1 LANGUAGE, 3 ACCENTS! UK vs. USA vs. AUS English Pronunciation!
WATER = wor-tah or waah-derr? We speak the same English language in 3 very different ways - British vs Australian vs American English pronunciation! FREE audiobook: geni.us/audiobookFREE (Amazon affiliate)
A HUGE thank you to Emma and Vanessa for their help with this video!
OUR VOCABULARY VIDEO: bit.ly/ONElanguage3accents
Please note:
This is a look at 3 of the MANY English accents, and is for entertainment purposes only. I come from Bedfordshire speak with a modern received pronunciation accent, Vanessa is from South Carolina and Emma is from Perth. I have used the terms 'British English', 'American English' and 'Australian English' to make it simple for you to understand.
I would love to extend this series - please let me know which accents you’d like me to look at next time!
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It's nice to learn english by beautiful teachers
You needed someone from Canada here as well :)
I am from briten
I love lucy
British: Harry Pottah Australian: Harry Poddah American: Harry Podder Indian: Hari Puttar
Damn!😂
Haripada.
Philippines is Harri Pattor.
in Indonesia it calls "Heri Poter"
In malayalam it is hary potter
Aaaah it is nice to be back. Thank you for waiting so patiently for me. Something sad happened in my family. I hope you all are safe and well x
Hope everything’s okay 😌
Hey Lucy welcome 😊❤️
So sorry to hear that!
hope you are fine now
Welcome back
When Lucy falls into an American accent, it sounds so natural. I always have to do a double take.
She instantly becomes Paris Hilton when she hits her American accent
@@BackRoadStoneRevival Or Phoebe
To be fair, the way Vanessa pronounces "percentage" is clearly correct if you do so slowly and deliberately, but a lot of people (at least where I live) pronounce it more as "persennidge" in regular conversation.
I was going to say I don’t pronounce the t at all. More of persenage
Same with Canadian pronunciation.
Correct? That would really depend on who think their version is "correct" . Correct by what standard is what I'm saying to suggest. The UK speaker is "correct", the down under is "correct" and the US speaker is also "correct".
@@kfelix2934 Each version is indeed correct for the region they're in. Not sure why you think I was trying to dispute that. I'm simply stating that the more common pronunciation of "percentage" where I live is "persennidge".
I hate when accents drop the 't' glottalisation.
I have studied British English in school but I watch Hollywood so I speak the accent of "United Kingdom Of America"
And watching cricket match in Aussie commentary
Literally the same.... I speak using American words but with British accent
@@xen2095 and my English is a damn mutant xD
🤣
Hahaha
I feel like the asturalian English pronunciation is mix of the British and american..and close a more to the British
As an Australian, I can confirm that’s true haha
That's because it is. There are also tons of first generation brits in Australia, I feel like I can do a British accent if I want, although it'd probably be completely wrong. To complicate things more, I feel like some Asian Australians do a bit of an American accent, for example a friend of mine likes to say "my gosh" it drives me nuts.
I think australian speek like a surfer mix old people in UK, and any other country try to speek like american, because of the actually culture, musical market, Hollywood etc, sell it.
Yeah, it seems so
Yes, canada has a flag having mixed designs with US and Uk.
Im Australian and I gotta say I absolutely adore Lucy's accent. Its probably my favourite accent in the world haha
Dear Lucy, I noticed that you pronounce 'either' the American way. Also, I always call a duvet a quilt. When they first came out, as opposed to sheets and blankets, we called them 'continental quilts'. A 'greengrocer' sells fruit and veg; a 'grocer' sells any foodstuffs. Linda (born and brought up in England).
I've been speaking with Australian accent my whole life and I didn't even know Aus accent sounded like that until now. LMAO.
So these ladies just fooling around and just joking? 😂
Same are you by any chance from England up north i am and was thinking the same this
Lol 😂
Same occurrence for me too.
