BRITISH FAMILY REACTS! Accent Expert Gives a Tour of U.S. Accents!

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  • čas přidán 24. 04. 2023
  • Aidan, Gaynor and Sophie react to an expert teaching us how to do different accents around the USA.
    Link to original video: • Accent Expert Gives a ...

Komentáře • 531

  • @TXLionHeart
    @TXLionHeart Před rokem +310

    I love how they were shocked how people pronounced "Martin" without a 'T', but didn't realize they were pronouncing his name without an 'R' 😂

    • @TheDachshundGaming
      @TheDachshundGaming Před rokem +49

      Or the whole time they were shocked about people not pronouncing a letter in the name, they were saying lettuh with our the r at the end.

    • @DerekDerekDerekDerekDerekDerek
      @DerekDerekDerekDerekDerekDerek Před rokem +1

      They pronounced the R but just didn't put much emphasis on it!

    • @anndeecosita3586
      @anndeecosita3586 Před rokem +15

      I notice that with a lot of Brits. Party is paw tee For most Americans it’s usually par dee. Except I hear some people from places like Rhode Island who don’t pronounce R. They say im paw tant for important.
      Erik is awesome.

    • @grahamh.4230
      @grahamh.4230 Před rokem +1

      @@DerekDerekDerekDerekDerekDerek Nope.

    • @Olivetree80
      @Olivetree80 Před rokem +8

      Imagine how strange everyone would sound if they pronounced everything

  • @jodyarrington8555
    @jodyarrington8555 Před rokem +430

    Erik Singer is a world renowned master dialect coach. He is fluent in French and Italian and speaks conversational Japanese and Russian. I have to say , his American accents are extremely accurate.

    • @yashar6595
      @yashar6595 Před rokem +37

      His accents are probably the best I have ever seen, his midwest, he read us to filth for it LMAO

    • @marydavis5234
      @marydavis5234 Před rokem +3

      His Vermont accent is 100% off.

    • @johnalden5821
      @johnalden5821 Před rokem +8

      I don't know where he is from originally, but I would not say his natural accent is any kind of identifiable Southern accent. I would guess Mid-Atlantic or West Coast of some kind.

    • @jodyarrington8555
      @jodyarrington8555 Před rokem +8

      @@johnalden5821 I think he grew up in Connecticut and South England, He traveled and lived abroad while studying.

    • @edwardmclaughlin719
      @edwardmclaughlin719 Před rokem +9

      @@marydavis5234 wrong

  • @kennethswartz8252
    @kennethswartz8252 Před rokem +352

    Whenever a Canadian says "about" you'll know they're Canadian.

    • @TaMara_x
      @TaMara_x Před rokem +46

      They say aboot eh bud ? Lol

    • @BNehls08
      @BNehls08 Před rokem +62

      Or they could be from Minnesota or North Dakota. I had a friend from North Dakota and many people thought he was from Canada.

    • @SCP.343
      @SCP.343 Před rokem +6

      Are you trying to ask me about a boat or a boot? I don't get it.

    • @maxproctor1229
      @maxproctor1229 Před rokem +10

      Or from Wisconsin

    • @TaMara_x
      @TaMara_x Před rokem +6

      What aboot Minnesota?

  • @theblackbear211
    @theblackbear211 Před rokem +168

    This Guy is incredibly skilled and knowledgeable.

    • @chrisp308
      @chrisp308 Před rokem +1

      Meh he's alright

    • @jaredhomola3066
      @jaredhomola3066 Před rokem

      The wokies are unbearable he has to be

    • @halicarnassus8235
      @halicarnassus8235 Před rokem +12

      ​@@chrisp308 I can imagine someone asking you what you thought about Neil Armstrong as an astronaut and you replying the same 😅

    • @chrisp308
      @chrisp308 Před rokem +2

      @@halicarnassus8235 he flew to a big rock out in space, bounced around for no apparent reason and flew back home to earth a super star of pointlessness but that dude that invented antibiotics is an absolute legend.

    • @t0dd000
      @t0dd000 Před rokem +9

      I'm from the Pittsburgh region. You guys wondered how good he is... Well, he nailed the Western PA accent pretty closely.

  • @TES-541
    @TES-541 Před rokem +99

    Gaynor saying the welsh accent is totally different than an English accent…that’s the point. In the same way you might not be able to tell differences in American accents because you’re not used to it, the same would be true of many UK accents. I stayed for a little bit in Aberystwyth, a town on the Irish Sea side of Wales, and there’s no way I could have spotted the difference between them and an accent from England. I’m way better now at spotting local English accents because I watch a lot of English content, and have watched a lot of accent videos similar to this about the UK.

    • @JustMe-dc6ks
      @JustMe-dc6ks Před 6 měsíci

      Exactly, you need exposure to learn which differences go together as part of an accent and which are just individual differences.

  • @jacenjustice
    @jacenjustice Před rokem +105

    As someone from DC I can tell you that the sound of our dialect depends on who's listening. To people from the North East we sound southern, but for southerners we sound northern. However, both of those groups can almost immediately tell that you're from DC.

