British Girls React to Hardest UK Accents To Understand!!

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 14. 05. 2024
  • Hi World Friends 🌏!
    What accent was hard for you to understand!?
    Show us your ❀ with Subscribe, Like👍 & Comment, and Share!
    LAUREN
    / lauren_ade
    EMILY
    / ryzemily
  • ZĂĄbava

Komentáƙe • 1,7K

  • @tywco
    @tywco Pƙed rokem +4861

    I remember two Scottish people asking me for directions (I think) in Portugal after they heard me speaking English. They’re probably still lost out there, twenty years later, confusing the hell outta people.

    • @multilingualsltty5267
      @multilingualsltty5267 Pƙed rokem +75

      😂😂😂

    • @myheartbroken1121
      @myheartbroken1121 Pƙed rokem +13

      Hi

    • @uliuchu4318
      @uliuchu4318 Pƙed rokem +115

      same experience in Berlin with an Irish guy. Didn't help that his Intoxication made him slur to no end. Hope you're still alive out there!

    • @lxportugal9343
      @lxportugal9343 Pƙed rokem +31

      Don't worry we understand Scottish... they are probably at home by now

    • @swissboleh2746
      @swissboleh2746 Pƙed rokem +1

      😂😂😂

  • @hugom5391
    @hugom5391 Pƙed rokem +1984

    As a foreign student in London I got depressed when almost a year trying to learn English I just couldn’t understand a word when I met an elderly Scottish man, I remember the feeling of failure, awful, but now watching these two British girls struggling to understand them I feel that it wasn’t really my fault 😂

    • @NazriB
      @NazriB Pƙed rokem +34

      Lies again? The old man was just mumbling not moving his mouth properly to pronounce his sentences

    • @gggmoney77
      @gggmoney77 Pƙed rokem +60

      American English would probably be easier to understand lol

    • @philcollinson328
      @philcollinson328 Pƙed rokem +14

      Scots or Scottish, scotch is a drink.

    • @ElPayasoMalo
      @ElPayasoMalo Pƙed rokem +9

      Scotland is like a third of the island of Britain.

    • @XXXTENTAClON227
      @XXXTENTAClON227 Pƙed rokem

      @@philcollinson328 Scotch-Irish is a thing though

  • @jesusfernando978
    @jesusfernando978 Pƙed rokem +733

    I am really satisfied to see that native english speakers also couldn't understand the old rifle man 😅. Thank you Girls

    • @thomsboys77
      @thomsboys77 Pƙed rokem +62

      Because his heavy accent was intentionally exaggerated for comedic effect in the film

    • @jesusfernando978
      @jesusfernando978 Pƙed rokem +5

      @@thomsboys77 hmmm got it. Do you understand his accent?

    • @mookiestewart3776
      @mookiestewart3776 Pƙed rokem +5

      Native speakers have rules too lol English has an insane amount of accents to understand but we have limits lol

    • @ianmontgomery7534
      @ianmontgomery7534 Pƙed rokem +1

      or that it was a shotgun not a rifle! he got you twice LOL.

    • @dougsmith3499
      @dougsmith3499 Pƙed rokem +11

      From the movie, that is why there were 3 police officers, 1 to translate the farmer, the second to translate the first, and the 3rd who actually knew what he was doing

  • @nickgermanic8505
    @nickgermanic8505 Pƙed rokem +684

    I'm shocked that England, a tiny country that can be travelled in less than 15 hours from south to north, such tiny country can have so many different accents!

    • @Chris-uh7cw
      @Chris-uh7cw Pƙed rokem +99

      15 hours? Were you on a pushbike ? 😁

    • @magicmulder
      @magicmulder Pƙed rokem +1

      Sitch a toiney cuntray, innit?

    • @HYDROCARBON_XD
      @HYDROCARBON_XD Pƙed rokem +51

      Netherlands:💀💀💀💀

    • @Lauren88nl
      @Lauren88nl Pƙed rokem +48

      You'd be more shocked in the Netherlands then xD We even smaller and you can travel through in about 3 to 4 hours. Loads of accents.

    • @andreacantieri3364
      @andreacantieri3364 Pƙed rokem +46

      I'm Italian, hold my beer

  • @whukriede
    @whukriede Pƙed rokem +2831

    I thought it was especially intelligent to play the voices, which were poorly recorded anyways, at a really low volume, put some music over them and then finally talk a lot at the same time. This made the exercise extra entertaining for us viewers, lol.

    • @iamironclaw
      @iamironclaw Pƙed rokem +287

      I had the same reaction. I mean, I could maybe have understood more than I did, if I could just frickin' hear what they were saying, but yeah, shitty recording, stupid added music on top of it...

    • @frictyfranq321
      @frictyfranq321 Pƙed rokem +48

      At first I thought you were being sarcastic.

    • @psychosocialbadass7236
      @psychosocialbadass7236 Pƙed rokem +9

      I wouldn't understand even if was me..

    • @SansNeural
      @SansNeural Pƙed rokem +70

      I especially enjoy the echo - like they're sitting in front of a white paper partition in a parking garage. No, wait, a little more confined space than that. A WWII bomb shelter?

    • @SmaugySpeedruns
      @SmaugySpeedruns Pƙed rokem +11

      Same, i had to stop after skimming through 20sec over the first 2 parts where they play the video.