@@chloebird860 same🤣
Looks like i've been speaking these 3 english mixed together all these years (edit:tq for the likes, turns out i'm not the only one who speaks mixed english)
same
SAMEEE 🤣🤣🤣
SAME!!!😂
SAME 😂
Yeah.. because in other countries. We learn the standard english.. and this is a mix between all of those english accents.
Another great video. It would be fun to sit and listen to the three of you have a casual conversation. Thank you again.
I used to find English difficult, but after watching videos on this channel I felt I was able to learn it, especially with a British accent, thank you Lucy
The moment when you realize you have a strange mixture of British, American, Australian and Mexican spanish accent 😅😅😅
Julia De la Peña that’s a Mexican accent lol
Rigel Guerra that’s french
DavidBakeCake YT our R are way more accentuated in a french way so unless you’re a native french or speak french perfectly, you can’t do a french accent
That's German... Change my mind
So... Basically any foreign accent is likely to be a mix of the variants of English (American, British, Australian, etc)
We INDIANS just speak each letter in the word😂😂😂. To us every letter must get justice😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣..
😂😂😂
Exactly 😂😂😂😂 We learnt every letter so hard...now can't leave any letter being silent🤣🤣🤣🤣
😂😂😂😂
True that ...Justice 😂😂😂
hhhhhhh you are funny
I’ve never been more self conscious about how I speak until this video. Emma has a more polished and enunciated accent than someone like me from the working class suburbs of western Sydney who speaks with a stronger accent and less enunciation. Australian accents do vary to a certain extent. Social class, education, upbringing, ethnicity, occupation and socioeconomic status all play a role in how we pronounce words. My wife from the Philippines says we swallow our words which is a very accurate description. I have been aware that my accent is different to British and American English but never realised how much we replace the letters such as “ch” and “d” for “t” and like “chewsday “ (Tuesday) and “boddle” (bottle) and sometimes we don’t use “t” at all such as “percennage” (percentage). Another thing is we tend to drop the “g” in words that end in “ing” such as come-en and gowen (coming and going). It would be interesting to see a video on the difference between how someone like Emma speaks and someone with my accent.
I live in the US and you must understand that we have even more accents than the British Isles do. The South Carolina accent, the south in general, sound very different from the east coast and west coast. I was listening to Vanessa thinking ‘nope, that’s not how we pronounce it in Nevada’
I totally agree. Born & raised in Colorado, but now live in SC. Vanessa doesn’t seem to have a strong southern accent, but she definitely pronounced words very differently from both CO & SC! 😊
British Isles has about 30 different accents.
American: Dooty British: Duty Australian: *Judy*
The American sounds like doodie
Indian : Booty
Mia Nguyen Yup😂
@@jeklinmusic48 more like due+ti
@@jeklinmusic48 😂
This was a lot of fun! Thanks for letting me represent American English.😁❤️ If you want to use the American accent, just say "water bottle" (wah-derrr bod-ul) again and again.😂
Oh, that's nice! How about the Covid19 cases in the US? I hope that you're safe.❤️🇵🇭
Ms. Vanessa! ❤️ I just watched your latest video and surprisingly, got a notif from Ms. Lucy! My heart is so happy right now 😭😍😍
I used to use American English because for me is easier, but sometimes I mix up all the accents, because I have been studying with 3 teachers, one from Africa the other is American accent and the third one is British accent 🙂.
What about Harry poderrr
Thank you so much for your time Vanessa ❤️ 🇺🇸
I love this video very much...I learned a lot of new vocabularies...thank you lucy,emma,vanessa🥰😘
I'm from Ohio (USA...just in case!) and we definitely have the same terminology and usage for "woods" and "forest" as the UK! I have never in my life referred to a generally "wooded area" as a forest unless it was as a joke or as part of a place that was legally designated as such (i.e., state forest, a very large part of land with dense trees in a national park, etc.).