    • @victorialopez9717
      @victorialopez9717 Před rokem +5

      It's hard to determine a true DC accent because people are constantly moving. There aren't a ton of native Washingtonians (and surrounding area) that still live here. My mom is a native but moved away and then moved back. I have lived in Montgomery County for over 35 years and I can tell when someone is a native Marylander versus someone who moved here. I've never truly developed the accent because of the people I'm surrounded by.

    • @MoejiiOsmanTV
      @MoejiiOsmanTV Před rokem +3

      Mid Atlantic accent is probably the hardest to distinguish of all east coast accents where as I can tell who’s from Baltimore in two seconds even tho DC n Baltimore are only an hour n change away from each other

    • @CSAcrazy
      @CSAcrazy Před 11 měsíci

      nobody can say "oh they're from D.C." just hearing you talk" it's not very remarkable...

    • @Know26874
      @Know26874 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@CSAcrazyI can every black accent in every city has a style

    • @be8nice
      @be8nice Před 7 měsíci

      I grew up in Montgomery County but left. I went to my 50th high school reunion and met a lot of people who never left. I felt surrounded by strong Maryland accents, and I think I'm still recovering.@@victorialopez9717

  • @ShelbyBaby27
    @ShelbyBaby27 Před rokem +61

    I love what he had to say in reference to the generic "American" accent. The thing that doesn't get mentioned enough is how Hollywood forces actors to break their accents. Learning American English through movies/tv gives a very narrow education, considering few actors are allowed to sound like where they're from.
    If Matthew McConaughey were an actor back in the 60's, Hollywood would have made him break that southern drawl...

    • @anndeecosita3586
      @anndeecosita3586 Před rokem +9

      Anthony Mackie said he was told to lose his New Orleans accent.

    • @be8nice
      @be8nice Před 7 měsíci

      Matthew McConaughey didn't change his accent (much), which speaks to how much that mindset has already changed. Hollywood used to force actors to speak in an artificial "general America," but that's in the past. If Anthony Mackie was told to lose his New Orleans accent, it may have been for a specific job where that accent was wrong for the character. The important thing for actors to be able to do is 1) use their own accent when there's no reason not to and 2) lose it and adopt an appropriate accent when necessary.

    • @michlo3393
      @michlo3393 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@be8nice Would that be the MidAtlantic accent that you hear many actors and other popular figure speaking during the 1930's and 1940's?

    • @be8nice
      @be8nice Před 6 měsíci

      Yes. For some it was fairly natural; that was the way their parents and teachers spoke. For others, it was learned. It was a supposedly "neutral" accent that was considered appropriate for American actors to use on stage, rather than assuming a more RP accent. It's still taught by some speech teachers, unfortunately.@@michlo3393

    • @be8nice
      @be8nice Před 6 měsíci +1

      By "unfortunately," I mean that it's unfortunate if they teach their students that they still have to use that accent when not doing a specifically regional one. It's a useful accent to be able to do when playing someone of a certain class in a role set in the appropriate period.

  • @Michelle-oh5ws
    @Michelle-oh5ws Před rokem +76

    11:10 Fascinating how you caught that breathing thing! In the Caribbean, we Puertoricans and Dominicans “aspirate” or “sigh” some of our letters. For example, in some of our accents, we sigh the “s” so estas might sound like ehtah. Really nifty you caught that!!!😊

  • @dayeak57
    @dayeak57 Před rokem +46

    She is spot on about being able to detect the differences, inner city kids can tell the difference between neighborhoods

  • @yashar6595
    @yashar6595 Před rokem +103

    You can ALWAYS tell a Canadian apart. Like when I watched Katherine Ryan (whos on British TV) I knew in her first two sentences she was Canadian. Its word choice and subtle things, like the "O" pronounciation, my cousins were born and raised in Canada, they also say things more British, like Mum not Mom, Washroom not Bathroom, subtle things

    • @Antonio-wh3oq
      @Antonio-wh3oq Před rokem +6

      On the “O”: sorry sounds like “sorey”

    • @caiawren6100
      @caiawren6100 Před rokem +5

      idk - hearing the accent my brain will ping 'Canadian' but then I remember Minnesota exists lol

    • @peenhead9938
      @peenhead9938 Před rokem +1

      No, you cant only some Canadians. Most Canadians just sound like typical Americans with a few words here and there that might be a little different but not noticeable most of the time.

    • @xXprettyxkittyXx
      @xXprettyxkittyXx Před rokem

      It’s about exposure, I think. I used to think we sounded exactly the same but even the lighter accents go up at the end of their sentences. Almost like valley girls.

    • @kazuma11791
      @kazuma11791 Před rokem +2

      ​@@caiawren6100 Minnesotans sounding like Canadians is a myth

  • @hyett1954
    @hyett1954 Před rokem +18

    I moved from Long Island, NY to eastern Connecticut a distance of 130 miles and although there is little difference in accents, the locals would ask, "you're not from around here are you?' just by the way I pronounced certain words.

    • @anndeecosita3586
      @anndeecosita3586 Před rokem

      Interesting because I think LI accent is very distinct. One of my favorite ones.

  • @t0dd000
    @t0dd000 Před rokem +11

    The Gullah history is fascinating. Just spent some time in the Carolina low country recently.

  • @VittoIB
    @VittoIB Před rokem +23

    As a latino born in Spain, raised in the US south by parents from the US north, I totally get the inheritance of accents over their localizations. It truly is a melting pot, especially in the cities.

