially. Generally these was northern and southern parts of Jutland, and then the people on the island of Bornholm.
I'm from Coventry in the west Midlands and my nephew moved to Newcastle about 9 years ago and he talks with a Geordie accent now. Didn't take long for his original accent to go. Lol
There are way more than that. I can travel to the next town 15 mins and have trouble understanding some folk! Good video!
They have made an extra effort to find old recordings of old people with the most extreme versions of local accents. People who probably never left their village in 70 years. Very few people in real life have accents as extreme as these recordings.
You are listening to old regional accents, most of the south no longer have a country accent.
It's way more than you realise, Wales and Scotland have accents that change every few miles. Between where I was raised and the Welsh capital Cardiff a distance of maybe 20 miles , there are at least four distinct accents.
Only about 1/5th of the welsh population speak welsh fluently, and there are very few that speak welsh primarily.
As others have said, many of these are pretty broad groupings. If you are from Yorkshire, you can tell the difference between Sheffield, Barnsley, Leeds and a few others.
Lol I'm from the UK and I can tell you that the voices you are hearing are from older people. If you were to listen to younger people you would definitely understand a lot more of what was being said.
haha i'm from Bristol and you two's reaction too it was great
There are many more accents/dialects than given here and few of them weren't very typical e.g. both Lancashire and Yorkshire accents. There's a big difference between North and South Wales, etc.
It's a good introductory to the variety of our language. But 30 doesn't even scratch the surface
Loved this thank you 😂😊👍🏻❤
Most of those recordings were so poor you couldn't hear the accents. We have many varied and beautiful accents across the UK
As you folks point out,s everal of those accents from Southern England sound like authentic American accents in the South and Appalachia. I think that's because people emigrated from those places to America, and the isolation of smaller, rural communities in America meant that the accents were mostly preserved. Just my little theory.
Also there are 3 or 4 accents in North Yorkshire, they missed Teesside in this too where I am from
Love the video. You two work well together. I’d recommend any interview with Brian Sewell. Very, very posh art critic from my youth. People often said he made the Queen sound common.
Y'all be saying your region has multiple accents. Dialect experts have identified that Hull has different accents by STREET. Rest of Yorkshire is also crazy diverse from rural accents to rougher areas and some especially posh ones. There's no patriotism like the British patriotism for their local region
Brummie here. It's crazy how many accents there are just down the road!
Hi. These recordings are about 90 years old I think. A lot of those dialects have or are disappearing from the UK now, sadly.
My late dad a true Wiltshire moonraker, could speak, Wiltshire, Dorset and Somerset dialects. I have a book on West country dialects, a dag was a sheep, gallybagger a scarecrow and a hoss meaning horse. It was eye opening hear him talk and not understand a word. Many Wiltshire words made your vocabulary, from immigrants especially in the Virginia areas of there abouts. My dad spoke like Gerald from clarksons farm on prime
Fun video (and good dogs). Some southern US accents are meant to come from various UK regions via settlers - mainly Devon/Cornwall and lowland scotts.
@bobbyscott2123
Жыл бұрын
Scot’s What’s with the double T
@stevehampshire8061
Жыл бұрын
@@bobbyscott2123 Sorry to steal your name. Scott's is a shop I used to see sometimes, so I guess it got into my head.
The East Midlands speaker is Farmer Wink, from Lincolnshire.
The two Northern Ireland accents were from Antrim and (I think) Tyrone. There's about a dozen more (or more depending how fine you slice it), including several in Belfast alone. The Belfast accents are very different to these two examples.
To be fair, a lot of these recordings are quite old and so the differences are more pronounced than they would be today. I’m in my early sixties and I remember my best mate’s uncle had never left the county of Hampshire so his accent would’ve been very particular. My father grew up in war time Oldham (Lancashire) and he used to say he could tell to within a couple of streets, where someone was from in the same town, just by the way they spoke. Oldham had a very distinctive accent even when I was a boy.
🏴 that was a very generic Welsh accent, there are many different types in Wales , for example North Wales sounds completely different to the accent in Cardiff or Swansea. Every town and city has its own accent 🏴