11 Difficult English Accents You WON'T Understand

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  • čas přidán 28. 04. 2024
  • ❓🤨❓ How good are your English listening skills? Can you figure out where these accents are from? Can you understand what they are saying? Brag in the comments and let us know!
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    ⏱ TIMESTAMPS:
    0:00 - Intro
    0:25 - Dialect #1
    1:35 - Dialect #2
    3:26 - Dialect #3
    5:06 - Dialect #4
    6:37 - Dialect #5
    8:24 - Dialect #6
    9:53 - Dialect #7
    11:43 - Dialect #8
    13:52 - Dialect #9
    15:11 - Dialect #10
    16:01 - Dialect #11
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Komentáře • 7K

  • @theoldone3485
    @theoldone3485 Před 9 měsíci +6536

    I’m from Appalachia. I hated my accent so much growing up. I was ashamed of it, and would get made fun of when visiting anywhere. I did my best to lose it and I mostly have. I wish I’d known then that it was nothing to be ashamed of and the people mocking me were ignorant.

    • @dalubwikaan161
      @dalubwikaan161 Před 9 měsíci +174

      aw. I am sorry to hear that.
      Just keep going

    • @theoldone3485
      @theoldone3485 Před 9 měsíci +153

      @@dalubwikaan161thank you. It’s totally fine. It’s just I wish I’d known then what I know now.

    • @johnwelsh5591
      @johnwelsh5591 Před 9 měsíci +110

      I'm from Appalachia to and you did the right thing

    • @anitahall2618
      @anitahall2618 Před 9 měsíci +21

      I'm right there with you!

    • @malcolmsleight9334
      @malcolmsleight9334 Před 9 měsíci +41

      Very sorry to hear that. I grew up with kids from all over the world, so I learned a lot about accents.

  • @C.O._Jones
    @C.O._Jones Před 9 měsíci +720

    I’m a Texan, and I understand my Appalachian countrymen perfectly well. I love hearing all the dialects!

    • @paul_321
      @paul_321 Před 9 měsíci +43

      Appalachian is easy to understand.

    • @brianarbenz1329
      @brianarbenz1329 Před 9 měsíci +24

      The "Scotch-Irish" dialect of U.S. English came out of southern Appalachia and spread from East Texas to Virginia and Southern Maryland. It's basically working class and rural Southern.

    • @rudra62
      @rudra62 Před 9 měsíci +11

      He should have done a Texan dialect segment.

    • @bookon999
      @bookon999 Před 9 měsíci +11

      I am from Boston and didn't understand about half of it.

    • @stevenboettcher4796
      @stevenboettcher4796 Před 9 měsíci +12

      I'm a New Yorker and understood Appalachian easily.

  • @frankie3213
    @frankie3213 Před 7 měsíci +326

    I'm New Zealander/Australian and I have no trouble with Appalachian English. I did an online University course and some of the content was delivered by an agriculturalist in Scotland - could barely understand a word. I think maybe the english accents you think are difficult depend on which type of english accent you have.

    • @SR-ir1xu
      @SR-ir1xu Před 7 měsíci +11

      Definitely the New World dialects were easier for this American than those further out, and Appalachian is no sweat. I've had more exposure to those and related dialects. Georgie- that's incomprehensible to my ear. 😂

    • @binxbolling
      @binxbolling Před 6 měsíci +6

      The whole South is heavily Scots-Irish.

    • @sharonhines3476
      @sharonhines3476 Před 5 měsíci +11

      I once called a customer service number in Australia from the U.S. I could not understand the guy. I felt terrible. I told him I knew we were both speaking english, but it wasn't helping. The one word I remember him having to spell was pin.

    • @Zultzify
      @Zultzify Před 5 měsíci +4

      i agree, as a maritimer with a lot of family with newfie accents, and some with the western new brunswick accent (biggest giveaway of west new brunswick accent is they pronounce garage as gerrej) i find appalacean scottish and irish accents easy to understand, but then find many of the american accents in the south and carribean confusing.

    • @confused-new-zealander
      @confused-new-zealander Před 4 měsíci +3

      What do you mean that you're New Zealand/Australian are you half and half?

  • @appalachiantexan2729
    @appalachiantexan2729 Před 7 měsíci +36

    Proud Appalachian and voice actor here! My grandaddy used to say "I'm so hungry, my stomach thinks my throat's cut," all the time!! It's true you can find Shakespearean phrases spoken by older people. I wish it wasn't dying out! My favorite Appalachian thing is adding an "a" to the beginning of "ing" verbs, as in, "I was just a-sittin' on the porch." I also love the addition of the word "done" to past -tense verbs: "I'm not hungry. I done et." I've heard dialects in the UK use the word "et" as past tense for "eat." I've also heard folks in the UK use "I reckon" in the same way we do. One more good'un: we pronounce "wh" at the beginning of a word differently than a "w." "White is not "wite," but 'whah-ite." (We push air through by pronouncing the "h" sound. Love this video!

    • @fuckdefed
      @fuckdefed Před 7 měsíci +3

      That throat-cutting expression of hunger is widely used in England still, despite what this video says, as is ‘reckon’. I still say ‘et’, which is the more traditional Brummie way of saying ‘ate’, though many Brummies now say it as ‘ite’ and most of the rest of England as ‘eight’ unfortunately.

    • @MeanBeanComedy
      @MeanBeanComedy Před 2 měsíci

      Me too. I love my home. I never want to leave.

    • @NinaHansen2008
      @NinaHansen2008 Před 2 měsíci

      My mother, who was born and brought up in the US State of Maine, used the expression, my stomach thinks my throat’s been cut.”

  • @eosborne6495
    @eosborne6495 Před 9 měsíci +454

    Appalachian English is such a comforting sound to me. My family lost it a few generations back when they moved to the cities for work, but I’m certain our ancestors all spoke that way.
    Incidentally, most folks from the region say “App-uh-LATCH-an” not “App-uh-LAY-shun.” I often hear the joke, “If I hear you say Appalaysha, I’ll throw an apple atcha!”

    • @MichaelPhillipsatGreyOwlStudio
      @MichaelPhillipsatGreyOwlStudio Před 9 měsíci +17

      Yep, lived there for almost a decade and you're right.

    • @pierreabbat6157
      @pierreabbat6157 Před 9 měsíci +6

      I'm not from here, but I've lived in western North Carolina for about nine years. I recognized Appalachian as being spoken somewhere in eastern North America, though I wasn't sure if it's in the mountains, the Outer Banks, or what.

    • @williamcrain4204
      @williamcrain4204 Před 9 měsíci +25

      I got Appa-LATCH-an immediately, as that’s where I’m from originally (and my family still lives there). I’ve lost most of it myself, but it’s like music to my ears now!
      Next time, Olly should do the Hoi Toiders of the Outer Banks.

    • @williamcrain4204
      @williamcrain4204 Před 9 měsíci +15

      And EOSborne, thank you! Every time he said “appa-lay-sha”, it was like finger nails on a chalk board!

    • @akiko7298
      @akiko7298 Před 9 měsíci +4

      I almost picked up a bit of an Appalachian accent when I went to school right near the mountains. Now I'm the only one in my family who says Appa-uh-latch-an and not the other way.

  • @flufwix
    @flufwix Před 9 měsíci +867

    I’m Australian. I understood significant parts of most of the accents. The development of accents and dialects is super interesting.

    • @vertigo2894
      @vertigo2894 Před 9 měsíci +41

      I love the Australian accent! It's my fav hehe! Too bad there is a lot of racism in Australia, it actually shocked me.

    • @joythought
      @joythought Před 9 měsíci +52

      ​@@vertigo2894there's lots of ignorant people everywhere but scratch the surface and they are good to their families and easy to make friends with. Australians are generally fun and friendly and racism can be wiped out with a bit of communication.

    • @vertigo2894
      @vertigo2894 Před 9 měsíci +21

      @@joythought Of course there are wonderful Australians; I am guessing you are white? We don't tend to have the same experiences and it's often drastically different. From all the places I have been, it's sadly the worst in this context.

    • @RockinFootball_23
      @RockinFootball_23 Před 9 měsíci +53

      @@vertigo2894 not white australian here and I was wondering what type of racist situations are you referring to cause I personally don't find that bad.

    • @vertigo2894
      @vertigo2894 Před 9 měsíci +6

      @@RockinFootball_23 Are you a black male?

  • @gingerkiwidev
    @gingerkiwidev Před 7 měsíci +55

    I experienced the same with French accents. My mom's side is Acadian (Acadien) from PEI. They immigrated from the west coast of Brittany in 1604 and settled "up west" in PEI (except for the mid-1700s and the Expulsion of the Acadians/La Déportation des Acadiens). So it's a very isolated ancient French.
    We lived in New Zealand in elementary school and my mom taught me French so I'd be ok whenever we moved back to Canada and I had to take French class. ... But French was Parisian/standard French and I knew the equipment of circa 1600s French (with some Irish Catholic Gaelic influence). I had no idea what was happening!
    My Nana (grandmother) in New Zealand was a Geordie - occasionally when I'm tired or one of my cats is especially naughty out comes some random Geordie (She had a naughty cat.). So apparently I was picking that up along with Kiwi English and Acadian French. .... which led to the following...
    I read text books onto tape in university for a friend who was blind. She had a first degree in linguistics. She said that she couldn't have me read for her because she spent all that time decoding my accent and not focusing on the material I was reading.
    I was waiting for Newfoundland English! I've spent much of my adult and teen years in Toronto, Canada, so I actually either got most of the accents or was close.
    BTW Hello to "cousins" in Louisiana who speak Cajun. Thousands of Acadiens ended up in Louisiana after "La Déportation des Acadiens" in the 1700s.

    • @TheBigBoyBrian
      @TheBigBoyBrian Před 7 měsíci +2

      It's complicated but basically, when Napoleon lost his war in Europe, the British made him forfeit all French occupied territories in north america, including Acadia and the Louisiana territory (Mississippi watershed)
      So the British wanted to consolidate/extend New England northwards wanted to settle Acadia (such beautiful place name!) so they evicted the Acadiens

    • @gidiess7880
      @gidiess7880 Před 6 měsíci +8

      A friend of mine grew up in Nova Scotia speaking Acadian French. Her school to a trip to Louisiana and all the kids were speaking Acadian French on the bus. There was this elderly couple Cajun couple who burst into tears saying they hadn't heard young people speaking their language in so long 😢

    • @intiorozco5063
      @intiorozco5063 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Fun fact: the word "Cajun" comes from "Acadien", pronounced in the Acadian accent.