  • @katherinetepper-marsden38

    The Wire has really good examples of the Baltimore accent.

    • @Kim-427
      @Kim-427 Před rokem +2

      I know someone is from Bmore when I hear them speak.

  • @babyfry4775
    @babyfry4775 Před rokem +26

    Yeah his accents are quite good. His Pittsburgh accent is right on. I’m from there but don’t speak like that too much. Our mother didn’t want us to use that accent too much. 😆

    • @GiuseppeDAntelmi
      @GiuseppeDAntelmi Před rokem +5

      I wish more yinzers would speak like that. It's not good that our accent and dialect is dying out, just because it's not a "sophisticated" way of speaking.

    • @babyfry4775
      @babyfry4775 Před rokem

      @@GiuseppeDAntelmi I like the different words than I do the accent. Like “redding” up the room (Pa. Dutch I think). I don’t know, I don’t like the accent too much just like I don’t like the New England accent. I lived in NH for a few years and that accent got on my nerves. I don’t think the accent will die out though. It’s true you can tell a person is from the burgh with it though. 😃

    • @johndoe-lp9my
      @johndoe-lp9my Před rokem

      Only fools and the pretentious assess someone's intelligence based on a dialect.

  • @jordanledoux197
    @jordanledoux197 Před rokem +22

    It's always fascinating to me. People will insist that the accents where they are from are SO DIFFERENT. They aren't more different, you're just trained to tell them apart because of exposure. I can almost immediately tell Scottish, Irish, and British accents apart for instance, but it would take me a few sentences to tell a Northern England and Southern England accent apart most likely. That doesn't make them less different, I'm just not trained on telling them apart.

  • @Lazai2190
    @Lazai2190 Před rokem +53

    Great video. Also please do parts 2 and 3. Not sure why a lot of channels just stop at one.

    • @limeygg
      @limeygg Před rokem +16

      We will be 👍🏻

    • @meganclare7
      @meganclare7 Před rokem

      I think it's because they're pretty long

  • @tmalone2530
    @tmalone2530 Před 3 dny +1

    As a native New Yorker; I have NEVER seen such an amazing impression of the various accents in NYC. I’m also SO glad that FINALLY someone said that there is no such thing as a “Brooklyn” accent. Furthermore, he really nailed all the various accents. There are people in the South who talk so slow and pronounce every word that I get impatient just listening to them while there are other Southerners who talk a thousand miles an hour and I can’t understand a word they’re saying and I think to myself “damn I thought us New Yorkers talked fast” lol. Excellent video.

  • @michaelkb8783
    @michaelkb8783 Před rokem +8

    All three parts of this series are worth your time.

  • @johnalden5821
    @johnalden5821 Před rokem +9

    Maryland native here (and lived several years in Baltimore City). The accent he was modeling is a thing, but it is most often heard on the eastern side of the city, and mainly among older, white folks. It was common in this part of the city, which was the industrial core, throughout the 20th century but is less common now. Vowels come out a bit differently in this accent. As he said, long "o" sounds come out like "ay-oh" and long "U" sounds come out as "ee-oo." Hard to describe unless you hear it. There are folks who say "Bawlimer" or some variation, but the most common pronunciation is something like "Ball-da-more." The "t" is converted to a "d" and the word is said very fast.

  • @sherriandwaynejohnson3185

    It amazes me how spot on this man is with his accent depictions!

  • @JPMadden
    @JPMadden Před rokem +17

    The accent here in Rhode Island is a blend of the Boston and New York City accents, which makes sense geographically.

  • @danielm5535
    @danielm5535 Před rokem +21

    Love seeing reaction vids like this- for so long I’ve seen too much “How Brits are better, Americans suck” instead of a cultural exchange- love hearing the other perspective and the how/why with a lot of it.

    • @WGGplant
      @WGGplant Před rokem +9

      It's always been popular to hate americans. Most ppl with strong negative opinions about america, dont even rly know that much about it, aside from eye-catching headlines that are especially designed to cause strong emotions (for them clicks, baby!). It will never stop, ppl will always hate us, cuz they ain't us.
      But it is nice to see people's reactions to this type of stuff. It shows that people are
      curious or willing to learn, and it's incredibly flattering and humbling. And it makes us more curious about their cultures as well. 🇺🇸 🤝 🇬🇧

    • @pinkonesie
      @pinkonesie Před 9 měsíci

      @@WGGplantThere's a whole Reddit sub (mostly Brits) trashing Americans.

    • @WGGplant
      @WGGplant Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@pinkonesie cuz theyre euro-nerds

    • @starmnsixty1209
      @starmnsixty1209 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@pinkonesieNot surprising.

  • @Alex-kd5xc
    @Alex-kd5xc Před rokem +15

    Of all the people you might find on CZcams who discuss dialects and accents, I reckon Erik Singer is one of the few who is actually extremely knowledgeable and whose accents are quite accurate. Of the ones I’m familiar with, his American accents all seem pretty spot on.