  • @doaakhmer1119
    @doaakhmer1119 Pƙed rokem +231

    As an English learner, I fell great that I could understand those two British girls , also satisfied that even native speakers may not understand each other’s accents so it’s ok if I can’t 😂

    • @artemislogic5252
      @artemislogic5252 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +2

      yeah exactly

    • @theseangle
      @theseangle Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci

      You can't help but fall greatly right

    • @Mattmerrison
      @Mattmerrison Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +1

      I’m British and could only understand scouse. You’re doing great

    • @Jimmy_The_Kid
      @Jimmy_The_Kid Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci

      Feel*

    • @georgezee5173
      @georgezee5173 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci +2

      I will always remembet when I had been to London for only a month (my first time in an English-speaking country), working as a bartender. This was a restaurant franchise, with 40+ venues. It was Christmas time, so they decided to bring people from head office (99% of them British, unlike the people who worked in the restaurants) to mingle with bartenders and waiters giving us a hand, as an "exchange experience". They put a 50 yo English lady that was very nice to me. At some point, a British man came to the counter asking for a cider. He was asking the English lady, and even though he had an accent (I think it was Cockney, but can't remember now), I could understand what he wanted due to context. She was totally cluelss, to the point she made the gentleaman ask like three times until I intervened and told her he wanted a cider LOL It was thanks to that incident that I started to feel more conformtable with English and understood that even between native speakers they don't understand each other some times, so I shouldn't feel stupid if I'm having a hard time with someone's accent.

  • @shangobunni5
    @shangobunni5 Pƙed rokem +95

    I was driving with a friend in the far north of Scotland in the early ‘90s. The narrow two-lane road we were on (which was the main road or highway) was closed ahead due to an accident and a police officer was telling the few cars that came along how to take a detour. He had an EXTREMELY thick accent with, I swear, a significant number of Gaelic words and phrases mixed in. The roads all wind around and are not marked very well with signs, so he was telling us to use landmarks (I think) to know where to turn. It was a complicated detour and this poor guy had to explain it to us 3 or 4 times with a lot of pointing and gestures. My friend and I were just staring at him, slack-jawed like, “Huuuhh?” the whole time. We finally thanked him and went on our way because we couldn’t ask him to explain it again. Still can’t believe we made it.

    • @gerald4013
      @gerald4013 Pƙed rokem +9

      If it were me I'd have asked him to speak Gaelic, because I understand Gaelic better than English with weird accents :-D But actually, Gaelic is now mainly used in the Hebrides, and in a few places in the Highlands.

  • @robertkukuczka6946
    @robertkukuczka6946 Pƙed rokem +283

    When I first went to London in 1992 after 6 years of having studied English, when I asked one man for the way I did not understand a word of the answer, and I was afraid to ask again. Next time I dared to speak English with Polish accent and English people tried their best to make themselvs undestandable. :) Nowday I do not play pretending I am an English man.

    • @billyjean7169
      @billyjean7169 Pƙed rokem +3

      Lollllll

    • @Carrylane
      @Carrylane Pƙed rokem +2

      Why exactly would you pretend? I have never

    • @shryggur
      @shryggur Pƙed rokem +7

      @@Carrylane Fear of embarrassing yourself, the one that too many L2 learners know too well. Especially those who think that the only indicator of your knowledge is your ability to speak like a native at least

    • @Carrylane
      @Carrylane Pƙed rokem +9

      @shryggur ok i also get embarrassed when i pronounce some words in English wrong, but that's how it is. I'm a bookworm i read so much stuff in English that i just translate the word but i don't hear the pronunciation.
      A wise one will correct u so that u will learn.
      That's how i see it đŸ€“

    • @bojo88
      @bojo88 Pƙed rokem +10

      Lmao I did exactly the same thing when I went to France! I rehearsed my sentence so many times and finally asked, in my best French accent, where I could buy a stamp. I was horrified when the response came back like two chapters of War and Peace and I didn't understand a single word! The shop assistant took once look at my face and said, "English?" and I nodded sheepishly. She was very nice though and did tell me that my accent had been so good that she thought I was French which I thought was a lovely compliment! 😄

  • @pepsimax8078
    @pepsimax8078 Pƙed rokem +99

    Just a comment:would be a bit easier to try and understand it myself, if there was no music when the videos play, and also that the audio of the videos were a bit louder 😅
    But really did love the video!

  • @purplestringsmariamichelac3391

    Gosh, thanks for this. It's such a relief to learn that you also might not understand each other at times 😁

    • @inoox
      @inoox Pƙed rokem +3

      Not really, we do. Most of these clips are from tv shows with exaggerated accents where youre not supposed to understand or the audio was too quiet.

    • @purplestringsmariamichelac3391
      @purplestringsmariamichelac3391 Pƙed rokem +3

      @@inoox đŸ€ŁđŸ€Ł right, I'm back to earth from planet Relief

  • @prashantmishra1994
    @prashantmishra1994 Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci +2

    His Emily and Lauren! A beautiful lesson because you both explained the beauty of the UK in respect of different acents.
    Thanks & regards.