    • @robfriedrich2822
      @robfriedrich2822 Před 6 měsíci +1

      I'm from Berlin Germany, when Bavarians confuse me, I couldn't do the same, my dialect is comparable to a Cockney without jargon words.

    • @mmichel2436
      @mmichel2436 Před 5 měsíci +1

      As french man, the mix french / english is understandable but the cajun accent is difficult for me.

  • @ThatFigureSkaterZamboniGirl
    @ThatFigureSkaterZamboniGirl Před 8 měsíci +74

    I’m from central NY, at the foothills of the adirondacks, and my father was from Saratoga. The Appalachia accent was no struggle. That’s how he sounds and some of my teachers back in school too. The phrases and pronunciation were the same. 😃
    I should note that my husband, who is Romanian and learnt English in NYC as a teen, still complains and struggles with comprehending my father’s speech sometimes.

  • @rhov-anion
    @rhov-anion Před 8 měsíci +297

    When the Appalachian started, I got such a big smile. My great-aunt spoke this way. Apparently my grandfather used to as well, but he did his best to tone it down so the grandkids could understand him. My great-aunt had no such reservation. She was a hoot, a huge storyteller, and I would listen to her tales for hours.

    • @HiveSci
      @HiveSci Před 8 měsíci +2

      It's just the language of the elder story teller to me.

    • @littlebitofhope1489
      @littlebitofhope1489 Před 8 měsíci +4

      That was the only accent I could understand.

    • @mrjellyfish161
      @mrjellyfish161 Před 8 měsíci

      Dude same. I’ve spent my whole life trying to avoid it because my mom spent her whole life trying to lose it…

    • @littlebitofhope1489
      @littlebitofhope1489 Před 8 měsíci

      You guys need to watch Beau of the Fifth Column. He spent a long time hiding his accent too. In fact none of his friends new he had one. Then he got drunk one night and it came out. He now has a huge You Tube channel and uses his real accent for it and does just fine. Of course you have to be understood, being able to choose like Beau is pretty cool too.

    • @barbaralavalley2383
      @barbaralavalley2383 Před 8 měsíci

      i'm originally from nw Arkansas (Ozark mountains) and we talk pretty much the same way. I've had people in other parts of the country think I'm from one of the Carolinas.

  • @juniormynos9457
    @juniormynos9457 Před 8 měsíci +332

    Got Trinidad, Guyana, and Jamaica.
    Only because I'm West Indian 😅
    Side note: Each English speaking Caribbean country has a unique and distinctive dialect also, so whenever Caribbean people meet, we usually can tell where they're from just by their dialect😊

    • @nicholaswjamrock
      @nicholaswjamrock Před 8 měsíci +15

      if you ask all the english speakers of the caribbean to write a statement in propper english, you will not be able to tell where they are from. American english is dialect of standard english, be cause it has different spelling and grammer. we all use the same spelling and grammer in the carribean . So i am from jamaica and I speak two languges, Enhlish and Jamaican Potios, its not a dialect its a language

    • @fionaanderson5796
      @fionaanderson5796 Před 8 měsíci +10

      @JimCarner so what if @@nicholaswjamrock didn't capitalise some words to your liking. His statement is informative and intelligible, which puts him well ahead of half the USians I encounter online.

    • @chongus1072
      @chongus1072 Před 8 měsíci +16

      bajan (barbadian) here, can confirm. also, all the carribbean ones were quite easy for me to understand and differentiate since i speak in a bajan accent.

    • @michaelregis1015
      @michaelregis1015 Před 8 měsíci +12

      From Trinidad and can confirm. A lot of times our islands can't understand each other.

    • @amandam5363
      @amandam5363 Před 8 měsíci +13

      Yes!! I’m Guyanese and got the trini accent within one second lol (loved seeing so many West Indian countries in this). A lot of people say trini/Guyanese sound similar, but to us it is so different!

  • @Caeric77
    @Caeric77 Před 6 měsíci +44

    The only one I knew about and understood with ease was #4 - Appalachian. While it isn't exactly the same, it shares enough of the characteristics of my native Southern English that communication isn't much hindered. My own accent has become much more 'standardized' American English over time, but my grandparents spoke in such a thick Southern that some of my friends from other places found it difficult or impossible to understand them. I find myself slipping back into it when I'm around others speaking it.

  • @conlon4332
    @conlon4332 Před 8 měsíci +6

    9:25 Aww, this guy seems like a sweetheart. Very friendly and hospitable.

  • @TxVoodoo_
    @TxVoodoo_ Před 8 měsíci +515

    My late husband came from Appalachia, and his family speaks this way. He trained it out of his voice because he felt it was holding him back in his career, but when he'd speak to them on the phone, it would come right back. The accent he ended up with was so soft and lovely, I miss it. When my mom (native Philadelphian) came to our wedding at his parents' home, she didn't understand a thing anyone said!

    • @rosemadder5547
      @rosemadder5547 Před 8 měsíci +14

      Hello from Gatlinburg 😍 I trained it out of my voice as well... it's coming back as I get older though. I loved reading your comment, and I'm very sorry for your loss. I know what you mean too, everyone can tell if I've spent the day with my papaw bc my accent gets pretty heavy. I speak very fast though lol it can really confuse people...

    • @TxVoodoo_
      @TxVoodoo_ Před 8 měsíci

      @@rosemadder5547My Philly comes back when I've been talking on the phone w/ back-home friends! We all adapt.

    • @DeezNuts-
      @DeezNuts- Před 8 měsíci +9

      I understand applacian english better then the weird uk accents

    • @TxVoodoo_
      @TxVoodoo_ Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@DeezNuts- I watch a lot of UK tv, so I understand most of them by now!

    • @HeartOfFire-cp4vf
      @HeartOfFire-cp4vf Před 8 měsíci +5

      Weird I get that, as a citizen of the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 I don’t hear many different ones unless I travel, and I have a posh accent as I grew up around Buckingham and never heard anything else and the first time I heard an American accent I had no idea what they were saying learnt the hard way though as I have had many different horse riding instructors and tutors

  • @hmmmninjas
    @hmmmninjas Před 8 měsíci +235

    I trained with the Singapore military. Not all had the same accent, but I'd say 75% could easily converse with the American Marines. Great group of guys.

    • @Fuzzy_Llama
      @Fuzzy_Llama Před 8 měsíci +16

      We can code switch easily. ;)

    • @MrBenHaynes
      @MrBenHaynes Před 8 měsíci +3

      Yeah, they are real filli faleh! (filli faleh, filli faleh).
      Who knows what I'm talking about?
      My Singaporean sister-in-law used to say this.

    • @markiobook8639
      @markiobook8639 Před 8 měsíci

      Yes, that's why the government is trying eradicate Singlish.

    • @akcarlos
      @akcarlos Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@Fuzzy_Llama many just think they can 😜

    • @DavidHoughton17
      @DavidHoughton17 Před 8 měsíci

      @@Fuzzy_Llama ORD loh !

  • @dad.b.y
    @dad.b.y Před 4 měsíci +8

    im ethnically guyanese and trini. one of my great grandmas was actually arawak and carib! im so happy to see caribbean culture featured in this video ❤ much love!

  • @pzycho_reclas1794
    @pzycho_reclas1794 Před 3 měsíci +7

    I'm from East Tennessee and my whole familys from Appalachia. My grandmother taught me to speak without my accent cause people would think I was stupid if I used my hillbilly English. Today I can speak without it but I'm proud to have my accent and usually just talk regular. We say things like toosdee for Tuesday, haint for haunt or ghost, holler for hollow, and use lots of phrases like ive know him since he was knee high to a grass hipper and well im finer than a frogs hair split 3 ways. I love that you included Appalachia in the video I only have one issue with you... its Appalachia with a soft 3rd A no with a long 3rd A. i aint really sore at you but it is a soft A lol

  • @planetdisco4821
    @planetdisco4821 Před 8 měsíci +97

    Years ago I stopped at a cattle station in the Aussie outback that was larger than some European countries and spoke to the old bloke that had been left in charge of the homestead while the owner spent the next six weeks or so inspecting the boundary fences. Yep. Six weeks. His Aussie accent was so broad that I struggled to understand him and I’m actually Australian! What a character. Not many of them left now. I still think about him all the time…

    • @geoffas
      @geoffas Před 8 měsíci +5

      Strewth! lol

    • @RendallRen
      @RendallRen Před 8 měsíci +3

      > *I still think about him all the time*
      You should definitely go pay him a visit!

    • @planetdisco4821
      @planetdisco4821 Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@RendallRen it was about 30 years ago near Lake Eyre in SA. He was an old fella then. Long gone by now I’m afraid

  • @craigflower13
    @craigflower13 Před 9 měsíci +165

    Hi Olly. Ewan Bremner (Trainspotting clip) is from Edinburgh and his accent is East coast, not Glaswegian. He is speaking fast because he is speeding, not because he is a Weegie. The most difficult dialect in Scotland is probably Doric from one of the fishing villages along the Moray Firth coast, or some of the islands, like Orkney.
    czcams.com/video/le3cBRlWSE8/video.html

    • @tonyennis1787
      @tonyennis1787 Před 9 měsíci +2

      I was able to pick out about half of it

    • @craigflower13
      @craigflower13 Před 9 měsíci +12

      @@tonyennis1787 My wife, who is from Fife, has little problem with Glaswegian but needs me to translate Doric. Aberdeen residents speak quite slowly, but it gets faster the further west you travel, especially in the fishing villages, like Buckie, Banff and Burghead (less fishing and lots of incomers have diluted this somewhat.)

    • @elaineb7065
      @elaineb7065 Před 9 měsíci +12

      Fraserburgh is by far the thickest Doric ever!!! I live in Doric-land

    • @craigflower13
      @craigflower13 Před 8 měsíci +7

      @@elaineb7065 i was at school in Forres, swam for the Bluefins, travelling round Grampian and my parents still live in Burghead. Most of the fishing villages and towns are indecipherable to anyone from outside the area.

    • @EleanorCasson
      @EleanorCasson Před 8 měsíci +5

      I was once at a wedding in Cullen surrounded by fishermen and fisher's wife's. Nae fecking clue what they were sayin. I've live in Glasgow for 20 years now so know the accent pretty well. My biggest issue is getting taxi drivers to take me to Crow Road. They have no clue where I want to go! I just can't seen to shake the plumy English for that one!