  • @disoriented1
    @disoriented1 Před rokem +9

    Growing up in northern Missouri, I learned I was mistaken by my pronunciation of Washington D.C. as 'Warshington'. It actually took me concerted effort to stop being wrong and placing that 'r' sound in the middle of Washington. I still will continue to pronounce Washington without the 'r', but I won't feel ashamed for pronouncing with the 'r'. Walter Cronkite was raised within 50 miles of where I was, and his accent was totally standard 'American' :)

  • @Jiinx123
    @Jiinx123 Před rokem +16

    Yes!! You guys FINALLY went on a tour of the U.S.! Well, through our lingo at least, lol. Erik Singer is phenomenal. Please react to all 3 parts! You won't regret it. 😁🌎🇺🇲

  • @jrbaytown
    @jrbaytown Před rokem +26

    Wow, his Baltimore accent! Sounds amazing, that is one tough accent to learn unless you are native. I know Kathy Bates tried to learn and used a Baltimore accent on season four of American Horror Story: Freak Show. Well, I thought it was good but she got flak from folks in Baltimore. One of the most talented actresses, and The Baltimore Sun asks if she is using some form of “Baltimorese?" Lol 😂 I can’t even comprehend how they developed linguistics to say Baltimore the way they do. Pretty fascinating to me.
    Back in the day I listened to Robert Blumfield dialect lessons. I think I’ll stick with what I know, a good ‘ol Texan accent.
    This was a great video guys!!!
    Daz…LET’S GO ASTROS!!!!

    • @erinka555
      @erinka555 Před rokem +4

      Grew up in MD - it's all about the looong o's ... You can practice with 'goin down to the ocean' as we all say here lol

    • @jrbaytown
      @jrbaytown Před rokem +2

      @@erinka555 I love the accent, it's so interesting and very unique! I don't think all the practice in the world will help me learn that accent!!! 😆

    • @anndeecosita3586
      @anndeecosita3586 Před rokem +1

      Baltimore sounds like someone put a bunch of accents in a blender and made an accent smooth

    • @emPtysp4ce
      @emPtysp4ce Před rokem +2

      Bawlmerese is kinda like if you took North Carolinan Southern and blended it with New Yorker then make it drink way too much

  • @hulkhatepunybanner
    @hulkhatepunybanner Před rokem +7

    *I always wondered why the Irish, Scottish, and Welsh accents (brogues?) were very different from the Anglo English accents. Later I learned that the first three groups were originally Gaelic speakers so they speak English as though it's a second language.* Because once upon a time, like the Indians, Africans, and non-Anglo Europeans in American, it was a second language.

  • @Tabfort
    @Tabfort Před rokem +6

    I’m one of those southern Appalachians. This was great guys!😁

    • @HBC423
      @HBC423 Před rokem +3

      I’m from a city in the southern Appalachians

  • @starparodier91
    @starparodier91 Před rokem +7

    I met Erik Singer once and he’s such an amazing guy! I’m a translator and linguist and always enjoy when I see his videos pop up! 😊

  • @katherinetepper-marsden38

    Erik Singer is from Connecticut but lives in NYC.

    • @EMD1028
      @EMD1028 Před rokem

      When someone says Eric Singer Noone thinks about this guy. We all know who people think of when the name Eric Singer comes up. But again this Eric Singer in just a youtuber.

    • @katherinetepper-marsden38
      @katherinetepper-marsden38 Před rokem +1

      ​@NL911GTR I don't know who the other one is, but this guy is a well-known dialect coach.

    • @EMD1028
      @EMD1028 Před rokem

      @@katherinetepper-marsden38 well he is well known to those who search for dialect content. The other guy is a drummer for KISS

    • @katherinetepper-marsden38
      @katherinetepper-marsden38 Před rokem

      Cool. We have different interests.

    • @mkphilly
      @mkphilly Před měsícem

      As a dialect coach, his is a quintessential American or TV accent, just as many educated Brits have that distinct BBC accent

  • @victorialopez9717
    @victorialopez9717 Před rokem +4

    I'm a Marylander and have lived most of my life 20 miles north of DC, but went to college up near Baltimore. There is definitely a difference in accent between Baltimore and DC. It's so interesting.

  • @Matt_03
    @Matt_03 Před rokem +8

    "What should I wear today? Long sleeve soccer/football jersey or hoodie?"
    - Aidan

  • @secolerice
    @secolerice Před rokem +8

    Eric is great! As an Army Brat that moved all over the country, I can attest that we have a lot of different accents and word differences. The diversity of settlers created this and it is always changing.

  • @Gurtington
    @Gurtington Před rokem +1

    I love this Accent expert guy, every time i see him in a thumbnail i have to watch the video. He's just a good talker

  • @Kat-pe3gq
    @Kat-pe3gq Před rokem +1

    Minnesotan, lived in Seattle for a time. Everyone loved that I sounded “like a grandma” I was 21 😂

  • @NuckinFuts2215
    @NuckinFuts2215 Před rokem +8

    The Pittsburgh accent was pretty spot on. Lol!