  • @ShinmenTakezo1234
    @ShinmenTakezo1234 Pƙed rokem +2

    This is very refreshing somehow, seeing two women focusing on a conversation in English and then one says Ok, I'm getting it. So much refreshing~~

  • @spiderliliez
    @spiderliliez Pƙed rokem +149

    When I was a kid, I was exposed to a lot of Scouse accent, because I was a big "Sporty Spice" fan, haha! I love this video. UK accents are soooo fascinating to me. I can easily copy American accents, but dang... the various UK accents are just so much more fun to hear, and yet so difficult to copy. 😅

    • @myspeakingmind4065
      @myspeakingmind4065 Pƙed rokem +1

      indeed😂

    • @mulkanmulkan5620
      @mulkanmulkan5620 Pƙed rokem +1

      Standar american accent... can u copy american souther accent... 😆

    • @seandonohue6793
      @seandonohue6793 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

      Sporty Spice was born on the border Liverpool but grew up in Cheshire, which is not Liverpool. Cheshire typically only has a small Scouse twang.

    • @notgadot
      @notgadot Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci +1

      @@mulkanmulkan5620 southern usa is basically british descent

    • @mcrichton46
      @mcrichton46 Pƙed měsĂ­cem

      Give the long and looow Loos-iana accent a go and see what you make of it

  • @asaris_
    @asaris_ Pƙed rokem +34

    Aw man, now I have to remember that dude from Edinburgh I used to play MMOs with. He loved to talk to me but I couldn't stop giggling about his accent...
    That's so hard to understand for me (btw, I'm not a native speaker. I'm German. I've only been exposed to Oxford English at school).
    And it got worse when he was drunk. He then subconsciously switched to Scots. That sounded even more hilarious but I understood even less. You don't want to know how long it took me to figure out what was going on.
    (I know that's a bit off topic now, but once I asked him about his clan. It resulted in a three hour lecture ranging from the history, over associated clans and families, motto to tartans and famous members of his clan. He finished it with "And now that you know everything about my clan, what about yours?" Me: "You do remember I'm German, right?" He: "Yes, of course! And I know absolutely nothing about German clans, so I'm super excited to find out more." Me: "Uh... Sure... Here's everything you need to know about German clans: We don't have clans." He was genuinely shocked. It never occurred to him that clans don't exist everywhere... đŸ€Ł)

    • @hmu05366
      @hmu05366 Pƙed rokem +2

      I’m sure he was probably being sarky mate, you’re German afterall therefore have a humour bypass. Patter is lost on ye

    • @artemislogic5252
      @artemislogic5252 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci

      @@hmu05366 lmao

  • @Vacheron7
    @Vacheron7 Pƙed rokem +25

    Fun Fact. The actor who plays the Geordie porter Michael in Alan Partridge (Simon Greenall) is actually from the Scottish Borders, but as a Geordie myself, it's one of the best Geordie impersonations I've ever heard.
    The part where he sits on his steak and kiney pie at Alans party still cracks me up to this day!

    • @Blaydon-Mag
      @Blaydon-Mag Pƙed rokem

      Really? I'm a Geordie nd can hardly understand him, it's more scottish than Geordie, saying "aboot" and a few other geordie words doesn't make it good đŸ€Ł one if the worst I've seen personally.

    • @philcollinson328
      @philcollinson328 Pƙed rokem +2

      I'm from Durham and agree his accent was perfect Jarrow speak :D

    • @thegrinderman1090
      @thegrinderman1090 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci

      He also voices Aleksandr Orlov, the meercat from the Compare The Market adverts!

  • @Sasfoot
    @Sasfoot Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci +17

    I'm American but have watched alot of British programming over the years and can definitely tell that the girl in the light brown shirt does have a more northern accent. Some of her inflections and pronunciations are very similar to Christopher Eccleston. His northern accent was even mentioned during his one season on Doctor Who.

    • @VanDiemensLander
      @VanDiemensLander Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci +1

      Haha make sense because Christopher Eccleston is from Lancashire, one of the accents she said that she has a mix of.

    • @Ned-Ryerson
      @Ned-Ryerson Pƙed měsĂ­cem

      When she said "Lancashire" at the start, she had the typical north-western English nasal sound, it was quite amusing. It is a bit like trying to catch Tricia Helfer's Canadian underneath her Hollywood roles' standard North American.

  • @oxyjen11
    @oxyjen11 Pƙed rokem +10

    Honorable mention: South Wales Valleys accent. I spent some time in Wales years ago (as a foreign student) and noticed that one even left many native speakers absolutely confused by the end of a "conversation".

  • @guillermogonzalezlavin4613
    @guillermogonzalezlavin4613 Pƙed rokem +56

    I'm from Spain, I love your beautiful language, and makes me feel better that when for you it's hard to understand many accents, I thought it was only me for not having lived abroad! Thank you thank you

    • @holliswilliams8426
      @holliswilliams8426 Pƙed rokem +3

      If it's any consolation I studied Spanish and found it difficult to understand a lot of South American accents.

    • @DavidAlvarez-he6sd
      @DavidAlvarez-he6sd Pƙed rokem +6

      @@holliswilliams8426 But even so South Americans accents are more understandable than these english ones.