  • @lilsuzq32
    @lilsuzq32 Před 8 měsíci +6

    Before I retired in 2018, I worked for a US Midwestern Bank's call center (It was Harris Bank Chicago, later absorbed into the BMO Canada corporation). Soooooooooooooo many times, I had clients from the southern part of the US say to me, "Slow down, I can't understand that fast Northern speak!"

    • @bW9taeH4
      @bW9taeH4 Před měsícem +1

      That's surprising given the overwhelming media exposure that uses a broad standard US English. I found that throughout the world, when people learn English as a second language, they often have problems understanding various accents, but find a general American accent easiest to follow if it's spoken slowly. If somebody from England goes to a non-English speaking country, and the other person who supposedly understands English can't follow, faking an American accent might help.

  • @debracreevy7357
    @debracreevy7357 Před 21 dnem +4

    ‘My stomach thinks my throat is cut’ was an expression used by my mum to express feeling hungry. My family all born in Liverpool England but Mum’s heritage was Ireland / Welsh. Nice to know this expression is medieval Irish xx

    • @rosreid3945
      @rosreid3945 Před 5 dny

      My dad use to say the same thing and he was from Barbados. Many irish were sent to Barbados by Cromwell.

  • @JackFalltrades
    @JackFalltrades Před 8 měsíci +40

    I love Singaporean English! I knew that one. My late wife and I lived there for a year. After six months, my daughter came to visit. "Dad! You talk like them!"
    My wife and I were so proud! 😀

    • @mingzmings88
      @mingzmings88 Před 8 měsíci

      I am ashamed of singlish as a Singaporean

    • @TryinaD
      @TryinaD Před 8 měsíci

      @@mingzmings88why lmao??? It’s a valid way of speaking. Stop trying to cater to white people

    • @crystal8537
      @crystal8537 Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@mingzmings88sad for u 😊

  • @jeffkelly8020
    @jeffkelly8020 Před 8 měsíci +188

    As an American Southerner, the Appalachian was super easy to understand. I hear the north GA version of it daily in north metro Atlanta.

    • @lovingfantasy
      @lovingfantasy Před 8 měsíci +4

      Im certainly accustomed to it but i imagine it’s not nearly as hard to understand as the previous ones even for others who are not used to it

    • @jeffkelly8020
      @jeffkelly8020 Před 8 měsíci

      I'd have to agree.

    • @SeaToSummit-bk1qy
      @SeaToSummit-bk1qy Před 8 měsíci +6

      I think the Appalachian is probably the easiest in this list for a broad English speaking audience to understand aside from Singaporean English.

    • @jeffkelly8020
      @jeffkelly8020 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Although we think it would be easier to understand for a broad group, that may not be the case. I tend to slip into a deeper Appalachian/southern accent when speaking with another southerner. A coworker who'd recently relocated to Atlanta from LA overheard one such conversation and couldn't understand us. She was totally lost.

    • @austinbowles7500
      @austinbowles7500 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Probably due to it being the closest to the general American dialect, but my wife grew up in California and it took her a good couple years to be able to understand my grampa that grew up in rural north Georgia in the 40s

  • @savimaharaj1963
    @savimaharaj1963 Před 8 měsíci +12

    I'm from Trinidad. Just wanted to point out a small error in your video caption: the original name of the island was "Iere", not "Lere", i.e., the first letter is uppercase i, not L.

  • @Kyokushitaka
    @Kyokushitaka Před 7 měsíci +16

    I got the Scottish variants and was happy that you included Tangiers! The second video you used for it was shown to my class during our phonetics and phonology class in college and I've never forgotten how round it all was

  • @LotharYael
    @LotharYael Před 8 měsíci +244

    I grew up in South Florida and later moved to Georgia so I got the Trinidadian, the Jamaican, and the Appalachian right off the bat. I really appreciated learning the history.

    • @firebert123
      @firebert123 Před 8 měsíci +7

      Grew up in Georgia! My wife is British and I have to translate my uncles for her lol

    • @yondie491
      @yondie491 Před 8 měsíci +2

      I'd highly recommend you confirm with your own research before taking what he presents as historical gospel. He has a few pretty blatant errors with history of some of the languages here.
      Most of it is great tho.

    • @user-dr9qu7qt9o
      @user-dr9qu7qt9o Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@yondie491 I totally agree - you want to seem kind saying "most of it is great" - most of it is actually for likes/money and not correct

  • @jenniplease
    @jenniplease Před 8 měsíci +357

    I got all the Caribbean dialects, Newfie and Appalachian, but I’m a Jamaican Canadian who’s spent a lot of time in the South so that makes sense 😂 Respectfully: These days the Indigenous Caribbean peoples who migrated from the southern mainland are not usually referred to as ‘Arawaks’. Arawakan is a language family. Pre-contact, the eastern islands were populated by the Caribs and western islands by Taino. They were enemies, not one group referring to themselves as Arawaks. I believe the Ciboney were also a Caribbean group but I don’t know about them. It was common in colonial curriculum to call all of the groups “Arawaks” and claim they are fully extinct. Now curriculum teaches about the culture of the groups like Taino in Jamaica and Puerto Rico.

    • @judithsahirah9564
      @judithsahirah9564 Před 8 měsíci +5

      Excellent information! Thank you! Gracias!

    • @R.B.90
      @R.B.90 Před 8 měsíci +13

      I'm from Toronto. Parents from Guyana. I got all but the Singapore one lol. I think we both are lucky having the upbringing we have. We expose to a lot more of the world than the average person both because of the Caribbean and being Canadian. Something I never realized until I was older.

    • @markblocker4565
      @markblocker4565 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Much appreciated insight.

    • @danastriker6070
      @danastriker6070 Před 8 měsíci +1

      The cibony I think we're on carriocou island

    • @kwimms
      @kwimms Před 8 měsíci

      Yeah, nobody cares. Were you there? How do you know any of what you said is true? Where are these people now, eh?

  • @johanbarnard3435
    @johanbarnard3435 Před 5 měsíci +10

    South Africa has so many different accents. Each group has their own accent. Very diverse. The cape colored accent is very unique in itself

    • @mrvwbug4423
      @mrvwbug4423 Před 2 měsíci +2

      The main thing I've noticed with SA accents, is they all have the slight afrikaaner sound to them. And that is unique to SA I believe.

    • @AnonamemusHacker-yk2dh
      @AnonamemusHacker-yk2dh Před 2 měsíci

      That's not very accurate as in reality it some people sound like they have a British accent coz some teachers are from there whilst anothers sound American coz of Saturday morning cartoons​ whilst others sound more like their home language so the real answer would be it depends@@mrvwbug4423

    • @ohhi5237
      @ohhi5237 Před 17 dny +1

      cant confuse the afrikaner accent

  • @violondesocrate
    @violondesocrate Před 5 měsíci +8

    As a Canadian who has lived in the Caribbean area of Toronto, I was able to identify the dialects from Trinidad, Guyana, and Jamaica. Of course, I also recognized the Newfoundland accent.

    • @heikkikiviniitty2163
      @heikkikiviniitty2163 Před měsícem

      I guess I got to brag: As a Finn who has never been to Canada or the Caribbean, I was able to identify the Trinidad, Jamaica and Newfoundland accents! Not the Guyana one though.

  • @silentcovemusic
    @silentcovemusic Před 8 měsíci +63

    Trinidadian here! Happened to stumble upon this video. Thank you for accurately capturing demonstrations of the accent as well as its historical origin!

    • @dannyshucksill7687
      @dannyshucksill7687 Před 8 měsíci +4

      Also Trini here! My sister's sent this to me haha

    • @mrssaunders2
      @mrssaunders2 Před 6 měsíci

      Not Trini, however I LOVE a Trni accent! ❤Beautiful!

  • @Ghostie03
    @Ghostie03 Před 8 měsíci +316

    Im from newfoundland! The accent has sadly died down quite a bit, although many of the youngsters have maintained the vocabulary. Yu most often find the accent as strong as that in the remote communities, and in our older population.
    Another piece of our interesting history is Newfoundland used to be an independent dominion of the UK, but due to economic crisis we became more dependant on the British until 1949 when we joined Canada.
    Also, its pronounced more like like newfenland, then newFOUNDLand which is how a lot of mainlanders and foreigners pronounce it!

    • @frizz7.727
      @frizz7.727 Před 8 měsíci +11

      whale oil beef hooked

    • @kimfleury
      @kimfleury Před 8 měsíci +15

      I learned to pronounce it Newfenlin here in Michigan on the border. The city on the Canadian side had a lot of workers coming in from around Canada to work in the refineries. Newfies had to adjust their accent a lot to communicate with the other workers, and of course the other workers had to learn a bit of Newfie as well. The border used to be more open back then. Now I'm cut off from family over there.

    • @tomfitzpatrick8303
      @tomfitzpatrick8303 Před 8 měsíci +15

      Rhyme it with understand...un-der-stand New-fen-land, or at least that's what I've been telling people for decades.

    • @Ghostie03
      @Ghostie03 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@tomfitzpatrick8303 smart! I'll have to use that one

    • @msamour
      @msamour Před 8 měsíci +10

      All the Newfonies I sailed with sure did keep their accents. Especially the Murphy girls. There were three women's last names was Murphy, they could drink any hard core alcoholics into an early grave. Good folks! I definitely would have like to marry a girl from the rock!

  • @carolinepark4033
    @carolinepark4033 Před 7 měsíci +3

    I live in Cornwall, U.K. … I think ppl here would be blown away knowing a little island in Chesapeake Bay sound just like the Cornish!

    • @pianokey3497
      @pianokey3497 Před měsícem

      Yeah same here I heard it and thought it was my people but it’s in America!

  • @valiumtwo
    @valiumtwo Před 7 měsíci +9

    So glad we can now stream so many TV shows from the UK. A couple of times I have found one that it's hard for me to understand the dialect and accent. Fascinating how many versions of the English language exist. I enjoy learning a bit about the different accents and the history behind them.

  • @davidcox3076
    @davidcox3076 Před 8 měsíci +135

    Enjoyed listening to the Appalachian speakers. My mom's people mostly came from Kentucky and Tennessee. The accent hasn't changed a great deal over the years.