    • @Kim-427
      @Kim-427 Před rokem +5

      Yes! I’m from Pittsburgh. Our accent isn’t regularly heard. So,When you hear it outside of Pgh it’s odd. Lol You know we’re all familiar with the NY accents,Jersey and LA not Pgh😂😂

  • @merlinathrawes746
    @merlinathrawes746 Před rokem +6

    And then you have people like me. Born and raised in the state of Michigan to parents born and raised in Arkansas and spent many summer vacations in Arkansas and Missouri. Spent 6 years in the Navy based in Norfolk, Virginia and after being discharged, went back to Michigan and ultimately (for now) moved to southwest Missouri where I've spent the last 17+ years. I was also a long-haul truck driver for over 20 years. And because I was tongue-tied as a child I spent a lot of time in speech therapy. Good luck figuring out
    where I'm from by listening to my accent. The best you'll be able to say is "you're not from around here, are you?"

    • @kwj_nekko_6320
      @kwj_nekko_6320 Před rokem

      Have you tried talking to the folks in Des Moines and Omaha? This area is well known to have 'the most colorless pronunciation' in America. At least during the late 20th century.

    • @Incipit9
      @Incipit9 Před rokem +1

      Heh. I have heard “you’re not from around here, are you?” all my life…Service Brat…added the local speech patterns from every place we lived, and mixed them all together, but I can sound like whatever I want to. It’s amusing. 😉

  • @04m6gto
    @04m6gto Před rokem +5

    As an American, it's quite difficult to pick out a Canadian accent unless there is that prominent "Canadian Raisin'" sound that Erik Singer mentioned in the video. Canadian English and American English can be very similar.....for obvious reasons.

    • @anndeecosita3586
      @anndeecosita3586 Před rokem

      Some Canadians I have to catch some clues and others it’s extremely obvious the moment they open their mouths. Especially if they are from a rural area.
      Have you never heard anyone from Newfoundland?

  • @gregcable3250
    @gregcable3250 Před rokem +2

    Classic line from the play, then film, "Streetcare Named Desire" starring Vivian Leigh and Marlin Brando: "I've always depended on the kindness of..strangers".

  • @_PuckFutin_
    @_PuckFutin_ Před rokem +11

    I think he doesn't remember already what his actual accent is 😅

  • @jlpack62
    @jlpack62 Před rokem +6

    There are certain sounds that typically identify a Canadian from an American, but much of our speech patterns/sounds are shared. Some upper midwestern Americans may be confused with certain Canadians. I can see how it's difficult to identify a Canadian from an American if you aren't from North America.

  • @RogueJyn
    @RogueJyn Před 7 měsíci +1

    Fun fact, the Scottish Highlands and the Appalachian mountains were once part of the same mountain range when the continents were together. Ironically, a lot of Scottish immigrants moved to Appalachia probably because it was familiar terrain. I'm a descendent of Scottish immigrants, and my family is from North Carolina. Fun little tidbit

  • @brosaus
    @brosaus Před rokem +7

    accents are wild, here in the Netherlands, a very tiny country there are tonnes of accents as well. often seperated by only 20 Km

    • @limeygg
      @limeygg Před rokem

      We lived in Hillegersberg

  • @Maria-go5fd
    @Maria-go5fd Před rokem +8

    I lived in the UK( London area) for 5 yrs 75-79. I worked in a gift shop for awhile and I was constantly asked if I was Canadian or Australian ! Canadian I could kind of understand , but Australian?? I never got that!

  • @christophermckinney3924
    @christophermckinney3924 Před rokem +2

    You have to see part II especially the part about Chicago's vowel shift.

  • @C.O._Jones
    @C.O._Jones Před rokem +2

    Erik Singer is not from Texas, Georgia, or anywhere else in the South. He grew up in Connecticut. He does speak Southern accents beautifully, though. (I’m from Texas).

  • @dremarcus1622
    @dremarcus1622 Před rokem

    Loved the video. This was fun to watch

  • @gregcable3250
    @gregcable3250 Před rokem +3

    Aidan's face when Erik did the Pittsburgh accent (where I am from) was a WTF?-face as though he did not understand what was said. Welcome to Pittsburgh!! :). Here is what Erik said: "Yinz wanna meet dahntahn, go shoppin' fer cahches"---let me translate for you: Do you want to meet downtown [i.e., in the city], to go shopping for couches? The word "Yinz" is the Pittsburgh version of the southern, 'Y'all"--Pittsburgh is the only place in the worlds where people say Yinz (in fact, we sometimes refer to fellow Pittsburghers as "Yinzers")--and Yinz is not the only word you will find used only in Pittsburgh. It is a truly baffling dialect that I, living in New Jersey now for 30 years, hide from the locals.

  • @Ezewright
    @Ezewright Před 8 měsíci +2

    Your family is awesome! Thank you for the educational aspect. Most of my lineage is British, but I have never been “home.”I was an American Sailor that loves my country more than my own life. However, I grew up in the Midwest(Missouri). Typically, a very neutral accent.

  • @jrg4313
    @jrg4313 Před rokem

    The man doing the accents did an excellent job illustrating each accent!!

  • @gregcowen930
    @gregcowen930 Před rokem +4

    Always interesting hearing the different dialects after moving from Sacramento to western NC………heck there’s even local variations to saying y’all !!! I’m starting to pick up different British accents just from watching footie every weekend

  • @sarahanderson7398
    @sarahanderson7398 Před 8 měsíci +3

    As a born and raised Maryland eastern shore girl I can tell you that the accents are vast and different depending on what area in Maryland you are in. I know in my county alone there are 6 or 7 different accents depending on what part of the county you grew up in and its a tiny county. Most of the accents from my county get mistaken for southern accents by Northern people and even by Marylanders from the western shore who have not been around it may confuse it.

