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Tell us your accent
 

[Closed] Tell us your accent

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As per RedThunder's request on the [url= http://singletrackworld.com/forum/topic/your-favourite-and-least-favourite-accents ]favourite accents[/url] thread...

I speak Canadian. Winnipeg to be precise, although I think my 'r's are slightly less pronounced after 15 years in the UK.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:41 am
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Pure Sussex with a London lilt.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:45 am
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no one can get mine.....

Yorkshire till i was 9, north of Scotland till 17, Aberdeen for 11 year while dating a Geordie for 4 of those. Now resident in Fife for 21yrs.

i drop H's depending on company kept.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:45 am
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I don't have one- everyone else does.

Oh OK then, Edinburgh middle class scottish with a whiff of council scheme.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:45 am
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Midwelsh border/nouveau Shropshire. No one out of the area seems to be able to place me. Northerners think I sound welsh, southerners think I sound brummie, Brummies think I sound posh, Americans think I sound Australian. Dunno what Australians think.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:46 am
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South Cumbrian. Quite what that means/sounds like I've no idea but I know that it's sufficiently different from N. Yorks (where I currently live), North Cumbria and Lancashire that if I drop back into dialect then few from outside the area would understand me.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:46 am
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Deepest, thickest Lanarkshire.

Indistinguishable to Glaswegian except to anyone from Lanarkshire or Glasgow.

I am, however a complete accent sponge and will subconciously take on the intonation of those around me in a very short timescale.

A bit unfortunate if ye work wi' Fifers eh?


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:47 am
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You know when Liam Neeson is trying to do an American or mid Atlantic accent but still sounds like an Ulster man eating a chip butty - a younger version of that.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:47 am
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RP

family are all services/civil service, we moved every 2 years or so (mostly abroad), I went to grammar school. For this I am eternally grateful as I was born in Wolverhampton


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:48 am
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Yorkshire 🙂

And proud of it!


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:49 am
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Lanarkshire with a hint of Irish.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:49 am
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Smoggie/Bristol mix.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:49 am
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Essex, East London, Australian and Cornish. It's a bit of an odd one.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:51 am
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A mish-mash of rural East Anglian meets RP, depending on how many beverages I've consumed.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:51 am
 emsz
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sort of bristol-ish? moved from Banbury when I was about 8 or 9 now live back in oxfordshire. People I work with take the piss a little bit and call me bumpkin..grrrrr


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:51 am
 Yak
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Southern nothingness. Occasionally drop in a few regional bits and pieces from past places without thinking.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:51 am
 Drac
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Ah now you’re asking.

NE is has a vast array of accents many within just a few miles. It’s easy just to say Georidei but mine is really a mix of Geordie and Northumbrian but I don’t roll my Rs.

Ulster man eating a chip butty - a younger version of that.

New potatoes in flour?


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:52 am
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Brummie with a hint of a black Country twang, but quite soft due to time spent working and living further south.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:52 am
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East Lancashurrrr. 🙂


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:53 am
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RP here, and tend to get labelled as 'posh' by lots of folk as a result of prep school.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:58 am
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Deepest, thickest Lanarkshire.

Indistinguishable to Glaswegian except to anyone from Lanarkshire or Glasgow.

Having been brought up in Motherwell (so probably not quite as deep as perchy) I like to think that this is the accent I have. However as people generally think I'm from Edinburgh I may be mistaken!


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:58 am
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Having been brought up in Motherwell (so probably not quite as deep as perchy)

Pure Wishy, am ur. 😉


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 9:59 am
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Lancashire via Canadia via London

Proper shit f'sure hey


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:01 am
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Soft black country I think, similar to black country, but phone and spoon are still one syllable words.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:02 am
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Indistinguishable to Glaswegian except to anyone from Lanarkshire or Glasgow.

Pure Wishy, am ur.

Wishy is totally different from Weggie. Easy to tell the difference, use a lot of different words as well. 😉


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:04 am
 ton
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blunt flat Yorkshire. but more Barnsley than harrowgate..... 😀


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:05 am
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Public schooled Somerset with a hint of S African mum


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:06 am
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Apparently Janner, but I just don't hear it...


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:06 am
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🙂 who knew Motherwell had so many bikers.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:07 am
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Posh S. Devon with a little Norn Iron [s]swearing[/s] vocab acquired from my wife.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:07 am
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Boro + Yorkshire with all the corners knocked off having lived in London for too long.
Pretty much only the Boro vowel sounds remain.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:08 am
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Keighley


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:10 am
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Warwickshire. Not a particularly distinctive accent but someone I'd never met before correctly identified it once so there must be something there. It also has Yorkshire bits to it (have lived here for over 20 years and my grandparents have always been here) e.g. shorter vowels than my Warwickshire friends and using some local phrases.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:10 am
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Warwickshire...So I sound just normal but am surrounded by people who talk funny.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:10 am
 DezB
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Central Sarf Coast Common Scumbag.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:10 am
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who knew Motherwell had so many bikers.

Anyone who's tried to walk their dog round Chatters / Mauldslie / Camby Priory woods on a warm summers evening?


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:10 am
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Geordie (North Shields), but with a little Peterlee/Seaham twang after 10 years with my other half.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:12 am
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@perchy
A true fifer would never admit to working


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:12 am
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I was once told I had a strong hampshire accent by someone who has no idea where i was from (they were correct). which is kind of bizarre as i didnt know hampshire had an accent (its a massive and varied county after all), let alone it could be strong.

I'm also an accent sponge so now sound pretty welsh though


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:12 am
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Mine is a bloody mess - I'm an accent sponge. Surrey until I was 18, then Aberystwyth for a bit. When i came home I got in the taxi and couldn't make the shapes with my mouth to make London vowel sounds when I tried 😀

Then Northampton where i spent a lot of time with Americans, then South Wales, Bristol and the last 8 years in Manchester.

It really depends on how drunk I am and the company that i'm in.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:13 am
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I have a little American southern drawl left but mainly its all a bit RP..


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:14 am
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Another Wishy accent here, though I had to polish it up a bit when I moved to Glasgow to be understood, then again after moving to Edinburgh. Still recognised as Lanarkshire though (I think...)


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:14 am
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A mongrel.
Northern English, with slight hint of Cumbrian, influenced by International India school and being married to Yorkshire lass for 22 years.
Commonly asked if I am Aussie....!


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:15 am
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Kind of East Lancashire but not Blackburrrn or Burnleh.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:18 am
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Lived in South Wales (Porthcawl/Bridgend) for 22 years, been in East Mids since.
Had a very strong accent when I first arrived - people used to say "Say ****ing hell" as the girls used to get moist when I did as I dwelt on the 'K' 😉
Then after a period of time I'd go home to be told I sounded English. Not got East Mids accent yet which is hideous - "get over here now Brit-nehhhh!"
Sound more Welsh after I come back from being there for a few days. Or when I swear.
Still pleased when people I've just met can tell I'm Welsh though 😀


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 10:18 am
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