In this video I give a brief guide to the American accent. I decided to do it entirely in an American accent just for a challenge.
Жүктеу.....
Пікірлер: 6
@world2003.isupdating4 ай бұрын
Great ☘️
@user-zp2rv2vi2r4 ай бұрын
What about these phrases where a word ends with t but it's pronounced something like ch? like usually before the word "you". Why dontchyou help me? But chyou were gone. Idk. Is that an American thing? And I didn't make that up, right?
@jim2386
4 ай бұрын
Yep. Can confirm. I guess you could call it shorthand where you don’t space out the two words. Don’t you….. vs Dontchu. Minnesota accent they’ll say “dontcha” :)
@jim23864 ай бұрын
I spent the whole video waiting for you to show us the accent, but it never happened….you just talked normally. May need to redo this one. ;)
@Dennis_LearnGeek
Ай бұрын
Well, "gimme sum wadder" sounded great 😊. I guess the intonation or something must also be different. Americans speak more monotone than Brits, I think. (Except maybe in Texas, where they also kind of "sing")
Пікірлер: 6
Great ☘️
What about these phrases where a word ends with t but it's pronounced something like ch? like usually before the word "you". Why dontchyou help me? But chyou were gone. Idk. Is that an American thing? And I didn't make that up, right?
@jim2386
4 ай бұрын
Yep. Can confirm. I guess you could call it shorthand where you don’t space out the two words. Don’t you….. vs Dontchu. Minnesota accent they’ll say “dontcha” :)
I spent the whole video waiting for you to show us the accent, but it never happened….you just talked normally. May need to redo this one. ;)
@Dennis_LearnGeek
Ай бұрын
Well, "gimme sum wadder" sounded great 😊. I guess the intonation or something must also be different. Americans speak more monotone than Brits, I think. (Except maybe in Texas, where they also kind of "sing")
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