    • @youtuber-tg1pu
      @youtuber-tg1pu Před 5 měsíci

      the more into DC or PG you go the faster they speak I swear I can't understand them

    • @kells969
      @kells969 Před 4 měsíci

      He was way off with the Baltimore accent

  • @ghostpatriot4754
    @ghostpatriot4754 Před rokem +2

    I Love to you all say "Me" Thats "Me" car. We say Thats "My" Car. - You say "Me" Where we say "My"

  • @1776SOL
    @1776SOL Před rokem +1

    A while back, I came across an author's blurb where Erik Singer mentioned he was from Connecticut, with a Scandinavian mom. He stated he mostly grew up in CT but also lived in England for some time as a kid.

  • @RevPeterTrabaris
    @RevPeterTrabaris Před rokem +1

    Always interesting to learn about the ways that we speak. Also to hear reactions to this diversity. I hope that you will do the other videos that take us across the country linguistically. Peace

  • @jahnschafer1170
    @jahnschafer1170 Před rokem +4

    I'd love that guy to visit my area... I'm in Pennsylvania and the dialects differ by county, or even town. I can drive an hour in any direction and hit at least 2 different local dialects, certain directions 4 or more

  • @vcwloves9864
    @vcwloves9864 Před rokem +3

    Matthew McConaughey is from my hometown, Uvalde, TX. He was raised 50 minutes from the Texas-Mexico border in two directions. He came from a primarily Hispanic community, so his accent is odd because no one from that town sounds like that. Perhaps he purposely learned it for his film career?

  • @AMC2283
    @AMC2283 Před 10 měsíci +1

    He mentioned Ocracoke Island where there happens to be a cemetery for British merchant marines who got torpedoed by a U Boat off the coast in WW2.

  • @INDYANDY4C
    @INDYANDY4C Před rokem

    That was fun watching you guys.

  • @skyjust828
    @skyjust828 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I found it funny Englis (from England) get US accents very well, there's the lady who plays Beth in Yellowstone is English by season 3 i heard her in an interview 😮 WOW!?! She's great!❤

    • @Longhauler85
      @Longhauler85 Před 5 měsíci

      Emily Blunt, as well. She's from London.

  • @avtomatt554
    @avtomatt554 Před rokem +4

    Erik Singer is amazing at what he does. I think he's from New York. Unless it's a huge geographical boundary, I am awful at identifying American accents, and I'm American. I'm from West Virginia, and I honestly think I sound kinda "generic" when I speak, but when I hear myself on a recording, I probably sound closest to the lady at 18:35, and I'm white. When I talk to people from other areas, they either know exactly where I'm from, or nowhere idea where I could be from. No guesses in between. My dad would throw those superfluous R's in words, like telling me to "warsh the car" or would pronounce creek like "crick." And I definitely pronounce Martin without the T. I don't know why, but adding that T 'akes effort.

  • @VivaCohen
    @VivaCohen Před rokem +1

    True, no one in the U.S. would pronounce the "t" in Martin. Same also often goes for words like "Mountain" etc.

    • @mosfet404
      @mosfet404 Před rokem

      Probably a regional thing. I typically pronounces the T in both these words.
      I do hear words like Trenton pronounced as Tret-en, leaving out the first N, with a separate syllable for the last EN.

  • @bobzyurunkel
    @bobzyurunkel Před rokem +5

    Baltimore has the strangest accent I’ve heard. It sounds like a mix of New York City and Alabama.

    • @anndeecosita3586
      @anndeecosita3586 Před rokem +2

      For real. 😂
      I remember asking in the comments where a CZcamsr was from because her accent was so odd to me. I wrote it sounded sort of like New York. Then someone from New York said hell no to NY and it definitely sounded Southern. Then I pointed out a bunch of things the vlogger said that I had never heard a Southerner pronounce that way. Turns out the lady was from Baltimore 😂😂

  • @anonnnymousthegreat
    @anonnnymousthegreat Před rokem +4

    I’m an african american who speaks with a mixture of accents from the more northern midwest (wisconsin) and southern midwest (kentucky). So my family from the north think i sound more southern and my family from the south think i sound more northern. But my accent is a mixture of both. And i flip between the two accents. But i can thank my parents for the mixture. Because my mom sounds more proper in her english because she’s from the city. And my dad sounds more southern like he’s from the boonies deep down in kentucky (they say he sounds more like a redneck). Lol.

  • @justanotherrichkid1053

    You guys are adorable.

  • @chadbailey7038
    @chadbailey7038 Před rokem +3

    This guy does a video on England/UK accents!

    • @limeygg
      @limeygg Před rokem +1

      Ooh we will have to watch that. Thanks

  • @ExUSSailor
    @ExUSSailor Před rokem +1

    Erik grew up in Connecticut, but, moved to the UK when he was 12

  • @LarryHatch
    @LarryHatch Před rokem +3

    As a native New Yorker in North Carolina I sometimes use a hybrid dialect when in rural areas just to get along and fit in. "I'm a fixin' to get me some coal pop at dat dar shop up yonder".

