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Regional accents can be more complicated than standard accents. In Swansea, many people don't pronounce "made" and "maid", or "nose" and "knows" the same way. Their accent has these extra contrasts.
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Speaking "Scottish English" isn't the same as speaking "Scots". Scots can claim to be a different language. In Edinburgh they usually say "house" not "hoos". But you"ll hear plenty of rolled "R"s, even in "cuRl" and "squiRm".
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Some of the accents of Lancashire pronounce "r" sounds in words like "car" and "far". But not Manchester. Big cities often settle on their own distinctive accents, keeping some sounds from their local regions, dropping some of them, and pulling in others from other areas. Cities make accents!
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Words that have a "th" spelling in the middle are often said without any consonant sound at all in Belfast. Try saying "mother" and "father" without middle consonants. Can you get your mouth round it? Or is that your "moyth" "roynd" it?
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Bradford has a pretty typical "North of England" accent. You have a short-sounding "bath" in Bradford, and if you "cut" your "foot", at least those words rhyme.
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English has been the main language of Cardiff, the capital of Wales, for centuries (but Welsh is making a come-back). Cardiff speech isn't much like the speech of other parts of Wales. Some say "Cardiff" should be spelled "Cairdiff". You knows it!
Click here to listen to the last clip agai
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Why doesn't "singer" rhyme with "finger"? For lots of Birmingham speakers, called "Brummies", these words do in fact rhyme. And "know" almost sounds like "now".
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There's an "l" at the end of "Bristol". But did you know that some Bristol speakers put an "l" after words like "area", making this word sound just like "aerial"?
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All accents change across the generations. For older speakers in Newcastle "face" sounds like "fierce", but younger speakers pronounce it in a more general North-of .England way. You might think that a "Geordie" speaker who says "Can I have a shirt?" is asking you for a tot of whisky!
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Regional accents can be more complicated than standard accents. In Swansea, many people don't pronounce "made" and "maid", or "nose" and "knows" the same way. Their accent has these extra contrasts.
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Words that have a "th" spelling in the middle are often said without any consonant sound at all in Belfast. Try saying "mother" and "father" without middle consonants. Can you get your mouth round it? Or is that your "moyth" "roynd" it?
Thursday, April 23, 2009
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