Love English with Leila & Sabrah
Love English with Leila & Sabrah
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I've observed that Americans commonly leave out got. Have you got a cat? = BE Do you have a cat? = AmE (also BE).
Interestingly, you can find the same difference in usage of the present perfect versus past simple in Spanish and Latin American Spanish : ¿Ya lo has hecho? = Spain ¿Ya lo hiciste? = America
Regarding have got versus have: My observations ate that American commonly leave out got (or would use gotten as the perfect of get). BE: Have you got a cat? AmE: Do you have a cat?
You could easily pass as a Dubliner.
Chewsday innit bruv aye
Our teacher seems to be fond of communism. She's woke!
Can you do Nottingham/Derbyshire and then Leicestershire?
Amn't I? was really impressive. :) I miss my irish teachers.
Appreciate your efforts 👏👏
"Often" should always be pronounced with a silent 't".
Check the dictionary - you can pronounce it both ways actually.
Anyone else here so they can hear how Johnny Kavanagh from Binding 13 talks ahahah
Wow.. You look so picturesque and stunning as ever dear.. 👌 Just seeing you and your beautiful presence will always light up my day, no less.... 🤗🤗 Take care and Wishing you a good day full of positive vibes and great opportunities. May you seize them all!” Hugs.xoxoxo Gams ❤️
Loved it.❤
Thanks for the clarification on the formal expresssions, I love it...
How could I poetise without my unique muse? My stance on your absence is a feeling of langour and longing mixed with hope. I wish I knew the lowdown of your next appearence; and I hope you don't mind my trying to drill down a little deeper here in your plans. Now I'm sure you're cooking up another wonderful lesson on accents, right? Merci Sabrah, hope to see you soon, bisous bisous 😘🌹❤❤❤🌼
Nice tips. I have been working on my British pronunciation. I would like to point out that in some regions of England the "H" is often dropped. I met someone from Hull who said he was from "ull".
Cheers Sabrah. Toodle-loo for now, I am off to the loo to drop a few chocolate bars . Please, do give my love to the lovely Leila.
You are 🍑
Nice Sabrah!
If I am not mistaken you are mispronouncing pongy
So fanciful sessions by both of you...
sh**,as*,co**,mo****fu**** should be included lol😂
RP suffers from association with the likes of Rees-Mogg. It’s rightly considered alien and weird.
crap for hello i say ello
Ha ,brilliant
the weather was horrible that year but luckily i was out the country for that month
I'm Dublin born & bred - the "t" and "d" are declining rapidly. In fact, a highly Americanised form is now noticeable in the under 30s, especially in middle-income areas. Your accent is excellent btw
I am from ethiopia . I got nice lesson from your go head.
I see this thumbnail in my recommended section, just from the thumbnail I'm not interested in watching the video, but the thumbnail implies that the grammar rules are different between the US and the UK, not as much as the thumbnail suggests. Yes, people in the US might speak as the thumbnail suggests, but just because that's how most people speak and write here doesn't mean they are following the actual grammar rules that we have here, it they were following the actual grammar rules we have here the US side of the thumbnail would be the same as the UK side except for the word, "learnt," here it would be, "learned," but depending on where you are in the US it would still be spelled, "learned," but it might be pronounced as, "learnt." Most people in their daily lives unless their livelihood involves a lot of professional writing aren't going to use actual grammar rules in their day-to-day lives. Grammar is the established rules of a language, it's not necessarily how people speak or write in their daily lives. Being that your thumbnail has so many inaccuracies about US grammar rules I have to assume the whole video is chock full of inaccuracies too, I will not be watching the video, and I do not recommend it.
Thank you.
Im british and i say “Hello Harry have you go’(t) (a) new ha’(t) on?” The lady over here got more of a posh British English accent while most people have the casual one.
Speaking as a native Dub this is very good. The one adjustment I would make is on point 4. This is the one feature people doing an Irish accent almost always get wrong to the extent that we have a term for it; stage Oirish. It is like an imitation of an imitation of an imitation of an imitation and quite divorced from the real thing. If you want your Irish voice to sound authentic do not lean in to this feature as much as others do. I wish I could give better direction that that; the I sound is different but it is not as close to "oy" as many think.
Thanks so much for this feedback ! It is super helpful! 👍
For me as a Polish it is above my mind. Won't give it a try.I'll stick to RP.
Part of the feature that involves excessive contractions is the elision of the word "the." It gets reduced to just 't' . One of the standard lines in Coronation Street, heard in almost every episode, is "I'll put the kettle on." Sometimes you hear "I'll put t' kettle on." In this case, the t is almost swallowed up by the preceding t in the word "put," and you would amost think the word "the" was completely omitted. In other cases, there wouldn't be a preceding t there, like "in t' back of the shop." What I find challenging about this accent is how some people use glottal stops - and some people do so much more than others - but also use the single-tap r or even trill the r when they're feeling a little boisterous. This clip from over 40 years ago demonstrates this a bit for us. Listen to how a young pup of a Kevin Webster says there was "dirt in the carburetor" of Alf's car. kzread.info/dash/bejne/oYtqw6yriqWqkto.htmlsi=toMvdah_EfSLHJn2
~~~~ There must have been ...~~~~ Yes there must have been an angel on my screen if you could be mine - let' me have this dream - I'd like to awake before you in the morn For a while lean close to your sleep of angel I'd go with hushed steps to pick up some rosehip, And, being patient, with joyous silence filled I'd open your hands which - your breast - are guarding To slip my bloom there whilst your eyes I would kiss And your startled eyes would recognize the earth In things where Nature placed the most of sweetness, Then would turn to me their awakening light, Full of my offering and full of your heart. Oh feel how he aches, Oh, feel how he loves, The one who would place at the bright crack of dawn An invisible- still- bouquet on your breast To place Happiness closer to your wake! f.😘🌹❤
Im JuST ToM
Your accents are nothing like the real your yorkie sounds more like Manchester
Whale…Oil… Beef…Hooked.
The Dublin accent always makes the speaker sound like a drug dealer... 😂
I wonna know everythin' about Craigavon accent.
6:43 how is a farmer frowned upon like this
Very interesting. Just to note that if you say in Ireland an Irish Speaker more or less everyone will take that to mean speaking the Irish Language, Gaeilge
Dennis Moore is extraor........dinary.
Sexy accent 😂
As a Dubliner I couldn't stop laughing. She's captured and dissected the accent so well that I thought she must be Irish. She's not. What an ear she has.
I'm interested why you say 'British' as opposed to 'English' when referring to the accent. Surely it's more accurate to distinguish the accents by the individual countries in Britain.
My natural accent and the accent of a lot of people in the South is still referred to as the Standard Southern British accent. It is a linguistic term actually that you will hear any phonics teacher at the moment using. I agree it is essentially an English accent but I think British accents still have many similar base sounds even if you have a Welsh accent, Scottish etc, Southern British etc That may be why. The accents from the Republic of Ireland however are not British they are Irish and I hope I have made that very clear in the video.
WHATTTTT!