  • @t0dd000
    @t0dd000 Před rokem +1

    This segment is insanely interesting.

  • @notshylo
    @notshylo Před 11 měsíci

    Erik is actually from Connecticut and his Swedish mother moved to England when she was 12.

  • @JustDeannaJune
    @JustDeannaJune Před 9 měsíci +1

    Im from Pittsburgh Pennsylvania he is Dead on with our accent ... We smooth out all words... We have also been a city for over 260 years, which for America is a minute... We are a very diverse city with tons of Italian, polish, black, greek communities and thats just the tip of the ice berg, its a very friendly town, very southern honestly... Despite being North. I love your channel, just found it ❤

  • @jessicaloveridge2759
    @jessicaloveridge2759 Před rokem +1

    My family was New York Italian and they say Italian words without the last vowel. So we say Mozzerell instead of Mozzerella.

  • @sassycatz4470
    @sassycatz4470 Před rokem +4

    I've lived in Washington, DC since 1990 and yet I still get people asking me if ... or telling me that ... I sound like I'm from New Jersey or Philadelphia. (I was born and raised in southern New Jersey outside of Philadelphia.) I'm amazed that random strangers, who are not linguist experts are able to tell where I'm from, especially since my accent has been smoothed by education at higher university, exposure to other accents, and living in other parts of the country since 1990.

    • @kwj_nekko_6320
      @kwj_nekko_6320 Před rokem

      My master's thesis on the linguistics was about dialect phonology of my home region. It is Gyeongsang-do (Province) (a historical region now reorganized into 5 province-level divisions) and makes a single and quite unique dialect group within Korean language. My thesis focused solely on the tonal accent of various subdialects. The region's size is about 1.5 times large as NJ (about 30 thousand square kms, or about 14 thousand square miles).
      After reading the preceding studies, I was astonished that solely based on the tonal phonology, the region can be quite easily and clearly divided into at least 5 subregions. Even the laypeople can readily distinguish at least 3 different patterns, and you can learn much more about a person's birthplace if you know some simple tricks.
      During the fieldwork, I succeeded to prove that even within a single county, a trained linguist can detect small but staunch differences, and attribute them to geographical or historical reasons. And there are about 50 counties in the region! The region is fairly mountainous, and valleys are separated from each other, so you can expect that there are at least 100 distinguishable subdialects within the whole region. Solely based on tonal accents!

    • @anndeecosita3586
      @anndeecosita3586 Před rokem +1

      You shouldn’t be amazed that people can tell because a lot of times are it has to do with how you hit your vowels and how long you hold on to the vowel sound.

  • @EddieLove
    @EddieLove Před rokem +1

    This is a multi-part series, hope to see you react to all of them! Just like the office blokes did 😎

  • @rcrawford42
    @rcrawford42 Před rokem +2

    To give an idea how much accents vary in the states, and how easily they can change: I grew up just north of what's considered the South (five miles north of Kentucky), and when I went to college deeper into the Midwest, people said I had a southern accent. Then, after a couple years of college, I was working over the summer and a customer said my accent sounded like I was from up north -- likely because half the people at college were from Chicago and I picked up some of their accent.

  • @monisarkar5135
    @monisarkar5135 Před rokem +1

    if you do an Australian accent vid it would slap!! fire vid tho, love from Aus

  • @BTinSF
    @BTinSF Před rokem +4

    Where Canadians sound very Irish in Newfoundland. And I challenge you to tell the difference between someone from northern Minnesota and central Canada (locals can do it but I doubt you could).

    • @TheChromanoise
      @TheChromanoise Před rokem

      Poorer health and gun shot wounds. Loooooooool.

  • @PyckledNyk
    @PyckledNyk Před rokem +1

    That Piney Woods section is probably the first and only time that someone has discussed my own accent from North Florida. That sections describes it to a T ;p

  • @lynnfish3653
    @lynnfish3653 Před rokem +1

    I live in Detroit and Canada is literally across the Detroit River , we also see Canadian TV. There is definitely a difference in speech.

  • @ambam90
    @ambam90 Před rokem

    He's from Connecticut but moved to southeastern England when he was 12.

  • @lumina1104
    @lumina1104 Před rokem +1

    The Gullah t-softening isn't dissimilar to the t-glottalization of the Cockney pronunciation.

  • @atombomb31458
    @atombomb31458 Před rokem

    this guy is really really good

  • @courtneym75
    @courtneym75 Před rokem

    my grandmother was from near Pittsburgh (PA). She would say "go warsh the tahl with the tahl" (go wash the tile with the towel). Creek became crick, and it's CarNEGGie, not CARnegie lol

  • @JesFan1030
    @JesFan1030 Před rokem +3

    I’ve been told I sound Canadian even though I’m from Michigan. It’s the aboot

  • @dutchray8880
    @dutchray8880 Před rokem +2

    Linguists tell us many US accents should have all but disappeared, but young people deliberately preserve them.

  • @brianr6651
    @brianr6651 Před rokem

    Being from Connecticut, I love they read our accent to a T. We're between Boston and NYC and so its a mix of both

  • @PrincevincentiusEL
    @PrincevincentiusEL Před rokem +1

    Man they missed the whole “oo” section of Baltimore!! That shit is wild, cool but wild!