    • @eleni1968
      @eleni1968 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Thank the Lord for that. Would you mind recording them before their dialect of English disappears completely because it will owing to generational changes in language use. It's a very normal progression. Cheers from NYC!!!

    • @voiceofreason2674
      @voiceofreason2674 Před 8 měsíci +2

      So long as they don't do that annoying mush mouth thing where they can't annunciate and sit there and buzz thru their nose. That's not an accent that's a speech impediment and it goes uncorrected among a lot of Appalachian zones

    • @f0rmaggi0
      @f0rmaggi0 Před 8 měsíci

      My best friend is from Kentucky and calls is ‘Kentuckian”.

    • @rbarnes4076
      @rbarnes4076 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@f0rmaggi0
      I have cousins from there. Appalachian is very recognizable once you've heard it.. and you can hear echoes of it all throughout the south of the US.

    • @tedvillalon4139
      @tedvillalon4139 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Appalachian English sounds normal to me here in San Antonio.

  • @CedarSam
    @CedarSam Před 9 měsíci +127

    Every Canadian recognized the Newfies. They do tone it down when they talk to the rest of us but it's still pretty distinctive. BTW the emphasis is on LAND in both Newfoundland and Newfoundlander.

    • @corinna007
      @corinna007 Před 9 měsíci +10

      Non - Canadians tend to pronounce it and "-Lund", too, instead the typical pronunciation of "Land".

    • @davidmoores7608
      @davidmoores7608 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Actually there are a few acceptable pronunciations. Just never emphasize the second syllable (New FOUND Land). And never reduce the last vowel (Land not Lund). Mind you, no one will get upset if you get it wrong.

    • @bigscarysteve
      @bigscarysteve Před 9 měsíci

      I knew it was Canadian, but I wasn't able to pinpoint it any closer than that. I don't know enough about Canada to be able to pick out any regional accents.

    • @bigscarysteve
      @bigscarysteve Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@corinna007 How do Canadians pronounce the "found" part? Like "found," or like "fund"?

    • @b.w.6535
      @b.w.6535 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@bigscarysteve It's found, but spoken very quickly so it sounds more like fnd. And the syllable emphasis is very much like the word understand. There are some slight variations, depending on where you're from on the island.

  • @elizabethlefebvre1694
    @elizabethlefebvre1694 Před 4 měsíci +3

    I really enjoyed this. Thank you. I got 2,3,4,6 & 7. As a Canadian I am lucky to have been exposed to many of these beautiful dialects.

  • @brianthompson7950
    @brianthompson7950 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I'm a northern English man. My best mate was a witness in a murder trial in London. The court had to get a translator in because they couldn't understand him

  • @arivanuaranu
    @arivanuaranu Před 9 měsíci +260

    I’m from Indonesia 🇮🇩 , so I’m very familiar with Singlish 🇸🇬 and their sister Manglish 🇲🇾. Influences don’t only come from Chinese dialects (Hokkien, Teochew, Cantonese, etc) but also from Malay and Indian dialects (mainly Tamil).
    But as former British colonies, both Singapore and Malaysia have a high proficiency in English (especially the former) and they have no difficulty adjusting to your English level. It’s just that they prefer to speak Singlish and Manglish as they sound more natural and less pretentious 😁

    • @mnbr6884
      @mnbr6884 Před 9 měsíci +8

      You nailed it.

    • @lackingmyface
      @lackingmyface Před 9 měsíci +7

      Can la 👍🏻

    • @Worldaffairslover
      @Worldaffairslover Před 9 měsíci +4

      I Heard singlish isn’t even intelligible to standard English (uk, Canada, Merica, australia)

    • @arivanuaranu
      @arivanuaranu Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@Worldaffairslover I don’t know, did you understand what they’re saying in the video?

    • @Mottleydude1
      @Mottleydude1 Před 9 měsíci +9

      Don’t forget about Taglish in the Philippines. I’m surprised that didn’t make the list.

  • @vernelledouglas1801
    @vernelledouglas1801 Před 8 měsíci +281

    I'm Trinidadian and was pretty impressed with the view of my nation's accent. The Cape Flats was fascinating. Thanks for the knowledge.

    • @zochbuppet448
      @zochbuppet448 Před 8 měsíci

      You have noting to be impressed by.
      He is a shame and disgrace to the British education system.
      Did you realize he got the basic history of the country wrong?
      He said GERMANS made up the population of Trinidad. He has the make-up of many of the countries wrong.
      His historical information on many of the places in this video area very wrong.
      He said that people in Trinidad / Caribbean only learned STANDARD ENGLISH recently...LOL
      When....
      Jamaicans, Trinidadians and Guyanese and others have been citizens in the UK since the very early 1950's.
      How were they able to move to the UK if they didn't speak standard English.?
      and English has been the only language thats ever been used SCHOOLS, BUSINESS, AND GOVERNMENT and used in theses former BRITISH colonies, and the official language.
      This dunce is just disrespecting you .

    • @jpnh2012
      @jpnh2012 Před 8 měsíci +1

      I've never been to Trinidad but I had a strong hunch about the accent. That combination of how the people in the example look with that sound in their language was a giveaway to me.

    • @s3andy79
      @s3andy79 Před 7 měsíci

      It's crazy because I can hear the carribean, Indian, Chinese accents all mixed up in there.

    • @rufus1346
      @rufus1346 Před 6 měsíci

      Back in the mid 90's I met a young lady from Tobago and when that first clip came up I guessed 'Tobago'. Is it the same thing, do you have the same agent on both Islands?
      I suppose there has to be differences a local would pick up. She looked Indian, the country not Native American 'Indian'.

  • @AnglicanXn
    @AnglicanXn Před 8 měsíci +14

    As an Air Force brat with a Pennsylvanian father and a Georgia mother, I was exposed to quite a few American accents. I did have a Southern accent most of my childhood, but it went away in my teens, after living in central California and then Delaware. If I could have any kind of American accent, it would be a Tidewater Virginia accent, which is slow and stately, and has some similarities to a Canadian accent - the "ou" in "house" is the same. It's said to be close to the English spoken by the original settlers in the 1700s.

    • @tiffanyshanley1419
      @tiffanyshanley1419 Před 7 měsíci +3

      I'm from Pennsylvania and there are different dialects for different areas. And not even a far distance away. I'm from the northeast where we have what's jokingly referred to as "coal speak" (which has a home at Google) But I can tell by speaking to someone what part of PA they're from. Down near Philly they have their own, even an hour south in Allentown they have their own. It's pretty interesting. And they all make fun of us definitely lol

    • @annehersey9895
      @annehersey9895 Před 7 měsíci +3

      I've heard that area-Maryland, Delaware, DC and Northern Virginia called the 'Mid-Atlantic' accent and, you are correct, that is supposed to be the US accent closest to Britain! That was what they used to train actors to talk like for the stage and ealy talkie movies!

    • @mrssaunders2
      @mrssaunders2 Před 6 měsíci +3

      My dad is from Pennsylvania (Philly) and my mom is from South Georgia (near Savannah) also. Growing up, people would ask me if I was from "down south" and they never believed I was born and raised in Philly. My great grandmother was Amish and spoke Pennsylvania Dutch so I grew up hearing some of the language from relatives. Now I have a mixture of different accents and no one ever guesses what part of the country i'm from.

    • @annehersey9895
      @annehersey9895 Před 6 měsíci

      @@mrssaunders2 Wow! You’ve got 3 really distinct accents that shaped your early talking development years!

    • @AnglicanXn
      @AnglicanXn Před 6 měsíci

      @@tiffanyshanley1419 my cousins from the Philly-Wilmington area have that "Delaware Valley accent" - one mark of which is saying "whuter" for the fluid that flows in the Delaware River.

  • @nickp.4995
    @nickp.4995 Před 7 měsíci +8

    I nailed these. Step father grew up in Sunderland, probably one of the ones most people can't understand, it prepared me for the worst. Recognized most of these accents and generally can understand them. Picked out Newfie quick, they have some crazy slang. I've spent a lot of time around Guyanese, Trini, Jamaicans. Uncle was Scottish too. Libeerian was probably the toughest for me

  • @stlvn6363
    @stlvn6363 Před 8 měsíci +285

    The first accent for Glaswegian was actually an Edinburgh accent, Trainspotting is set in Edinburgh and Ewen Bremner is a native. Scottish people can hear the difference, but they're both lowland Scots accents. There's a different rhythm to the Edinburgh speech which is demonstrated in this clip. The second two people in your example did sound like west coasters though.

    • @ashleyfunnell2654
      @ashleyfunnell2654 Před 8 měsíci +30

      I'm Canadian, and lived in Glasgow for a few years. Even I could tell that first one wasn't a Glaswegian accent. I also did some research and his claim of Italians being lied to/not wanting to go to Glasgow and wanting to go to America but being taken to Glasgow instead seems to be insubstantiated as well. Odd!

    • @stlvn6363
      @stlvn6363 Před 8 měsíci +19

      @@ashleyfunnell2654 yeh and the example he used “gonnae nae do that” is just wrong, it’s “gonnae no dae that”. For the Italian thing, there are lots of Italian Scots, like I think 1 or 2% of the population. I’ve never heard they thought they were going to America though, that sounds dubious,

    • @myaa14
      @myaa14 Před 8 měsíci +8

      came to the comments to say the same things, especially to point out the "gonna nae do that" which just sounds awful to say out loud. Second clip is the guy who did that 'here you' ned song and he's from motherwell afaik

    • @williamdoonan736
      @williamdoonan736 Před 8 měsíci +12

      Absolutely. Ewen Bremner’s accent is an Edinburgh accent. And it should be “Gonnae no dae that” rather than “Gonnae nae do that”.

    • @COYM_1908
      @COYM_1908 Před 8 měsíci +22

      Yes, I immediately noticed the same thing, it's such a strange mistake to make since Trainspotting is so famously set in Edinburgh. It is THE quintessential Edinburghian movie, both in good and bad, so I was surprised when it was linked to Glasgow. Some of the scenes were filmed in Glasgow, but that's just a technicality, the movie or the accents are not representative of Glasgow at all.

  • @CM-yz3ze
    @CM-yz3ze Před 9 měsíci +81

    Being Guyanese and Trini myself, we never thought what our communities were speaking wasn't English, we just thought it was just English with an accent- and most people around us found that to be the case too... At least, here in Toronto.
    Put a bunch of us together and the accent gets stronger, but there's a difference between that, and the patois or Creole that is much more difficult to understand.