I think i speak for everyone when i say: I missed you
Yep!! I missed her so much
Oh yesss! And so did I... I don't need to learn English, but I often watch you with my 8 year old nephew. He's in love! He finds you so pretty and funny. No need to say he hates Will 🤣🤣🤣 Welcome back Lucy ❣❣❣
Correction dude : 'WE' missed you
same
hey guys! How is it going! Come take a look at my channel. I've taught English for over 10 yrs. I hope you like my content, see you there!
“1 language, 3 accents” Arabic language: hold my 99999999999999999999999999999 accents
+100,😂😂
خخخخ
HAHAHAHHAHAH omg i only know some فصحى
You mean dialects. And dialects isn’t the same as accents.
I learned one word with meaning 😂 'maktub'
Thank You again Miss Lucy for showing me the differences between accent. Thank you also Miss Vanessa and Miss Emma. I really love to watch your videos
Love Lucy's explanations of the differences. Me being from the northern USA, I can often tell the difference between the north and south with Vanessa's pronunciations.
Americans: 'Little' Australians: 'Little' All i hear: Lidl
True. I'm Australian and it sounds like that lol
Haha,supermarket
Haha! Over here in Australia, Lidl is called Aldi.
They probably changed it because of that reason.
BharathiGAMER Ohh here in the UK we have both Aldi and Lidl😅
when they say : "harry potter" me : it's must be harry pO-TTAH
Omg same harry pO-TTAH
TRAINING FOR THE BALLET, POTTAH?!
When ur ilocano-filipino, u will understand just how funny pottah is 😂
PoTTAH
yeah Malfoy style
English is my second language (though I've been using it far longer than my mother tongue by now) and I find British English far easier to understand than any other variety. It's the crispness of both the vowels and the consonants (those t's for example) that gives it a lovely clarity. To my ear, American English sounds somehow slurred, a little "muddy" in contrast. Of course, the British English variety I have in mind is the RP type, exemplified by Lucy's speech. Regional accents can throw me for a loop! Btw, I learned British English first and acquired an RP accent. After 40+ years of living in Canada, people often take me for a South African! 😂
Please get those videos coming again! I really love watching this video and the other one as well of the 3 of u repeatedly every now n then ❤
Australian English Rules: There's no rule
There are*
@@Delealli00 i was thinking the same 😂
😂 😂
Alłî Žãķhô or rule
@@Delealli00 thank you 😅
I'm indian and I use combination of all the accent. 😂 But majorly British influenced accent. While growing up, we used to think this is wrong, that is right..... But now we realise no one's wrong, it's just the variation of accents.
You are absolutely right!
I think everyone who's learning English is like that😂 because I'm filipino and I mix everything up too!
I agree ! Same with me. I feel like I speak mixed accents.
Im Bangladeshi & Talk like my favorite KZheadr judo sloth gaming
Yes indian english has a specific accent, hello welcome to Indian Tech Support
It's amazing linguistic lesson about differents pronunciation and accents. Bravo ! J'adore ça !
What I learnt from this video : So technically nothing is wrong, anyway you pronounce it becomes your accent until someone forces you to admit that their way of pronouncing is correct yours is wrong.
kzhead.info/sun/l7qHftKMiJ2MdWw/bejne.html
The fact that I am American and hear both other accents and still understand what they are saying is evidence of a specific fact of languages. Some sounds are clumped into similar groups naturally since there aren't equivalent words for the slight variations, so the variations sound like the same thing to us. Same goes for other English speakers. For example, if an American sounds like they are saying "Chree" instead of "Tree," well, there is no English word (that I know of) like that, so it just still sounds like "Tree" to a British or Australian for example. So yeah, as long as you are understandable, you are fine. It doesn't matter what slight variations you decide to use as long as the people you talk to can understand you where you live.