    • @thomsboys77
      @thomsboys77 Pƙed rokem

      @@DavidAlvarez-he6sd No

    • @everyojaniromerosifuentes5612
      @everyojaniromerosifuentes5612 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@thomsboys77 SI

    • @oscaralegre3683
      @oscaralegre3683 Pƙed rokem

      @@DavidAlvarez-he6sd latin american spanish is better than spaniard spanish. 100% proven

  • @WhatDayIsItTrumpDay
    @WhatDayIsItTrumpDay Pƙed rokem +74

    Yes, you two made a great point about the huge variety of accents in the UK in that every village has their own accent. And you know why? Because of a lack of mass communication on at least a national level. And you'll notice accents are more differentiated or maybe spread across the older generations. It's because if you don't have access to nationally broadcast accents from like TV or radio back in the day, you're gonna get extremely localized accents.
    Same thing goes in the US as well, however because the US is the entertainment capital of the world, going back almost 100 years now, people have gotten accustomed to nationwide standardized accents or dialects. But again, the more localized accents are still more prevalent amongst the older generations. But for those who grew up with Cable/Satellite TV and the Internet are quickly losing their local accents because there's what we call American Broadcast Standard accent that every nationally syndicated program uses whether it comes from L.A., Chicago, Atlanta, or New York. I included Atlanta because it's becoming Hollywood East. A lot of TV and movies are now shot in Georgia. But anyway yeah, I would say Gen X'ers and younger Gens will all roughly speak the same accent within the next 10 years all across the country. If not sooner.
    And you'll probably see that in the UK as well. The Internet is probably your greatest equalizer when it comes to exposure to a standardized Queens English accent. Because as you saw, all those samples of hard to understand British accents were from Boomers.

    • @nickgermanic8505
      @nickgermanic8505 Pƙed rokem

      Brilliant Mr Molinarolo.

    • @poppinc8145
      @poppinc8145 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

      Spot on. It goes even further. The Bible or any other similar book in a single language and dialect was used to standardize a language in a given area because everyone was reading the same book using the same spelling and grammar. Later national radio and TV played that role. Most importantly it's public schooling that standardizes language and lingua-franca. Look at Italy which has dozens of languages (so-called dialects) but across the 20th century they've slowly become accustomed to knowing "Italian" as L1 or L2. Most Italian emigrants to the Americas didn't speak "Italian" but only their regional languages.

    • @WhatDayIsItTrumpDay
      @WhatDayIsItTrumpDay Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

      @poppinc8145 yeah, good point about books, like the Bible, in helping at standardizing language. Never thought of that, but yeah, excellent point, but written text doesn't help with pronunciation. At least not 100%. Hell, with the Ukraine War, with trying to learn Slavic language pronunciation rules, it's insane on hiwn many people who report on the war can't seem to agree on how to pronounce these Ukrainian town names.

    • @poppinc8145
      @poppinc8145 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

      @@WhatDayIsItTrumpDay That's why I specifically left out pronunciation but mentioned grammar.
      As for Ukrainian, not that I'm an expert but I'm pretty sure the difference you're talking about is the difference in Russian vs Ukrainian pronunciation rather than differences within Ukrainian. Russian doesn't have an H-sounding letter. It's substituted with the hard G-sounding Russian letter which is *Г* (or the Kh-sounding letter which is *X* in some cases) whereas Ukrainian pronounces *Г* as an H while having a completely separate letter for a hard G which is *Ґ* (e.g. Good/Gang). It's actually pretty straight forward.
      Long story short: Russia uses G and Ukrainian uses H in most of these names.

    • @itseveryday8600
      @itseveryday8600 Pƙed 2 dny

      This is the case in Japan as well.

  • @clips9294
    @clips9294 Pƙed rokem +15

    You did a horrible job with volume there

  • @janew6059
    @janew6059 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +70

    Sorry but no one’s gonna talk about how Emily is in fact NOT speaking Oxford 😂

    • @HannahCooper94
      @HannahCooper94 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci +33

      I thought I was going crazy 😅 There is a standardised English accent there, but she sounds Eastern European.

    • @user-eh3uy1se7l
      @user-eh3uy1se7l Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci +10

      @@HannahCooper94 sounds and looks

    • @phoenixrose1192
      @phoenixrose1192 Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci +2

      @@user-eh3uy1se7l Not really, if I couldn’t hear her, I would have thought she was English! 😂

    • @tarirai
      @tarirai Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci +6

      Sounds East European defo!

    • @metehankanmaz8805
      @metehankanmaz8805 Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci +2

      @@user-eh3uy1se7lNot really. There are tonnes of English people straight look like her.

  • @albertoaguayo4607
    @albertoaguayo4607 Pƙed rokem +10

    Still remember my b2 speaking exam. Was funny because I was with my partner in the hall waiting for our examinators to call us and, meanwhile, they were talking to each other and we couldn't understand any word they said. This completely changed the moment we arrived, though. That came across to me as such a different language.

  • @guillermone1
    @guillermone1 Pƙed rokem +15

    It's amazing to see that for such a small country the great variety of accents. The US is so much bigger, but the regional variations are not many, and most of the accents are pretty much understandable.

    • @briansmith48
      @briansmith48 Pƙed rokem +3

      I think that's because of modern technology. Before the radio, television and movies.
      I'm sure that each region had it's own dialect.
      đŸ‡șđŸ‡Č

    • @LionXV1
      @LionXV1 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@briansmith48 you're right about that but they wouldn't have been as unqiue or varied as in the UK mainly because people haven't been settled for anywhere near as long. In the UK you can get a unique accents every 30-50 miles, but this is also diminishing as a result of technology. Appalachia is a good example of a settled American accent as they've been isolated up in the mountains for centuries. Louisiana likewise with the French being isolated in the swamplands. Minnesota had a unique accent too as a result of the large Scandinavian immigration.