    • @Siloguy
      @Siloguy Před 9 měsíci +8

      I'm also a born Trinidadian with a Guyanese grandfather raised in Toronto and thought the same, that Trinidadians just spoke English with an accent not that it was a dialect. Oddly enough some Trinidadian expressions my Newfoundland born wife also knows.

    • @zochbuppet448
      @zochbuppet448 Před 9 měsíci +9

      @@Siloguy Yes I found out that people form Newfoundland understand alot of Caribbean English because....both are using old english words and terms from the 1800s, because both were isolated...they also use all the salt fish and salt beef. If you swear the older people could of understand

    • @CM-yz3ze
      @CM-yz3ze Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@zochbuppet448 love that!

    • @scottbaron121
      @scottbaron121 Před 8 měsíci +2

      It IS English that I'm familiar with. There are simply some language...nuances...that differ from "standard" English. Living with people from the West Indies for any amount of time will make you familiar with them. That goes from Jamaica to Trinidad...and any island in between. In this video, the Guyanese dialect was the most difficult for me to understand...but not COMPLETELY. Trini was easy.

    • @SobrietyandSolace
      @SobrietyandSolace Před 8 měsíci

      @@SiloguyThere’s a really fine line I guess. I suppose it’s considered a dialect because of the presence of unique set phrases and loan words not from English

  • @kirstenroche8160
    @kirstenroche8160 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Love the shout out to Newfoundland! My parents and I left NFLD for Western Canada when I was very young but whenever we would go back to visit, there were always certain relatives I struggled to understand 😅I appreciate it now as a beautiful place, with a beautiful dialect. Your videos are very cool and I appreciate the chance to learn the backstory behind some of these accents!

  • @hgordon5288
    @hgordon5288 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Thank you Olly for this well done and informative English Language Accents video. Excellent.
    I subscribed from Washington DC !
    Cheers !

  • @bendulany7255
    @bendulany7255 Před 9 měsíci +15

    My Grandpa spoke with a deep Appalachian accent. That was perfect like listening to one of his stories right there.

  • @Jaydaydesign
    @Jaydaydesign Před 8 měsíci +140

    I was surprised the Australian indigenous dialect/s didn’t rate a mention. Their patois is very distinctive and most Aussies find it hard to understand unless you live amongst them

    • @The.Drunk-Koala
      @The.Drunk-Koala Před 8 měsíci +15

      I was surprised too but then I realised it's easier to understand than most of these.

    • @peta333
      @peta333 Před 8 měsíci +6

      None of these seemed any more difficult than West Texas English “es geets” (let’s go out for lunch).

    • @chesterdonnelly1212
      @chesterdonnelly1212 Před 8 měsíci +6

      😂 I love that video of the public health announcement being translated by the aboriginal lady. I remember she says "sick one".

    • @223mattieu1
      @223mattieu1 Před 3 měsíci

      'pucken' oath :-)

    • @sez-jhammond6646
      @sez-jhammond6646 Před měsícem

      A lot of multiple generation cattle station managers, especially in the Kimberley, have picked up the lilt of the patios and I can tell you now, unless you've grown up around it, it's almost impossible to understand. My mum lived in the Kimberley for most of her childhood, and can understand it well, I get so lost because it's so foreign to me having grown up in the metro area.

  • @ChakraVart1
    @ChakraVart1 Před 21 dnem

    I got the Trini accent immediately because it made me smile uncontrollably 😊
    What a joyful way to speak

  • @sarahsander785
    @sarahsander785 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I can't understand everything said in Cape Flats English, but I recognized it immediatly. Would've been weird if not, after living in Cape Town for almost half a year. And, for some reason, I love hearing it.

  • @zandrea_l
    @zandrea_l Před 8 měsíci +74

    I’m Afrikaans and living in Cape Town, since I understand it, it was so weird to think others can’t understand it..haha. Happy to be respresented 🙌

    • @JamesDavis-ps6yy
      @JamesDavis-ps6yy Před 7 měsíci +4

      Right? Seems clear to me, lol

    • @JohnFekoloid
      @JohnFekoloid Před 7 měsíci +5

      I'm Nigerian. We speak very different here. But whenever I hear Afrikaans English, I know it's them. It's almost Australian sounding, but with a lot of "A" sound to my ears. Friend sounds like Fr-Aynd Letter = L-Ay-tar (later?)
      Nigerians would say fr-EH-nd, or leh-ta

    • @fyuuredhijgfzregjjygtdftyi6021
      @fyuuredhijgfzregjjygtdftyi6021 Před 6 měsíci

      I fink you fweeky an i lahk you a lot

    • @ILikeBreadBro
      @ILikeBreadBro Před 6 měsíci +2

      Same , from sa too here, its so eazy to understand😭

    • @user-tf1fq4db9y
      @user-tf1fq4db9y Před 4 měsíci

      me as a zulu person ,i can hear you but some words can be difficult to understand jusl like the one in this video ,i doin't know the f what that kid said

  • @RobertSmith-km6gi
    @RobertSmith-km6gi Před 8 měsíci +57

    I lived in Maine for 35 years and I made a good friend at my first job. There are a lot of French Canadians there and it’s not uncommon to hear French being spoken. A version that might not be well understood in Paris. My friend bought me to his family and I was introduced to his grandfather. I couldn’t understand a single word he said and asked my friend what language his grandfather was speaking. He replied English! After he started interpreting for me his grandfather turned out to be a real hoot!

    • @janp2800
      @janp2800 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@curmudgeonaf don't forget the Acadians also speak Shiac

    • @LisaMarie042
      @LisaMarie042 Před 8 měsíci

      I'm in the Niagara region of southern Ontario, and besides small communities in Northern Ontario, very few speak, or even understand French. I sure don't. We can't understand them either, and we were forced to take French in school. And the dialect they speak is different from France after the British forced France out of North America cutting them off from native French speakers.

    • @HigesoriHanzo
      @HigesoriHanzo Před 8 měsíci +2

      They aren’t French Canadians. They’re Acadians.

    • @michellelaroche2189
      @michellelaroche2189 Před 8 měsíci +1

      I'm 100% french Canadian and Acadian. My memere speaks Frenglish. 😆 I I have to pay close attention when she talks.
      I speak with a subsidiary of long island/ NY English. Wish I would have learned more French than the occasional cuss words.

    • @Rebecca-zj4wq
      @Rebecca-zj4wq Před 8 měsíci +1

      ​@@janp2800 it's Chiac from Shediac, and it's got its own grammar rules, so it's more of a creole than plain Frenglish which is just mixing the two together based on your own vocabulary.

  • @khaledgb1
    @khaledgb1 Před 5 měsíci

    Thank you, thank you, thank you for including Liberian English! ❤ Every time you counted down another one I kept thinking, he can't have left it out - and you didn't! I was born and grew up there, it's so nice to hear it being covered in a film like this. "Tenk you ya" (That's an emphatic thank you in kolokwa)

  • @tmarofvulcan
    @tmarofvulcan Před 5 měsíci +10

    I knew the Appalachian, Cape Coloured, Singaporean and Scottish ones immediately. With clues I got Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago and maybe another one. For myself, I have a pretty stereotypical "southern suburbs" accent - the southern suburbs of Johannesburg, that is. But the kids I teach can't tell - they're always asking me if I'm from England. (Nope, that's two to 10 generations removed, doll. Oh, and it's not Af (like as)-rikaans. It's Af (like uh)-frikaans.

    • @jgkitarel
      @jgkitarel Před 3 měsíci

      To be fair, an Afrikaans accent tends to sound vaguely English to us Americans if we are not familiar with it, and yes, I've heard it. My school regularly had exchange students from South Africa, and I was a customer at a winery where one of its staff is an American Citizen from South Africa. People wonder how a white guy can claim to be African American until I tell them it's because he and his family are from South Africa. Something I was able to tell the moment I heard him speak.

  • @lawrenceseguin1865
    @lawrenceseguin1865 Před 9 měsíci +62

    I'm glad you included Liberian English, because there's a whole continuum of English-based pidgins and creoles stretching along the coast of West Africa from Cameroon (where I live) to Sierra Leone. Additionally, I'm from Canada so I picked up on the Newfie and Caribbean accents pretty quickly

    • @gabriellefagan1014
      @gabriellefagan1014 Před 8 měsíci

      What's important is to develop an "ear" to the way words are pronounced in different accents to help one selfs comprehension of what's being said ,
      It takes training and perseverance

  • @algonquin91
    @algonquin91 Před 9 měsíci +78

    Coming from Canada (Toronto area) I had no problem identifying and understanding Trinidadian accents ☺️ We have a large Trini (and in general, Caribbean) community 😍

    • @thealexfiles303
      @thealexfiles303 Před 9 měsíci +7

      I lived in New York City for a time, so that one, Jamaica, and Guyana were really easy to identify. I was waiting for Patois and Tangier to show up in this list.

    • @DarenC
      @DarenC Před 8 měsíci +2

      Aye, I think most of my Guyanese family are in or around Toronto these days

    • @GRMJXX
      @GRMJXX Před 8 měsíci +1

      Bruh I was dying the whole time when that part came on. Being from Grenada and growing up in Toronto you hear it a lot. The only time I've gotta confused is when I seen an Asian person with a Caribbean accent. But that was years ago

  • @radoraf
    @radoraf Před 7 měsíci +1

    Recognized Trinidadian, Cape flats, and Jamaican. I have Trinis in the family. Visited Cape Town. My sister's bf was Jamaican.

  • @ArnoldLokman
    @ArnoldLokman Před 6 měsíci +3

    6:25 thanks for this one, you made my day... Oh, that weird joy of self-employed linguist.

  • @dutchreagan3676
    @dutchreagan3676 Před 9 měsíci +33

    There are some Cajuns down in Louziane, not just the French words. Many influences all spiced up! They got kicked out of Canada and kinda got stuck in them swamps. But when they speak 'English'...it's like Gumbo.

    • @storylearning
      @storylearning  Před 9 měsíci +2

      So interesting!

    • @rutht2023
      @rutht2023 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Yes! Cajun is fun to listen to.

    • @dutchreagan3676
      @dutchreagan3676 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@rutht2023 Well... Cajuns in general are fun; food, music, dance, fiddles, crawdads, especially when you add some hot sauce!