Nothing is wrong it's all an accent! That's english 😂
British English : Biscuit American English : Cookie Australian English : Bikkie Tamil ( south indian language ) : maama biscothu 🤣🤣🤣🤣
😂😂
Australian English : bikkie My mom: hey bikkie where r u S my nick name is bikkie
Nithyakalyani V true!!! SO TRUE!!!
HAHAH BEST COMMENT. 🤣🤣🤣
🤣🤣
I sm loving it. Thank you for making such a programs!
I learnt plethora of words from you. I love your teaching and interactions
Staying in India, listening to this I guess we have a combination of everything🙈 We study British English in school and watch Hollywood movies, so yeah that explains why!
Yes
exactly , it is messed up
Like they said patrol station, gas station we say patrol "pump" lol
@@itz_snowing_galaxy9794 petrol bunk too
@@amarnathbk2128 ooohh I didn't knew it in gujrat here we say petrol pump
British: Nice American: Nice Australian: Noice
Noiceee
*SNAP* noice
it's noice , it's different, it's unusual ;)
Australian knife..noife.Watch Crocodile Dundee and you will see what I mean.
@@georgemaster689 i know m8
I was a teacher of English as a second language, and when I was a student we studied British English mostly in University level. But when I got to teach later I found all the early school classes have American English curriculum !! It was a fun experience nonetheless 😂 , you brought back so many memories while watching thanks for a great video or clip 😂👍🏻
I often mix all accents when l'm speaking, thanks for making this lesson and got to know why sometimes l sounds differently when l'm speaking due to different accents l found myself using them 🤗😔
Ok, so, I’m Thai and in school we mostly learn British accent. I was also staying in Australia for a year when I was 10 years old. And in my free time, I like watching KZhead, so I picked up American accent as well. As a result, I mixed all 3 accents. Lol
Omg me too
Im thai too But many words ive learned it's from UK But i got the US accent When i heard some general words from US I cant recognize it from the school It's new word to me
Some Americans drop the T entirely in "percentage" sometimes. Sometimes I say "percentage" and sometimes it's more of a "percennage."
I said percentage out loud and realized it was basically missing the t. You learn something new everyday!
I say percennage and will never stop 😌
And in some places in England omit the t entirely Bo'le Wha' Suumingk Boo's
I was thinking the same
From the uk and that’s literally how I pronounce it aswell.
Thanks, this was fun. As a native (American) English speaker, I don’t think about pronunciation much. Now I feel I can better understand the differences.
This was great listening to the 3 different English accents. Great Video !!!
All my whole life I was mixing the three accents and I pronounce every word as I like to 🙂
That's how the English language is! The rules are all made up lol
😂😂😂 best comment
Now I can see how much american movies and songs influence my pronunciation. In Poland we are taught British English, but because of the media i feel that I use American more
kzhead.info/sun/oadqnLCuqF-DeI0/bejne.html
Yeah, same in India
and with me in the Balkans
American pronunciation and words are pervasive. It creeps into the Australian language and some people aren't aware that they aren't speaking the Aussie lingo. I'm sure it happens elsewhere as well.
it's called soft power, unfortunately America is strong in this discipline
American English pronunciation largely depends on what region of the country where you were raised. There can be a huge variation between individual States. Where I'm from in Duty the T sound is clearly pronounced. In many areas of the US when a word ends in ING the G is often sharply suppressed or entirely silent. I suspect that's because of the large influx of Irish in the 19th Century. Irish accents, especially Northern Ireland, have that characteristic which seems to have passed on the regional US dialects. I don't know where Vanessa lives in the US but where I'm from we don't substitute D for T very often if at all. I'm in the Great Lakes region of the US specifically NE Ohio.
This is better than a music channel for me. Thank you ladies so much!
I think I use the three accents when I’m speaking English 🤭
Ha ha same here !
Same
kzhead.info/sun/oadqnLCuqF-DeI0/bejne.html
sm here😂😂
Lol! Me too!
I always thought Australian accent it’s like a mix of British with American closer to British accent. And yeah I was right haha
Same!