    • @poppinc8145
      @poppinc8145 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

      @@LionXV1 The UK's longer history is largely irrelevant because prior to Modern English, it was a completely different language called Middle English and before it Old English. They're not mutually intelligible anyways. These regional accents didn't independently develop from Old and Middle. They're all based on a quasi-standardized Modern English (itself evolved from Middle) that further diverted into regional variations of ME. The first reply is largely spot on.

    • @LionXV1
      @LionXV1 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

      @@poppinc8145 It's not just about the longer history it's about the settling of peoples, Britain's longer history means people have been settled in regions for significantly longer than in America where people moved and resettled regularly thus preventing enough time for the creation of as many unique regional accents.

  • @nocturnalwolf7559
    @nocturnalwolf7559 Pƙed rokem +6

    To the sound engineer/editor, we can't hear anything

  • @henri_ol
    @henri_ol Pƙed rokem +161

    I can see that both girls may be from UK 🇬🇧, but their accents are different , Lauren did a video with accents before with Callie đŸ‡ș🇾 and the hardest was the Cockney accent , i'm used to hear more accent from US đŸ‡ș🇾 because of TV shows and movies , but I absolutely love the UK accents

    • @deutschmitpurple2918
      @deutschmitpurple2918 Pƙed rokem +2

      I totally agree with you đŸ„°đŸ„°

    • @fernandolora1905
      @fernandolora1905 Pƙed rokem +1

      Man youre everywhere 😅

    • @dutchgamer842
      @dutchgamer842 Pƙed rokem +3

      In every country there are several accents

    • @startersheep821
      @startersheep821 Pƙed rokem +7

      @@dutchgamer842 Exacly, like for example China has many different accents, like Beijing accent etc, but I think all accents are awesome :D

    • @NicholasJH96
      @NicholasJH96 Pƙed rokem +4

      @@startersheep821 China is a much bigger country than the UK & people are usually surprised how many accents there are in the uk in such a small space South Korea is actually bigger than Wales & I said so you can see how small one part of the uk is.

  • @valerijavolosciuk3181
    @valerijavolosciuk3181 Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +7

    After five years of living in the UK I'm still often have a situations, when people talk to me and I'm like "could you say it again...pleeease?" It's actually a relief even locals sometimes struggling to understand each other🙈 Makes me believe I'm not so bad in mastering English😅

  • @rizaldiaulia7496
    @rizaldiaulia7496 Pƙed rokem +12

    the scouse accent to my Southeast Asian ears sounds like the softer version of Scottish accent, suddenly reminding me of my Scottish english teacher back then.

  • @AlessioQ
    @AlessioQ Pƙed rokem +3

    I really like the scouse accent and also the girl from the smallest village outside of liverpool😍 she is soooo cute and sooo genuine

  • @henri_ol
    @henri_ol Pƙed rokem +135

    Emily didn't appear on the channel for a long time, I mean a really long time 😅, April 18, 2021 was her last appearance, a year and four months ago.đŸ€” , World Friends didn't even have 150k subscribers 😂

  • @MightyFineMan
    @MightyFineMan Pƙed 10 měsĂ­ci +5

    Saying “announce” is wrong for this. Announce is when you give a speech or message to a group, usually from a podium, a PA system, or other ways to give a message to a large group.
    “To Enunciate” is the proper term for this context.

  • @Marvelous1616
    @Marvelous1616 Pƙed rokem +3

    I worked before with 118118, and one of the hardest accent as far as I could remember is from Glasgow. The towns with the most difficult spellings are from Wales.

  • @NarsFromMars
    @NarsFromMars Pƙed rokem +14

    Iran here. I did Translation Studies at uni. Over here people show clips from random parts of the UK/US, and if you miss 1 single word they'd go "so what the hell have you learnt at uni?!"

    • @jones.8004
      @jones.8004 Pƙed 7 dny

      This is the bane of every language learner/student 😂😱 I was studying German at uni and my uncle learns this one word, very obscure, and him misprouncing the word BADLY. He then berates me me for not knowing the language because I dont know ONE obscure word.

  • @silverhawk911
    @silverhawk911 Pƙed rokem +24

    I find that the pure Northen accent can be alittle bit difficult to understand (especially people from Liverpool or the Scottish accent) at first. However, being a supporter of Liverpool FC, I kind of gotten used to hearing it. Former Liverpool legend Jamie Carragher speaks English with a very strong scouse accent.

    • @GermanTaffer
      @GermanTaffer Pƙed rokem +1

      I agree . I got desperate in Liverpool.

  • @88marome
    @88marome Pƙed rokem +14

    Imagine an accident or something equally serious that you have to convey but everyone is just laughing at your cute, funny accentđŸ˜­đŸ€Ł

  • @cinthialemos7578
    @cinthialemos7578 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +2

    I went to scotland this year and took a taxi with a very caring driver in glascow. He was explaning to me that he was trying to improve his accent to be more understandable to non english speakers - as me - and in the final I understood just this piece of information 😂 but I really appreciate his effort to talk to me, tho

  • @angelgoyim
    @angelgoyim Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci +1

    I'm an American but I grew up listening to shows of people from the British Isles as well as watching some old BBC shows. I love Scouce as well as the Essex accent. Funny enough, I encountered a gentleman from Glasgow and I was able to understand most of what he said. I basically slowed down my brain and concentrated enough to the point where I was able to get quite conversational with him.