    • @WretchedRedoran
      @WretchedRedoran Před 9 měsíci

      I'm from Alberta up in Canada, and my ancestors arrived in Acadia in 1605. Instead of heading south once kicked out, they went further west. What's crazy for me to think about is that I almost certainly share ancestry with some Cajuns.

    • @dutchreagan3676
      @dutchreagan3676 Před 9 měsíci

      @@WretchedRedoran Acadia = 'Acadie' in French - Acadiens - 'Cadiens' - 'Cajuns'. You DO share DNA with the swampers, shrimpers & fiddle-players down on the bayou. Laissez les bons temps roulez!

  • @garielgrenadius7564
    @garielgrenadius7564 Před 8 měsíci +19

    I thought for sure you would mention the Outter Banks of North Carolina. Their accent is the closest English to 1500's English, and is very beautiful to hear. It is even "more English" than Tangier Island.

  • @Popthebop
    @Popthebop Před 7 měsíci +2

    OMG how did I not know number 2, I literally know someone FROM TRINIDAD!
    She sounds exactly like that, that’s actually super cool to learn more about it

  • @LaraLinx
    @LaraLinx Před 5 měsíci +6

    I actually understood 3 of them for sure...
    1. Appalachian English is easy enough to recognize IF you have ever lived in that region.
    2. Same with the Newfoundlander accent. If you've ever been to Northern Maine, you'll hear it there, too. Especially in Aristook County.
    3. I also recognized several of the Creole & pidgin dialects from the Caribbean islands. Some of them sound very familiar to each other, at first, but they really are different!
    Dialects are so interesting to me.
    Btw, I was traveling in Cairns, Australia many years ago. I recognized a guy from Newfoundland, who was working at a local shop. He was surprised I knew where he was from! ;)

    • @darylconnolly6877
      @darylconnolly6877 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Newfoundland sounds like county cork here in Ireland, as soon as I heard it I was like well if this isn't somewhere a gristled cork fisherman didn't go to and spread his accent like a plague then slap me silly, or as a cork man would say...goan shlap me shilly baii

    • @LaraLinx
      @LaraLinx Před 4 měsíci

      @@darylconnolly6877 absolutely correct! If you read up on where people originally immigrated from, it makes the Newfoundland-er accent make perfect sense!
      Cheers :)

  • @ajgorney
    @ajgorney Před 8 měsíci +84

    I worked in Singapore for a year. I really liked all the variations of English there, influenced by the styles of all the different cultures that were present, and the hyper-brevity was awesome. I worked with a lot of Filipinos there as well and they had a huge language mashup too.

    • @mingzmings88
      @mingzmings88 Před 8 měsíci +1

      I am ashamed of singlish as a Singaporean

    • @kwimms
      @kwimms Před 8 měsíci

      Yeah, it's terrible... can barely understand what they're saying...

    • @mingzmings88
      @mingzmings88 Před 8 měsíci

      @@adrianlean9628 ya blame everyone but our own system..

    • @triarb5790
      @triarb5790 Před 8 měsíci +5

      ​@@mingzmings88 Why? Singapore has developed as a country with a confident world identity, a nation that punches far, far above its weight. Singlish is a reflection of that. As an Australian I always think that about Singaporean.

    • @triarb5790
      @triarb5790 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@adrianlean9628 suffer from Australian slang? Err what?

  • @glennfolau6959
    @glennfolau6959 Před 9 měsíci +82

    I'm from New Zealand, it would be good to cover some of the English dialects spoken in the Pacific, as well as the creole (pigin) spoken in Papua New Guinea, Vanuatu, and the Solomon Islands. Even in relatively young countries, such as Australia and New Zealand, there are variances in accents.

    • @elzelinakriek-breet3092
      @elzelinakriek-breet3092 Před 8 měsíci

      Pidgin English.

    • @glennfolau6959
      @glennfolau6959 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@elzelinakriek-breet3092 yes, or Tok pisin, or Bislama.

    • @nikiTricoteuse
      @nikiTricoteuse Před 8 měsíci +9

      I agree. As a kiwi, I'd love a side by side comparison with a strong kiwi and a strong Aussie accent. I find it frustrating that so many people can't tell the difference. It's not the mocking our accent that l mind, it's being mocked by someone using an Australian accent that they think is kiwi that gets to me.😊

    • @elzelinakriek-breet3092
      @elzelinakriek-breet3092 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@nikiTricoteuse - I hate a kiwi accent, even worse is an Aussi accent! No need to have an accent, except when it is your second language!

    • @nikiTricoteuse
      @nikiTricoteuse Před 8 měsíci +5

      @@elzelinakriek-breet3092 Yes and no. I taught English overseas for almost 20 years and was proudly "accentless". When l first came back, l used to have idiots asking me where l was from, then arguing with me that l couldn't possibly be a New Zealander when l told them. The stupidity and pointlessness of it all did my head in. I don't know where you're from but, when l first came back, Lyn of Tawa was all over the TV and l was HORRIFIED to think we sounded like THAT. Didn't realise for quite some time that it was a comedian playing a part. Been back 30 years and although I don't think l have a particularly strong kiwi accent, definitely NOT Lyn of Tawa level, l sometimes catch myself with a vowel sound that l'm not thrilled by. My point was more that l'd love someone to demonstrate the differences between the two. Although l don't really have a problem with accents, l DO find it offensive that many TV commercials are voiced by someone pretending to be a NZer and getting the accent wrong or that someone using it to make jokes about it can't even get it right. Our accent and manner of speaking here in Aotearoa, has been shaped by the forces that created us and l love that it tells our story. Also, without accents how could we tell the Canadians from the Yanks or the lrish from the Poms and, losing that glorious Welsh accent that sounds like they're singing even when they're not or the wonderful Scots lilt would be a crime against humanity!

  • @lorenehensley1012
    @lorenehensley1012 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I’m from Appalachia and have and have mostly lost it from travel in the US. Where I live, my elders spoke like that gentleman. It’s wonderful to hear now that I’m getting to be their age. Music to my ears…

    • @mrvwbug4423
      @mrvwbug4423 Před 2 měsíci

      I think that makes Appalachian stand out from southern accents because southerners rarely lose their accent when they move out of the south. I grew up in NY but long since lost my NY accent and now have the rocky mountain region/rust belt non-accent (I call it a non-accent since it sounds about as close to English with no accent that I can think of).

  • @etloing5016
    @etloing5016 Před 7 měsíci +9

    I was born in the USA, raised in a small, west-coast irish town where I spent 17 years speaking with an Irish accent. Moved back to the US and speak with an American accent to most people and in an Irish accent when I speak to my family...it has amalgamated into something different tho as I live in the southern US. I'm fascinated by accents and how they develop

    • @mrssaunders2
      @mrssaunders2 Před 6 měsíci

      I noticed my from Jamaica doing the same. When we're speaking, his accent is nowhere to be heard. As soon as he speaks with any of his relatives, he's instantly in Jamaican Patios mode. I can listen to that all day❤

  • @kezkezooie8595
    @kezkezooie8595 Před 8 měsíci +57

    I'm Australian and we say "My belly thinks my throat's cut" over here, too. I recognised four of the accents straight off - Newfoundland, Appalachian, Jamaican and Glaswegian and had a good idea of the other Caribbean accents as coming from that area although I couldn't pin them down. I found this a very interesting video and you've won another subscriber here!

    • @revert6417
      @revert6417 Před 8 měsíci +7

      Aussie here too, found Appalachian and Glaswegian accents understandable.

    • @uppercut147
      @uppercut147 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Texan and guessed all the same ones. I could get Jamaican, Appalachian, and Glaswegian by sound, but could only guess Newfoundland after he gave the hints about the history of settlement.

    • @RS54321
      @RS54321 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Hi-I've never heard the "My belly thinks my throat's cut" idiom before. Do you know why people say this?

    • @rcrob7616
      @rcrob7616 Před 8 měsíci +2

      ​@@RS54321 Hungry 😂

    • @rbarnes4076
      @rbarnes4076 Před 8 měsíci

      @@uppercut147
      American, grew up in the US midwest.
      Although I didn't grow up in the US south my cousins grew up in Kentucky and I heard that a LOT.. so Appalachian was an easy one to identify.
      Jamaican I've known since I was a kid. Glaswegian also (part of my family is scottish)
      And my bro is married to a Newfie.. So those were fairly obvious..
      The rest? As mystified as could be.

  • @Capyrate
    @Capyrate Před 8 měsíci +35

    I'm French and know close to nothing about English and its accents. The best I could do was roughly locate a few of them like "sounds Scottish" "somewhere in Africa" 😂 Although the clues helped actually finding a few ones, so that was cool.
    Interesting video as a whole, it's fun learning about how the language and its accents evolved in different parts of the world!

  • @Mongruadh93
    @Mongruadh93 Před 6 měsíci +2

    I’m from Northern Ireland and got all these except Tangier. Appalachian accents are very very familiar to my ear, Glaswegian is heard around here quite a bit.

  • @dawngw26
    @dawngw26 Před 9 měsíci +36

    I guessed Appalachian, Jamaican, South African, Scottish accents. I've never heard the Newfoundland accent nor the Singaporean English. I loved this video, and felt like I learned something. So fun!

    • @CSIS25
      @CSIS25 Před 9 měsíci +2

      As someone from Newfoundland there are many different accents on the island depends where they are from on the island.

    • @annewhitney8809
      @annewhitney8809 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Skooshin…..the act of jumping on the clampers.

    • @ltr1745
      @ltr1745 Před 2 měsíci +1

      What about English accents from England?

  • @williamjohnpacker1563
    @williamjohnpacker1563 Před 8 měsíci +71

    I'm from Zimbabwe and grew up in South Africa so I had no issue with the accent in the video, we're exposed to it a lot in our comedy and movies tbh. I'd love to see a longer breakdown off all these dialects! So so interesting.

  • @lucid6891
    @lucid6891 Před 7 měsíci +2

    ahaha the Singlish breakdown from entire paragraphs to one word has me creasing lmao

  • @lindickison3055
    @lindickison3055 Před 5 měsíci +1

    My dad raised 'Appalachia/Ozarks"....first in family to go to college, worked hard to loose accent and vocabulary. I worked to reappropriate the language of my grandparents! I love the comfortable, homey sound-and colorful vocabulary!