  • @phoeonixdepress8598
    @phoeonixdepress8598 Před rokem

    you guys are great lol I'm from Ga and I promise you no one who grew up here sounds that understandable lol

  • @justindemski9999
    @justindemski9999 Před rokem +1

    As a native Marylander, yes. Some people her to say Balmer, Merlin Hon. That is more of a Baltimore City accent and those just on the outskirts of the city. Other parts sound more southern especially in the southern part of the state and out on the eastern shore.

  • @brittywren2877
    @brittywren2877 Před rokem

    He is doing them all very well.

  • @leeannsavoy
    @leeannsavoy Před rokem +1

    I grew up in Maryland ( Southern Maryland) and it does have a different accent. Some people say warsh instead of wash, and some may have a slight southern accent. But people from Baltimore pronounce it Balmer.

  • @shirlguidry5518
    @shirlguidry5518 Před rokem +8

    Yes that is Vivien Leigh. I find that most Brits can do a southern accent very well.

    • @SophieVictoria.
      @SophieVictoria. Před rokem +3

      I try my best to do the southern accent 🤣

    • @oaktree1628
      @oaktree1628 Před rokem

      Yeah, that is a Brit doing a Southern accent….

    • @katwebbxo
      @katwebbxo Před rokem

      Makes sense. Lots of southern accents came from British accents.

    • @usafvet100
      @usafvet100 Před rokem

      Right, the non rotic Tidewater or Deep South accent really differs only in cadence and inflection and cadence from a "posh" British accent. Vivian and Leslie didn't have to work too hard to come up with their GWWW accents.

  • @reinapanda6852
    @reinapanda6852 Před rokem +1

    I realized my own accent watching this lol. I have a mostly generic American accent with hits of southern sounding words due to growing up in the sounth most my life but moving around a lot. Watching this made me realize I don't often pronounce T's unless they are at the start of a word. I replace the T's in the middle of the word for a D most of the time and altogether just don't say the T if it's at the end of the word. So, for example for Martin I say Mar-inn and for water I say Wa-der. For the word accent I sat Ax-cen and for student I sat Stu-den. Interesting considering I never even realized I have an accent lol

  • @caseyrogers573
    @caseyrogers573 Před rokem

    I’m a linguist and he presents this stuff so well.

  • @sheilakeller9930
    @sheilakeller9930 Před rokem +2

    Hi, I enjoy your channel. You mentioned that you thought Eric Singer was from Texas. He didn't sound Texan to me as I know people from Texas so I checked on Google of course, hehe
    This is what I found: "I grew up in Connecticut. My mother is Swedish, but moved to south-eastern England at the age of 12. I grew up surrounded by all kinds of languages and accents, and imitated them all..." It seems he is east coast American but surrounded in his growing up years by multiple languages. I think one picks up an accent if they are around someone from day to day. My brother moved to the UK decades ago but whenever he speaks he sounds quite British to me. I lived with someone for awhile who was from Tennessee and had a very southern drawl. After several years I noticed a change in how I sounded on a recording and I am on the west coast of USA. My father though was from Ireland and my mother from Oklahoma so I grew up rather uncertain of which was the proper way to pronounce certain words. I got strange looks when I said "orange". Thank you for your videos. This was a really good one.

    • @SophieVictoria.
      @SophieVictoria. Před rokem

      Thanks for the support ☺️

    • @anndeecosita3586
      @anndeecosita3586 Před rokem

      He doesn’t sound Texan at all to me. I got New England Yankee vibes from him.

  • @sherriandwaynejohnson3185

    So I am someone that is obsessed with accents. I love to listen to people from different areas. I have specific accents that I’m obsessed with and they are as follows: Boston (#1), New York, the Midwest, and finally Miami I don’t know if people realize this, I’m from Miami so I hear it but there is a specific Latino accent in Miami that I just love. Maybe it’s because I grew up there.

  • @jeffreystanley7884
    @jeffreystanley7884 Před rokem +2

    As he said this wasn't all of the accents but wow Maine has a really strong accent I am surprised he didn't talk about. Down east Maine is hard for even inland southern Mainers to understand.

    • @zvoid_error000
      @zvoid_error000 Před 11 měsíci

      I'm from very southern Maine and I don't have a very thick accent at all but it was always interesting having a few key students at my highschool that had thicker accents. Definitely wish we had been included

  • @debbylou5729
    @debbylou5729 Před rokem +2

    Don’t feel bad about the distinction between Rhode Island and Connecticut. I moved there from Montana and didn’t even notice ANY accent. You’d KNOW a Georgian or Texas accent. He’s not it. Another fun fact. Blacks were not kidnapped. They were sold by other Africans. This practice was the norm. They sold the captured people to other tribes and other areas near Africa. Also, thank you for not trying to make LATINX a thing. Every Hispanic person I’ve met HATES it. I have 2 aunts from Mexico and if you want to test the theory of the fiery Spanish blood just say that in front of them. Also you were correct about the rising or lowering of a question. If I heard the lowering I would assume they thought I hadn’t done it

  • @cherylhoneycutt7553
    @cherylhoneycutt7553 Před rokem +1

    I have lived in the US my whole life (in 10 different states) with my longest time being in North Carolina. We are now in California and I am always asked where I am from.