I'm from America and miss Benny Hill!! My dad loved his show and had almost all the VCR tapes! Great video!!
Hello there! Thank you very much for this wonderful video. I enjoyed it very much and hope to see a lot more of you guys together again.
I can't believe in that pronunciation of "Tuesday" in UK... all I hear is chew-sday everywhere :)
i wanna like your comment, but its at 69-
It's because she's rich
@@shaunmckenzie5509 no just has an rp accent
She's what is known as a tory
@@irrelevance3859 RP is usually spoken by wealthier people...
British english: elegan American english: modern Australian english: simple . . . . My english: still learning:(
Australian accent is probably the hardest to learn tho
really? Aussie accent is never simple to me
American accent is the easiest to learn though
@@jarrahello877 let me be honest ppl here in Australia especially teens we all sound american british mixed language for some reason
Australian English is simple and elegant, too.
In Australian English, whilst you do hear people pronounce "water" with the T sound "waTah" (the way Emma pronounced it in the video). It is also very common to hear people say "waDah" where the D sounds more like a rolled r sound.
So fun! I'm studying my Ancestry right now and my Sheffield line comes from Bedfordshire
Please remember that different parts of America also have their own dialects and ways of pronouncing words.
My family is from southern MA (Boston) and they say r (or rather don’t) more as ah. My mother still has her accent so my son was the only FL born kid who was foah (four/4). So interesting all the different accents just within each country.
Nobody forgot.
I guess the same applies to dialects in uk and Australia too
kzhead.info/sun/ppFucpGioYKEhqs/bejne.html
We know it the same and probably more with uk
American English really depends on what state they grew up in.
Very true. Pretty much every region has their own "twang". New England, Southern, Midwest, Appalachian, Texan, and many many more!!
Exactly also we call different objects different things
USA has lots of different cultures so doing all the accents would be seemingly impossible.
As all the countries in the world. Her accent was pretty neutral. That's what they wanted to show
@@arlequinacontostavlos2100 Wouldn't call 2nd/3rd world countries culturally rich, but yeah that's a different conversation lol. If you mean the usa girl's accent, yeah i guess you could say "neutral". Definitely wasn't hard to understand her.
I have been having trouble here in Australia with people understanding my pronunciation which is more American. It was really frustrating for me as I am a Registered Nurse who is about to go to university to do my conversion program. I find it frustrating having to repeat myself all the time. Thank God I came across this Video, I was actually dreading the idea of going to school and work but I do not mind repeating myself all the time anymore
Almost every pronunciation in American English depends on how carefully you're speaking. Whether we drop or use the "T" heavily depends on people we're speaking to. Like with Interview, I'd normally say the T in most circumstances, but really it's just both. Most words we have at least 2 ways of saying lol
I'll take that phrase for the rest of my life, at 4:34: "many people say it's wrong or lazy, it's not, it's efficient"😜
:'D
Actually, Vanessa's accent is slightly different than Americans from other areas of the country. Each region has slight variances. This also includes the names for everyday items.
I am American and I pronounce many of the words differently.
Her accent is not quite "standard American"; the most important metric of how you say stuff / what you call them is where you were raised, secondarily who you were raised by. It's a really large country, people in the San Francisco area don't talk quite like her, though you can tell her accent is U.S. The "t" in the middle of words here is more of a tongue flip than a full-on "d", but it's pretty far from the aspirated "t" you find at the start of many words. It can change depending on the word or what sound it's next to.
Her accent is definitely the everyday North Carolinian
I wish I could tell the differences 💔🥲 Yeah, the Boston accent is very different from the others... but in general I could never tell the differences 😥
You'll find the same is true of basically any country's accent, especially when they're large and/or in groups isolated from each other. Emma's from Perth and her accent is very similar to accents from more southern states of Australia, but there is drastic variation from her more British-Australian to the more cartoonish one that Americans always use when they put on our accent.