  • @ilya.petersen
    @ilya.petersen Před 9 měsíci +53

    I'm a native Dutchman, and I got Trinidad, Cape Town, Appalachia, Jamaica, Newfoundland, and Glasgow on first listen. I have to mention I enjoy exploring English dialects and accents, but I'm most familiar with those of the UK and Ireland.

    • @unwoke1652
      @unwoke1652 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Cape Town has several accents, and that can even differ from suburb to suburb. We have such a variety of cultures that it doesn't really come as a surprise. The German English from Tamboerskloof may differ from the Fresnaye (pron Fre-naye) French English, or the Bo Kaap Cape Malay English. The Afrikaans semigrants have several accents, and the worst among them have the various Highveld ones. They tend to speak Afrikaans that borrows directly from the Pedi languages and even that can be very regional. They turn "wil jy nog kos hê" for "would you like more food?" into "soek jy nog kos?" which means "are you in search of food?". Most don't know they speak a Afrikaans mingled with Setswana Sepedi Sesotho et . 🇿🇦

    • @X_Bless90
      @X_Bless90 Před 8 měsíci

      Think you can get Bahamian Dialect? I have alot of Jamaican friends, Haitian, Trini and alot of them tell me they can't understand me.

    • @ilya.petersen
      @ilya.petersen Před 8 měsíci

      @@X_Bless90 I don't know, I'm not sure I've ever heard it.

    • @X_Bless90
      @X_Bless90 Před 8 měsíci

      @@ilya.petersen hey man, ok. Have you heard of the Gulla Geechee people from South Carolina in America and I just found this out, we sound a little like they do but it's more of an island tone...I'm sure there is a good Bahamian creole vid on here. Real awesome that you can get the Trini, and New Foundland and more, the Glasgow had me at first listen lol but awesome man.

  • @caribbeanman3379
    @caribbeanman3379 Před 8 měsíci +96

    Jamaican Patois is a lot more English influenced than many realize. The bulk of its vocabulary is actually derived from English. There are some other words from African languages like Akan. But the majority of the vocabulary derives from English with slight changes. For example "Look pon dah gyal dey", is literally "look upon that girl there!" They've contracted the word "upon", shortening it to "pon". It is these kinds of little changes and the variation in pronunciation that makes some of the words hard to understand for English speakers unfamiliar with it. Another interesting feature with Jamaica Patois is that it is filled with many idioms - phrases or sayings that don't literally mean what the literal words would suggest. So even if you can recognize the English equivalents of the string of words spoken, that doesn't mean you understand the idea being communicated by the phrase. So it's not just about recognizing the words, you have learn the meaning of whole phrases.

    • @devonperry
      @devonperry Před 8 měsíci +12

      From my experiences after living in Canada for many years, most people here assume that Jamaicans only speak English with a heavy accent and are completely unaware that Jamaicans speak Patois.

    • @kevinmorris4994
      @kevinmorris4994 Před 8 měsíci +13

      He said the dialect was mainly african influenced but if we break down each word in the Jamaican patois we'll see that its mainly English based. Information was a bit off.

    • @GAZAMAN93X
      @GAZAMAN93X Před 8 měsíci +5

      It depends on the region & dialect of patois being spoken. The more you get to the more tourist area it becomes more intelligible with English but the more you go inland the more it diverts into it's own language especially when it comes to the maroons. They speak deep patois

    • @GAZAMAN93X
      @GAZAMAN93X Před 8 měsíci +4

      ​@@kevinmorris4994it's region based. The more closer you are to tourist areas vs far deep inland is different. A Kingstonian will find it difficult to understand someone from saint Elizabeth. Or even worse a maroon speaking deep patois

    • @amahlgrant
      @amahlgrant Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@kevinmorris4994 Jamaican Creole/Patois is actually a creole "language" and not a dialect.
      Other than that, you are correct.

  • @mcmSEA
    @mcmSEA Před 5 měsíci +1

    Loved it, thank you!
    I always thought that in parts of Nova Scotia in Canada's Maritimes that it sounded like Cornwall from hundreds of years ago, but west of England/ east of Ireland makes sense!

  • @almrie265
    @almrie265 Před 5 měsíci +11

    I love that you included the South African Cape Town English.

  • @richardmaloneriki1811
    @richardmaloneriki1811 Před 8 měsíci +35

    I'm a North Texan with Southeast Asian ancestry, and I surprised myself. I got Trini, Appalachian, Singaporean, Jamaican, Newfoundlander, Guyanese, and Glaswegian right! I do watch a lot of international film, which certainly helped, and I've moved around a lot within the United States which exposed me to more cultures.

    • @iainfraser7588
      @iainfraser7588 Před 8 měsíci +1

      You got Glasgow right did you?
      Lol he mistakingly used two examples from Edinburgh and one speaking gibberish for comedic effect. 😂😂

    • @rationaltrekker2509
      @rationaltrekker2509 Před 8 měsíci

      Good job, man!

  • @JCO2002
    @JCO2002 Před 8 měsíci +114

    I'm a Canadian living in Jamaica for 12 years, and back and forth a lot for 10 years before that. It took me a while, probably too old when I started, but now understand Patois quite well. A correction, Jamaica wasn't first settled by Arawak, it was Taino.

    • @cthrugrl
      @cthrugrl Před 8 měsíci +4

      The Taíno are an Arawak people

    • @JCO2002
      @JCO2002 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@cthrugrl They spoke an Arawakan language. Here in Jamaica, they aren't regarded as having been Arawak.

    • @twitter.comelomhycy
      @twitter.comelomhycy Před 8 měsíci

      ,

    • @Kaneki6386
      @Kaneki6386 Před 8 měsíci +7

      ​@JCO2002 Taino are a subgroup of Arawak. Saying Taino aren't Arawak is like saying a banana isn't a fruit because it's a banana and not a fruit.

    • @twitter.comelomhycy
      @twitter.comelomhycy Před 8 měsíci

      @@Kaneki6386 aye

  • @taylorosterhuber9181
    @taylorosterhuber9181 Před 4 měsíci

    I'm proud of myself for knowing many of these! Helps with my Caribbean and Welsh roots (I appreciate the amount of caribbean dialects 💕), and many people I've met along the way from South Africa and Scotland!

  • @shenava
    @shenava Před 3 měsíci +1

    I understood all of them for the most part once I tuned my ear into each dialect. Some easier than others but all were intellegable. Being Scottish I think helps. We seem to understand everyone, even if it feels like a one way street lot of the time.

  • @hybridangel3403
    @hybridangel3403 Před 8 měsíci +20

    Dialect 2 🇹🇹 I am half Grenadian the accent is so similar. Just over the sea. The entire Caribbean has a very similar history. Every Island has a form of rice and peas.

  • @angelaschmidt1175
    @angelaschmidt1175 Před 9 měsíci +15

    The Appalachian accent was the only one I truly for sure knew! I was born and raised in and around the Monroe, Louisiana area so I KNOW most southern accents! :) Certain expressions my maternal grandmother used, I just didn't understand why she used them. Reading novels set in 18th century and before England made me realize where some came from! Someone would ask how she was and she'd say tolerable. My sister and I would ask her if she meant did she barely tolerate how she felt?
    There were a lot of things similar that she said that finally made sense when reading those novels! I've never tried to get rid of my southern accent BUT I vividly remember my 5th grade teacher trying to make us pronounce certain words correctly! Like it is FIRE, not far, WINDOW, not winder, etc!

    • @daviddawson1718
      @daviddawson1718 Před 9 měsíci

      Nacogdoches, TX, and I wanted to hear some coonass, or Houston hood rat.

  • @shichiyoru
    @shichiyoru Před 8 měsíci +1

    😂 Glad to see Singlish here, I've known people who complain they don't understand what we're talking about when they come here, then we start speaking standard english

  • @ambidexter2017
    @ambidexter2017 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I got Trinidad, Singapore, Jamaica and Newfoundland first try. So proud of myself.

  • @014bhap
    @014bhap Před 8 měsíci +45

    I also got Guianese, Trinidadian, Jamaican, Singaporean, and the Newfies because I worked in tourism in NYC for 25 years. I have a Brooklyn accent that almost qualifies as a dialect. There is no R on Noo Yalk/ Noo yauk. When I was growing up in Brooklyn, people pronounced Oil, Earl, and Toilet Ter-let. And a battery was a Bat-Tree. They say the accent comes from the original Dutch settlers In New Amsterdam.

    • @CherissesWorld
      @CherissesWorld Před 8 měsíci +2

      *Guyanese*

    • @Boodlums
      @Boodlums Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@SonWsp Heh, I'm from Manhattan so my accent is short Os and colored Rs. "The KAH-fee is in the AH-rinj AH-fis down the LAHNG KAH-rid-orr."

    • @kueichenglee7583
      @kueichenglee7583 Před 8 měsíci

      fun

    • @patriciakeats1621
      @patriciakeats1621 Před 8 měsíci +2

      In our traditional Newfoundland dialect, oil is pronounced, “iol.”
      Toilet is pronounced as, “tylit.”
      Egg is pronounced, “aagg, or “haaggs.” The “L” sound within a word is flattened, last letter is a word may be dropped. Cold was be pronounced, “coo” rhymes with, “o.” We exaggerate or drop h. We inhale with a yes. Lots more.

  • @sturutherford697
    @sturutherford697 Před 8 měsíci +56

    I’m from central FL. I hear most of the north and south American accents everyday. The hardest accent here for me to understand is Cajun. It’s especially difficult if it’s an older Cajun person because they mix a little French in there by nature. When I’m in Europe the hardest accent to understand is Welsh. Out of the hundreds of Welsh I’ve spoken to, I’ve probably understood a handful of words.

    • @brandonmeyers8249
      @brandonmeyers8249 Před 8 měsíci +6

      I moved to central Florida in 2014 from New York state, I find it so interesting how many different accents I hear even from people born and raised here. One family can sound Southern and the people in the next house sound like me.

    • @coppertopv365
      @coppertopv365 Před 8 měsíci +4

      I was from Ohio, left at 18 fir the military, dealt with Germans, and Americans from all over. I left the military and came south (I'm now near the Florida-Georgia Boarder..) and my "Accent" went from plain to a mix mash.

    • @joho0
      @joho0 Před 8 měsíci +6

      @@brandonmeyers8249 Florida is the real melting pot. I grew up in Miami and Orlando in the 70s and 80s and all my friends were either immigrants from Latin America or Northern transplants escaping the snow. And then there's my relatives, who identify with the Deep South and Dixie. I tell people that growing up here was like being in a foreign exchange program without ever leaving home.

