What accent do you talk in?

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Noodley

Guest
Thinkin' aboot it I suppose I do hae an accent and might speak a bit quick sometimes. But maist o' the time I'm shair fowk ken whit I'm speakin aboot.
 
It's funny how you don't always notice your own accent. I know my accent is a lot softer than it used to be when I was at school (I am more west-end-ified now). However, I've had plenty of comments about my accent on my youtube videos. ;)
 

Fnaar

Smutmaster General
Location
Thumberland
Sarf-East Engerlund, not the posh bits. People often assume I is a Londoner, but I isn't. (But I did live there for 12 yrs) I live in the North-East now though...
 

Jack9216

New Member
My own accent which is a mix of Southern England, Mid-West England and Australian. I pride myself on having an almost unique accent :laugh:
 

Cranky

New Member
Location
West Oxon
East London/Essex accent which gets more or less pronounced depending on the situation.

Someone recently told me that my voice and ironic humour reminded them of Arthur Smith which I found surprising.
 

Noodley

Guest
I spent a while in Australia and 'amended' my accent to being 'understandable' Scottish accent which progressed to 'a whiny Aussie' tone....then my mate arrived from Scotland and thereafter nobody understood me as I reverted to 'norm' in his company. But they soon understood when I was playing cricket, rugby and fitba!!
 

Jim_Noir

New Member
West-endy Glasgow with a bit of East Coast mixed in. Worked in Edinburgh for 7 odd years and weegies seem to think I have a "puffter" twang. That said most of my friends are from the east end or south side and think I sound like a pounce anyways!
 

colly

Re member eR
Location
Leeds
Originally from Fulham, then Twickenham I used to speak with a southern accent, not Cockney, not RP but just a general London accent.
Moving to Yorkshire years ago it took a while for me to get people to take in what I was saying first time round, and rather than having to keep repeat myself all the time I think unconsciously I began to enunciate properly. So much so I was surprised to hear myself described as having a posh accent.:rolleyes::ohmy:
That is far from how I speak but if talking to strangers or customers or on the phone I do try and remember not to drop my aiches etc.

'caws samtimes it donne work an i ferget '
 

eldudino

Bike Fluffer
Location
Stirling
I grew up in Lincolnshire until the age of 18 when I moved to Scotland. After being here for 10 years I don't have a Scottish twang having spent most of my time at university with people from all over the country or in an office with people speaking RP.

I've got a middle-Lincs accent when talking to mates back in Lincolnshire but it sort of disappears when I leave East Lindsey.

Most of the time I think I have a fairly standard accent, though I still say 'grass' rather than 'graaaaaass' and 'France' rather than 'Fraaaaaaaaaaance'!
 

swee'pea99

Squire
My dad was a kiwi, tho' you'd never have known it, but when I went travelling in New Zealand I came across ex-pats who'd been there 60 years but still had BBC/Home Counties accents you could cut with a knife. It's an interesting thing, how people's accents evolve or don't, depending, I assume, on whether they want to assimilate into or remain separate from the new environment in which they find themselves.
 

mangaman

Guest
The Velvet Curtain said:
Educated in a South Buckinghamshire grammar, so completely RP.

Out of interest Velvet C, which one.

I was educated in a South Bucks Grammar too (RGS in Wycombe) so RP for me too
 
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