I had a friend who was from Scotland. It was very hard to understand her English and damned near impossible after she'd had a few pints ! 🤣 I would love to see someone from Scotland in this group...
I love her bafflement at Australia's complete lack on consistency
Australians have many versions of the accents, Emma is from Western Australia and her accent is totally different from people in Adelaide, Melbourne, Canberra, Sydney , Brisbane and Darwin etc.
@@shivendrasingh2862 Not so different, I would say Emma's accent is Melbournian
@@shivendrasingh2862 I'm from NSW and I don't find her accent very different to mine. I think the accents vary with location (e.g. urban vs rural) - more so than region.
It's so funny for me to recognise, how much I mix British and American english. I think that's because in school we learned British english, but due to movies, tv series and music I often or almost use American english. And some words I pronounce in the Australian way... because I'm German? I don't know 😂 but I think that is the great thing about english. You can talk your way and the most will understand it 😊 Thank you for your videos. Take care and stay healthy 🍀
A lot of Germans seem to speak with an American accent, which always surprises me. The Dutch usually sound more English than American.
Same.
In Spain people normally speak American, but my dad it's British, so I have kind of an Australian accent, though my dad says it sounds artificial. 😔😔
Heyyaaa I learn German at school😁✌🏻
Ich auch omg😂
"One language, three accents" Brazilian Portuguese: 27 accents hahahaha
@T Doran of course I know that
@@raynerlopes1 qkkdkskdks vdd
My language has only 108k speakers and like 25 dialects sooo
Mandarin has 200+
My family is originally from Portugal so we live in Massachusetts and you got a mixture of this Massachusetts style Portuguese I'm not a very good speaker of Portuguese but I have a hard time understanding the Brazilian Portuguese
The "R" sound is so intresting! I speak English with a british accent because you drop the R-sound. I´m from a part in Sweden were we also drop the R-sound in many swedish words!
All of you people made me learn everything in English. thanks you so much.
Never been this quick... I'm a native but I like the way she teaches and that's why I'm here... Keep it up...
Same 😂
You must be single 🤣
@@sportlovers1508 ina?😂
@@sportlovers1508 you got me.. 😂
@Rugby first, English second. agreed
I'm American and I switch between "Inerview" (silent t) and "Interview" (pronounced t) depending on the sentence it's used in or how I'm feeling
I basically never pronounce the t, southern usa guy here
Same, coming from a new england guy here
@englishwithhlucy as an Australian living in London, it does my head in when I hear people say the days of the week sounding like "Mondee, Tuesdee, Wednesdee and so on. The pronounciations of foyer and furore also does my head in.
British pronunciation of ‘weird’ is wee ‘id. I noticed British method removes ‘R’s’ quite a bit in words. Interesting. Language migration is so fascinating! Great video thank you!
This is a reason why I love British english because “can” and “can't” in British english are obviously what you can do and what you can't do. But in American english, both words sound similar😑
Yeah that gets annoying
Sometimes u will confuse, is it can or can't... And yeah i like british accent... And still learning....
"Can't" is almost always stressed. I CAN'T do it! I can DO it!
USA It’s English Colony Therefore
I wanna say as an American it's actually quite easy. The word *can* is always fully pronounced but when people say *can't* (since they don't pronounce the T), they shorten the N sound. Like, it almost comes to a direct stop once they've started the N. Sometimes clarification is needed of course and I've also come across KZhead videos where people describe the difference before as well. I caN do it I can- do it
She protec She attac But most importantly: She's bac
You are missing a k after the cs 😑
Anas Wajid that’s the whole point. It’s a joke
@@user-so7nd5zl2b what are u talking about
@@anaswajid r/woooooooosh
@@anaswajid Is Anas your actual name? If that's the case then your parent's name choice was terrible.
It depends on context for me. I tend to enunciate more carefully outside my direct family or peer group and speak more slowly.