  • @fasteddie406
    @fasteddie406 Pƙed rokem +10

    Question to Lauren, have you soften your accent since you moved abroad?? if so when you return home do you notice the difference to family and friends and do you pick up you accent after a few days back home??

  • @DieBlutigeLynn
    @DieBlutigeLynn Pƙed rokem +4

    I love Lauren in this video, I find her really pleasant and fun to listen to! :) I would be happy to see more videos with her and Emily.

  • @osys7832
    @osys7832 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

    This video is a huge relief for me, thx to you, I'm not afraid of the UK anymore. Event British people doesn't understand accents LOL

  • @btsr2553
    @btsr2553 Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci

    Thank you 🙏 for this video. It's so funny that your common English language separates you at the same moment. I’m a Bavarian and in my mid 50's, so not native English speaking. However, I grew up across the street from American soldiers. Have been professionally active in various international companies for over 30 years, now. I think, sorry thought I have heard quite a bit. But honestly, with most here I would have been lost there as a non-native English speaker.
    Please more of this and please always resolve what was really spoken. Servus from Bavaria

  • @rlaw8658
    @rlaw8658 Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci +3

    I really enjoy listening to English accents, especially yorkshire. it's fascinating yet a bit funny.
    I live in Ph. From where I'm from, the accent differs from the district. when you get to another region, the language changes 😂. Hell, even in my hometown, the outskirts has their own language (native language) where I only understand one word. 😂😂

  • @shadevp8924
    @shadevp8924 Pƙed rokem +9

    With English as my foreign language, I was once in UK and managed to understand everything without sufficient difficulties. Both in London (we spend dozens of hours walking and enjoying the views and sightseeing) and in Cardiff (there I was even able to impress my colleagues by being able to read the signs in Welsh since I had some knowledge of the lingo due to my specializing in Arthurian literature). Can't boast that I managed to grasp 100% of what's been said at all times but still, generally I had no issues with communication. Till I meat a guy on a buss from Wales back to London. I just wasn't able to understand a thing he was saying... And it wasn't in some comical manner that old actor in the movie scene was slurring. The guy just had such heavy accent and was talking fast that I was completely baffled.

    • @notgadot
      @notgadot Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

      *specialiSing

  • @revolution3638
    @revolution3638 Pƙed rokem +31

    Emily has so much personality... she's perfect...the most beautiful girl on world friends I've ever seen❀

  • @tzmcneill
    @tzmcneill Pƙed rokem +27

    You need to do one with American, Canadian, and Australian accents. I wonder what you’d find most difficult, an accent from rural Maine, or Nova Scotia, maybe the mountains of West Virginia or Tennessee. Actually, you’d probably become utterly confused with a Cajun accent from Louisiana.

    • @shangobunni5
      @shangobunni5 Pƙed rokem +5

      Yeah, Cajun would be great.

    • @ianmontgomery7534
      @ianmontgomery7534 Pƙed rokem +5

      with Australia you would have more of a problem with slang and idioms rather than straight out accents (some a very broad though)

    • @BumblebeeTuna8
      @BumblebeeTuna8 Pƙed rokem +2

      As an American dealing with Aussies from time to time, I had no trouble understanding them or Canadians. Scottish and Irish Accents were the hardest to understand for me. Cajun Accent is just a French North American Country Person trying to speak English.

    • @allewis4008
      @allewis4008 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

      ​@@ianmontgomery7534Same with East Coast Canada, a lot of slang with an Irish lilt.

  • @78nailbomb
    @78nailbomb Pƙed rokem +29

    I had 2 Englishmen from a sister plant visiting my workplace about 15 years back. I don't know which part of UK they were from but they had very thick accent. 1st they asked my buddy and me if we spoke English. We said yes, but what came next was like ducks speaking to chickens. We managed to get through the convo but at the end I had to ask my buddy if they were even speaking English.đŸ€ŁđŸ€ŁđŸ€Ł
    Edit: We are Southeast Asians.

    • @richardreinertson1335
      @richardreinertson1335 Pƙed rokem +2

      Indians speak English also, but with a very thick accent compared to standard UK and American pronunciation. And for Indians, their version of English is "standard." All Indians speak with that accent. That is THEIR version of English. So for Southeast Asians...yeah, probably similar, I would guess. So I am guessing that is why you had difficulty understanding the two Englishmen from the UK. They were probably speaking in a fairly standard UK accent, but the Southeast Asian version of English is different. Just my guess...I could be wrong. I have spoken to a LOT of Indians in English, and I usually find it difficult to understand their accents. However I'm better at understanding them than a lot of other Americans I know.

  • @RexFuturi
    @RexFuturi Pƙed rokem +8

    I'll be honest, as a Midwestern American, for most of these I just blinked and gave up.

  • @crimemastergogo7878
    @crimemastergogo7878 Pƙed rokem +3

    There are many place in this world where the people speak the same language but has different accent region wise. So sometimes the people from the other side of the region might get confused of the same language that is spoken by the other person.

  • @MikoZeda
    @MikoZeda Pƙed rokem

    To "Enunciate" your words.
    This was fun to watch ^.^

  • @ahorrell
    @ahorrell Pƙed rokem +3

    I'm glad they got to hear the voices, cos I sure couldn't.