    • @MelissaThompson432
      @MelissaThompson432 Před 8 měsíci +3

      I grew up in Polk County 50 years ago, and the accent was either Deep South or mainly Michigan with a little Upstate NY and Ohio. Now, of course, it'a much more diverse.

    • @dk560
      @dk560 Před 8 měsíci

      I grew up in southern Louisiana and I was hoping he would include that area.

  • @Sockieknowshockey
    @Sockieknowshockey Před 4 měsíci

    I visited Newfoundland and the accent gets much stronger the more remote the area is. It’s a great province!

  • @IanKemp1960
    @IanKemp1960 Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you for this! A totally awesome demonstration that my beloved English language survives because it is welcoming and inclusive of all new variations. English has a huge vocabulary, over 150,000 words, and this is thanks to contacts with other cultures.

  • @jaydawg4632
    @jaydawg4632 Před 8 měsíci +49

    In Newfoundland, we still use old Irish words such as "Sleeveen." Many parts of Newfoundland have their own distinct dialect. I was at a foot all game in Alberta a month ago, and a man sitting next to me asked, "Are you from town?" Meaning are you from St. Johns? He was from another area of Newfoundland. He could tell I was from St. Johns by my accent.

    • @musashidanmcgrath
      @musashidanmcgrath Před 8 měsíci +16

      We still use 'sleeveen' in Ireland. It's funny, I was at an airport in south America a few years back and overheard a lad on a phone with a bizarre Irish-sounding accent. I got chatting to him out of curiosity and yes, he was from Newfoundland. It was fascinating to listen to him speaking. 😊

    • @jaydawg4632
      @jaydawg4632 Před 8 měsíci +6

      @musashidanmcgrath That's a great story, I can imagine your surprise. I was transferred to Scotland in 1998, and they all thought I was Irish. They were quite surprised to learn I was actually Canadian. My hometown was settled by O'Brien, Madden, Doyle, Hannaford, Kielly, Hearn, and McGrath, among others.

    • @samurphy
      @samurphy Před 8 měsíci +3

      Its not hard to tell a townie. You do speak different from the rest of the island. My family is from the western part of the island and I can hear a townie a mile away.

    • @jaydawg4632
      @jaydawg4632 Před 8 měsíci +5

      @samurphy Yes, we speak a different dialect compared to the rest of Newfoundland. What's surprising is that I left Newfoundland in 1998 and didn't return until 2019. Then I moved to Edmonton in 2023, but he could still hear that Townie accent.

    • @margaretquigley4303
      @margaretquigley4303 Před 5 měsíci

      I was visiting my sister in Texas and asked for something in the store one day and the clerk asked if I was from Ireland….when I said Nfld. he said he never heard of it…
      @@jaydawg4632

  • @johnearle1
    @johnearle1 Před 8 měsíci +40

    I’m from Newfoundland. Our accent is a melange of West Country and Waterford/Wexford Irish. It is a fast vernacular whose calling card is maintaining 3 conversations at the same time at a house party. Peppered with arcane and archaic words, it’s a dialect like no other.

    • @vls179
      @vls179 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Got in with a newfie gang in my university days and since. Great people and the kitchen parties are certainly a thing! As a Canadian I can just barely keep up - a lot to like about the dialect.

    • @johnearle1
      @johnearle1 Před 8 měsíci +5

      @@vls179 I have friends who can talk fast enough to call a dog race. Eminem might have been the first white rapper, but there’s guys in St. John’s who can tell you a story at twice his speed.

    • @mrwyatt6006
      @mrwyatt6006 Před 8 měsíci +4

      I grew up in SE Kentucky and I realized that Newfoundland English is similar to my family’s accent. So I understood a lot of what he said.

    • @johnearle1
      @johnearle1 Před 8 měsíci +8

      @@mrwyatt6006 The Appalachian accent from north Georgia to the border of Tennessee and North Carolina has some similarities to Newfoundland English. The original population of Newfoundland was about 40 000 people. These people were pretty much hermetically sealed for 350 years. The dialect was frozen in time until Newfoundland became a Canadian province in 1949.

  • @gwenstacy-kn2ij
    @gwenstacy-kn2ij Před 7 měsíci

    I love how he acknowledges how great the wonder of dialects is.

  • @stellarsjay1773
    @stellarsjay1773 Před 2 dny

    My western Canadian accent is apparently hugely entertaining to people in the southern US. One lady said “I love to hear you talk!” I could have said the same. Accents are so fun.

  • @Emily_Kelding
    @Emily_Kelding Před 8 měsíci +175

    As someone who comes from the middle of the Appalachian mountain range, I always have people trying to correct me when I say the word "Appalachia", in this part of the US, it's not actually pronounced as "App-ah-lay-sha", we actually pronounce it as "App-ah-latch-a". I love our unique dialect! And this video was wonderful!

    • @bryanmcdermott4204
      @bryanmcdermott4204 Před 8 měsíci +21

      This East Tennessean applauds your comment.

    • @Emily_Kelding
      @Emily_Kelding Před 8 měsíci +9

      @@bryanmcdermott4204 We have to stick together brother!

    • @marshawargo7238
      @marshawargo7238 Před 8 měsíci +8

      I find it So Condescending when people correct other people's pronunciations! Like Mine Is Correct & You Are Wrong! My sister moved to Louisiana & lived there many years & her accent, dialect & pronunciations changed to where I couldn't understand a lot of her speech. Didn't matter if I, her sister, could understand her the people that she lived near her could!😊

    • @debbielough7754
      @debbielough7754 Před 8 měsíci +9

      FWIW, I've always pronounced it 'App-ah-latch-a', and I'm English (my accent is the first one in the video).

    • @Rich_P_Anya
      @Rich_P_Anya Před 8 měsíci +7

      I'm a proponent of making people pronounce names properly (its basic respect) so I applaud you for that

  • @deanl6613
    @deanl6613 Před 8 měsíci +63

    This was fun to watch! When I was about 10 years old my cousins from Ireland came to visit us in Canada. I didn't understand a word they were saying when they arrived, but after a week or so of them speaking slowly for my benefit, I did learn to comprehend and appreciate my Irish heritage. As an adult I've worked with many people who've emigrated here from all over and love the challenge of interpreting there new found English.

    • @SobrietyandSolace
      @SobrietyandSolace Před 8 měsíci +1

      I find that interesting as everyone in Nova Scotia apparently sounds straight up fucking Irish to me (English born, Irish grandfather)

    • @johnearle1
      @johnearle1 Před 8 měsíci +8

      I’m from Newfoundland. My brother and I were in a pub in Halifax. We met some Irish people. We had to show them our drivers licenses to prove we weren’t from Ireland. They were bewildered.

  • @mrssaunders2
    @mrssaunders2 Před 6 měsíci +5

    I guessed 5 w/out the clues. All the carribean countries and Liberian accents.😊 Im exposed to these accents via my occupation. I even used some of the words and expressions in my every speaking. Btw, ive never heard my client from Liberia use -o after anything; whereas my clients from Nigeria do... all the time😅

  • @angela3kds
    @angela3kds Před 6 měsíci +2

    I understood every word of the Smoky Mountains guy but I grew up in NC, so I've certainly heard it, and others very similar. I also work with many incredible people from many different parts of the world with some very unique accents, so I'm getting better at understanding a variety.

  • @jontalbot1
    @jontalbot1 Před 9 měsíci +19

    Glad you included Glaswegian. I went as a 16 year old, on my own, in 1971 and stayed a week or so. For the first couple of days l had no idea what people were saying but my ears adjusted. Love the city in the way people love rainy, grimy cities.

    • @mcburnski
      @mcburnski Před 9 měsíci +9

      Not sure why he included a clip from Edinburgh based Trainspotting though! 😂😂😂

    • @Draggonny
      @Draggonny Před 8 měsíci

      There was a Glaswegian guy that used to stay at my step mum's B&B when I was a kid. He used to sit in the living room watching Star Trek. Trying to understand a tough accent when they're speaking in sci-fi language is top tier difficulty. I've since worked in a lot of call centres so it just takes me a few sentences to tune in to someone's accent. Having security questions like name, date of birth and post code is super helpful to tune in to someone's speech patterns and match them up to letters, numbers and words.

  • @avecmoncoeur
    @avecmoncoeur Před 8 měsíci +21

    I recognized the Appalachian accent immediately and understood everything. I moved to rural western NC as a kid/teenager. I had a really hard time understanding everyone at first!

  • @MillieMaa
    @MillieMaa Před 8 měsíci

    I guessed Trinidad & Tobago, Appalachia, Jamaica, Newfoundland, Guyana, Glasgow. Had no idea the Tangier Island accent existed - so cool! I can hear how that carried over into how mainland Maryland folks speak. love this!

  • @jessicanelson1486
    @jessicanelson1486 Před 6 měsíci +2

    I'm from the NYC/ north Jersey area, I was surprised I immediately recognized Trini and Guyanese accents, but it sounded so familiar to me because of two friend's moms I've spoken to many times! I couldn't tell you the difference but I heard it!

  • @ethanbotha1021
    @ethanbotha1021 Před 9 měsíci +30

    When I first moved from one part of South Africa to the Cape, I straggled a lot to understand both their English and Afrkaans, and had to learn to understand it for months before I could understand enough to work with them.
    But I absolutely love it, it's like their accent has a personality😂

    • @unwoke1652
      @unwoke1652 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Some accents in South Africa can be rather blunt. In the Western Cape, some have Deutsch ("German") influences, others French, and not as Nederlands ("Dutch") as one would expect. Sadly, despite RP taught in schools, not even the Anglophones can speak English properly, neither can they pronunciate. They can't even pronounce Brackenfell, let alone Thibault (tee-boo) or Llandudno.

    • @panadocoughsyrup
      @panadocoughsyrup Před 9 měsíci

      @@unwoke1652Speaking English “properly” is for losers! 😌😌🇿🇦🇿🇦 (light hearted)

    • @johnmeneses7039
      @johnmeneses7039 Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@unwoke1652 I'm a born and Bred Capetonian and I know the correct pronouciations of all the English relevant to Cape Town. I can slip into the Cape Flats way of speaking without any problems and can give you a nice Namaqualand accent as well. Oh by the way it is not correct to use the term pronunciate, I double-checked, you would either use pronounce or pronunciation. English can be bothersome sometimes, haha