Was just about to post the same 😉
In Northern Germany, we have the "t" changing into "d" as well. And in Low German, it is even written sometimes. "Buddel" means "bottle". If spoken the American way, only the vowel is slightly different (and the "L" of course). Otherwise, it is the same word. Yeah and dropping the "d" in a word with "nd" in it also happens sometimes. "Kinner" instead of "Kinder" (children), "anners" instead of "anders" (different)
Okay, I don’t wanna brag but when I speak I apparently use all 3 accents in one sentence😄🤦🏼♀️ God, how on earth a non native can learn this?)
"God, how on earth a non native can learn this" ... First you'll have to learn the language before using accents.
We Asians do that also #asians
@@bleonsalihu6645 it's not like that, I'm brazilian and at english course we must choose one country to start,cause they all have different pronunciations and words for the same thing example: Elevador (U.S) Lift (U.K)
Do ya think it’s really a mistake....?
same
As a New Zealander, this is probably the first time I have ever gone for the Australian.
You traitor
The ANZAC spirit just died a little.
69th like :)
Yessir
Good to get some support from the East Islands.
Going into the reason as of why the accents differ is fascinating too. American English sort of froze in time in some ways, while having a quite a bit of Scottish influence in with the 'd's with words like "Duty". Really interesting.
Thank you so much ladies, this is wonderful.
I fell on the ground laughing when American one said ‘hairy pottr’ 🤣🤣
We pronounce it Hairy Podder.
Harry powder😂
it’s “hairy podder” versus “airy pohta”
Harry pothead
Pls note that's not how America pronounce it. This lady was just horrendous.
I just realised that us aussies speak much faster, look at the way they say words and then look how fast the aussies say their words
a lota tha speed comes down t' tryin' t' keep tha flies outa ya mouth...especially in tha summa... ;))
It’s because the American and British ladies were speaking slowly and emphasizing the syllables to show the viewers a more clear difference between the words, but the Australian lady just spoke normally. I can guarantee you, Americans actually speak pretty fast too.
@@madinamohammad1161 that’s maybe true since there is like many accents in America according to like the states, so some may speak faster but idk
I wanna go to Australia lol
More upload vid like this.. Because for Me as Indonesian learner its so important things.. Thax LUCY.. LOVE IT EMMA AND VANESSA😘😘😘😘😘
Bear in mind there are hundreds of variations for each language. Even in Scotland, my country, there isn't one correct accent. It can change from 15 minutes along the road!
Absolutely! This is why I specified exactly where we are from, to add a bit more context. I love picking up on the minute little differences when I travel around the country!
True, but people from other countries have to learn something, they can't learn different accents.
i think we all have to be quite open minded. As the purpose of a number of videos are not to frattle people who are not interested in changing their accent, however who ever are, are free to do so. Normally we click these type of videos out of intrigue in improving our way of speaking. The intuition we have, that we shouldn’t have to feel the need to change our pronunciations if we don’t want to, Lucy is just simply and very well teaching us very useful widely used words and phrases. She is a wonderful teacher.
Yeah! )) I once tried asking an old couple in the street in Glasgow where's a shop or whatever. I just said thank you and went where the finger was pointing :D
@@dimbasick The Glasgow accent is the most difficult to understand for other British people. I'm English and I have problems understanding it sometimes.
Lucy's American accent is so perfect it's jarring when she switches to it. I wonder if she ever switches accents unintentionally while speaking to people from different places?
I am sure she does. I grew up in the Northeast US and have lived in the South for all of my adult life. I speak 'Yankee' English when visiting home and 'Southern Twang' around my Southern friends and family. I also speak/understand 'Janglish/Engrish' as I have worked for a Japanese company for the last 26 years.
@@fredgilbert2032 cool!