  • @mickybricks1113
    @mickybricks1113 Pƙed rokem +3

    6:12 its a scene from a film called hot Fuzz. The point is that you're not supposed to understand what the guy in the hat is saying and the guys in the left and right of the other angle are translating what's being said

  • @Anna-yw8yg
    @Anna-yw8yg Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci +3

    The girl on the left probably lives in the UK but I think she's not English or British. Her accent is definitely not standard Oxford/ English accent. Nothing wrong with that but just stating a fact. She could be bilingual too and switches between two accents. It's pretty common for immigrant kids. That's what I do 🙂

  • @igory3789
    @igory3789 Pƙed rokem +4

    The rain in Spain falls mainly on the plain 😊. I wonder how it will sound in Glasgovian 😂.

  • @PaddingtonSoul
    @PaddingtonSoul Pƙed rokem +65

    Wow. British accents can be very complicated. I think American accents don't get that hard.

    • @deutschmitpurple2918
      @deutschmitpurple2918 Pƙed rokem +6

      True, my friend.

    • @grzegorzg447
      @grzegorzg447 Pƙed rokem +5

      they do

    • @anndeecosita3586
      @anndeecosita3586 Pƙed rokem +6

      I’m American and I struggle understanding some American accents. One that comes to mind is Cajun. A lot of times I have no idea what they’re saying or can’t discern if it’s English they’re speaking. Most of my younger Cajun friends are the type to switch up for outsiders. There is a movie called Water Boy where the joke is no one can understand anything the Cajun guy says. Also in some deep South rural areas of like the Appalachian Mountains or the Low Country I can’t understand especially most older people because they tend not to enunciate. You kind of have to try to get the gist of what they’re saying.

    • @tonycrayford3893
      @tonycrayford3893 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@anndeecosita3586 I thought Cajun was its own dialect.

    • @Sadedits1888
      @Sadedits1888 Pƙed rokem +1

      There is only one accent in the whole USA

  • @seeker1432
    @seeker1432 Pƙed měsĂ­cem

    Im from a simular place outside Liverpool and also a mixed accent. Its amusing to hear her explain my accent basically.

  • @seeker1432
    @seeker1432 Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci +1

    The part scouse , Lancashire northern is also me. As i live outside of liverpool within a villsge. So i slip accents also.

  • @pandamanda5606
    @pandamanda5606 Pƙed rokem +61

    Emily doesn't sound totally RP. She definitely has a twang to her accent that isn't from the UK. Her accent sounds to me like she grew up around ESOL speakers, or English speakers from outside Britain.

    • @craigsb92
      @craigsb92 Pƙed rokem +28

      Yeh she doesn’t sound like she’s from the UK at all to me

    • @Sirusholuvyou
      @Sirusholuvyou Pƙed rokem +3

      Agree!

    • @mimi.94x
      @mimi.94x Pƙed rokem +9

      I don't know why she said she had a RP accent because you can tell she isn't from the UK...I'm confused đŸ˜©

    • @amyw6808
      @amyw6808 Pƙed rokem +2

      Totally agree. There’s definitely something else there. Maybe she lived in another country for a while?

    • @tkegs6492
      @tkegs6492 Pƙed rokem +16

      I 10000% agree! I’m from the UK. Up north. She sounds so Eastern European to me lmao

  • @davidfromamerica1871
    @davidfromamerica1871 Pƙed rokem +3

    These types of accent dialects are typically developed by the uneducated and undereducated groups living in communities often isolated from the general population for a hundred years or more.
    This is how different languages and dialects where first formed hundreds of thousands of years ago with the development of the very first language structures through long term isolation. Example: India has over 700 different dialects spoken.
    There are languages that are extinct today. This is typically from the conquering of cultures and civilizations unification into one culture and language spoken.

  • @beautifulmind08
    @beautifulmind08 Pƙed rokem

    I love you Lauren, what a beautiful personality

  • @Sabbathissaturday
    @Sabbathissaturday Pƙed měsĂ­cem

    I’m a 6 generation native Texan and I absolutely adore the northern England and Scottish accents. I could chat all day to a Geordie or Glaswegian! Every time I visited nobody would guess I was a Texan. I even got Canadian a couple of times. đŸ€Ł

  • @tab5e53
    @tab5e53 Pƙed rokem +7

    GLASWEGIAN OLD GUY
    "well its very hard to bring out me mind.
    this is the thing.
    it's alryt, alright, he's ours. there's no point.
    ian hart, he is ours.
    you understand?"
    i think he's talking about Scottish football. Most likely glasgow football club rangers director ian hart, or less likely the football club hearts. Rangers are 1 of two top teams in Scotland that everyone supports. other being celtic.
    he's abbreviating the sentence and cutting it short, by using context of the topic to make her fill in the blanks. so without knowing the topic it's harder to understand what he said.

  • @lemagreengreen
    @lemagreengreen Pƙed rokem +3

    Their own accents are wild, like posh Southern-English/American hybrids.

  • @tbishop4961
    @tbishop4961 Pƙed rokem +1

    Very clever top. I almost didn't notice the bandageđŸ˜łđŸ€Ł

  • @JapaneseAccentChannel
    @JapaneseAccentChannel Pƙed měsĂ­cem

    Ohhhhh. From Accent lover, this is beautiful!

  • @jameswoodard4304
    @jameswoodard4304 Pƙed rokem +4

    As an American, I can say posh girl has more than a bit of generic American creeping in.