My accent definitely gets less British-sounding when I’m talking to people with a different accent, though if I realise I’m doing it, I try to make myself sound more British because I hate it when it changes by itself lol
A lot of it will depend on how fast you're speaking. Even in the US, if we say "better" for instance, and really want to emphasize it while speaking slowly, we will pronounce the t. I guess those situations don't come up that frequently though.
I love this type of videos, thank you Lucy
British always wants their English perfectly pronounced
Lmao come to England ull change ur opinion this is only a few English ppl that talk like this. Most of the time we dont pronounce our ts
Maybe people who live in the south of England. Midlands and Northern is completely different.
Yeah
This woman has a posh accent. They don't all talk that well
Hahaha not really... they too have different accents.
I would love to see different British pronunciations, like English, Irish, Scottish and Welsh. I actually asked it because I could not found a channel with a teacher with these accents here in YT. I already knew the other 2 teachers but until now I could not find teachers from Ireland, Scotland or Wales.
Good luck understanding the Scots as even English people can't
Northern Irish*. Irish is quite different from Northern Irish :)
@@doctor-atuti you can say that about English aswell as a northerner sounds very different to a southerner
@@lewishopkins5779 Ayem frum Luhverpewool
I meant the British as British isles not just great Britain. If it had northern Irish and Irish it would be even better.
Thank you Lucy for this invaluable information. All my love to you
I would love to see how you would rate my English. I grew up in the southern US. My dad was from Vermont but was first French American born in the states. So we learned some French. But they were French and immigrated from great Britain when they came over. I also took singing vocal lessons in so many languages. As it turns out I have such a great cooking knowledge from the French and British influences
I wonder how many hours she had to put in editing. It must be a nightmare for KZheadrs.
she has a team for that
American accent really pronounce the r. British accent sounds like they're going to pronounce it but decided not to in the end. While australian accent was like we ain't pronouncing that thing ever!
Yet Australians do pronounce the R sometimes-- Including me. Depends on the word
Not in Boston we don't 😃
We don’t say “ain’t”, and we don’t not never use double negatives
blackpink in your area
The pronunciation of the R is called rhoticity. It isn't all R's but it is the use of R's in certain situations. Most British accents are non-rhotic, but some are rhotic (West Country and Geordie are rhotic if I recall correctly). American accents tend to be rhotic, but a few major urban accents are not (Boston and some New York accents mostly). Scottish, Irish and Canadian English are generally rhotic. Australian and New Zealand English are generally non-rhotic. There might be a few minor regional accents that are exceptions but that's the basic trend.
This is fun! Thanks for sharing!
I loved 🥰 British, French, and Spanish accents but I never had Australian accents and I learned them from T.V. shows and I’m good 🙂 at those accents and amazing 🤩 times I have with my life and that’s how I want to roll.👍
It cracked me up that Emma looked sideways when asked to say barnyard and said, "We wouldn't say that." I made exactly the same comment at the same time 😅 I've never heard that word used here in Oz. Also, I'd always thought that US and Aussie English were quite different, until I fell down a KZhead rabbit hole of pronunciation videos and realised that we both say our t's more like d's.
I’m Australian but my pronunciation of words is much more British. I am in my late 60’s and we didn’t have a television until I was 10. Television here showed a lot of American programs and I think that is why the younger generations have adopted or mixed accents.
Back in 20th Century Birtain owned the land of Australia do possibly after the country got their own land they might've kept the accent for few generations.
American English is VERY different depending on where you live. Even in the same state, you can have huge variations. Like where I live we say the T sound in duty and bottle. I’m sure it’s probably similar in Australia & England.
I’m from Washington state and I say duty the way Lucy does! Different states/regions have different pronunciations and also different names for items! For example: soda, pop or coke (it doesn’t have to be an actual Coke brand) for carbonated beverages! I have a friend who called all cola drinks a coke no matter the brand!
And how do u say "bathroom?" We say "washroom" in Ontario, Canada but mostly we use a combo of words for the facilities.
The look on everyone's faces while it is paused... 😝
😜
🤣🤣
🤣