  • @EnglishWithStuartIngles
    @EnglishWithStuartIngles Pƙed rokem +12

    You don't have a Liverpool accent or Lancashire accent but the closest accent you have, if it needs to be classified (it doesn't) is a North Cheshire accent, similar to Warrington, Northwich, Altrincham, Stockport (although there are variations within these).

  • @evaandava2439
    @evaandava2439 Pƙed rokem +1

    I got them All apart from the one with the West Country one they’re pretty easy for me to understand bc I’m very used to hearing strong accents 😂

  • @---is8zn
    @---is8zn Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    in many cases its not just accents, many of these episodes its dialects. Accent - its about how different people pronounce same words.. Dialect its local modifications of languages, there are different words, local slang... the more dialects we understand - the richer we are, dialects of languages its our wealth..

  • @stefanicooper7644
    @stefanicooper7644 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci +5

    The Oxford woman has quite a strange accent, slightly American? In any case, it’s ‘enunciate’ not ‘announce’!

  • @scifyry
    @scifyry Pƙed rokem +7

    When I served in the Marines ( U.S.), I trained with British Marines once but couldn't understand most of what they said. I've spoken to other British people since then with no issues other than names for items, places, etc. The Marines I trained with were from Newcastle. Is that area known for its strong dialect?

    • @Bella-fz9fy
      @Bella-fz9fy Pƙed rokem +5

      Yes,Geordie.

    • @darrenjones1413
      @darrenjones1413 Pƙed rokem +1

      Ye geordies basically Newcastle is northern England close to the Scottish border. More of a working class area famous geordie online is true geordie podcast type thing he has interviews with top boxers celebs on ytube

  • @jonathanaldecoa1099
    @jonathanaldecoa1099 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci

    Awesome video. I’m from Southern California and understood everyone in the presented videos. I’m an accents geek however. I have a friend from Scotland who’s been here over 20 years and still has a strong Scottish accent, especially when he has some single malt scotch in his belly. That’s when he starts speaking Scottish. He tells me, Ah Jonny “haud yer wheesht!”. đŸ€Ș😂😎

  • @yul498
    @yul498 Pƙed rokem +1

    A few years ago, on the exhibition in Milan, guy from Bangladesh transfer for us English from Kentucky. Staff from New York, London, Australia, Moscow, Berlin, Miami, Belgium, Italy - understood nothing in English from Kentucky;))

  • @lolatana
    @lolatana Pƙed rokem +3

    I'm a French person living in a black country for 13 years. Can you imagine the state of my accent? Lol, I swear, now everyone I speak to thinks I am from a Slavic country. Even when I go to France, they ask me where I am from.

  • @davesalmon2492
    @davesalmon2492 Pƙed rokem +9

    Gornal Black country had its own way of speaking, this plus the accent made the old guys very difficult to understand in the 70s if they thought you were being annoying you would get “quit the the tricks you play on we” sadly this has died out with more movement around the area. But within 20 miles I still find four distinct accents wolverhampton, Dudley Stoke, and Derby the uk is still slightly weird.

    • @grapegripe
      @grapegripe Pƙed rokem +2

      I’m Gornal born and bred! Very strange to see it pop up on CZcams
!

  • @OptikSinoptik
    @OptikSinoptik Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

    I love you guys to react more videos coz some of abroad can’t understanding English

  • @newsreal4994
    @newsreal4994 Pƙed rokem +2

    The "language" at 4:44 minutes in is amazing, lol.

  • @travellolo
    @travellolo Pƙed rokem +43

    It always amazes me that such a small country can produce so many accents. Your whole country fits in California.

    • @keyos1955
      @keyos1955 Pƙed rokem +2

      Like 10 accent, lol? You have never been in Europe, I suppose

    • @emaan05
      @emaan05 Pƙed rokem +5

      More than 10, one city can have so many different accents.

    • @Rawan-sl1ms
      @Rawan-sl1ms Pƙed rokem +7

      if youre american it only seems like a lot bc your country is too young to form more than a few

    • @stephenhaw9177
      @stephenhaw9177 Pƙed rokem +4

      @@keyos1955 10 accents? What? From where I live I can drive 5 miles in different directions alone and get 4 stark opposite accents, so not sure how you’ve managed to generalise the entire country to 10 😕

    • @nba2kaii12
      @nba2kaii12 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +1

      @@keyos1955 10 accents😂😂 try 100 times that mate

  • @felipebelmiro7200
    @felipebelmiro7200 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci +4

    This is such a relief. Even in my main language Portuguese I find myself struggling with the accents of my in laws. Specially when they are talking to one another. It feels like a totally different language. Glad to see I’m not that bad at languages it’s just a matter of how strong an accent is. Not matter ur knowledge in a language , the stronger accents are gonna be hard to get. And that’s ok. Keep calm! 😂

  • @charankol
    @charankol Pƙed 26 dny

    i have never bored this much before waiting to hear an accent i could hardly understand

  • @mandalorianscum1138
    @mandalorianscum1138 Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci

    In flanders, Belgium we have a similar problem, people living 30 miles apart can't understand eachother, but sadly that's fading away, I would love to preserve that!

  • @annabergman1166
    @annabergman1166 Pƙed rokem +5

    Some parts of Sweden have diverged so much from swedish that they're basically talking a different language. I assume that's a common occurrence around the world. But it's funny when two people with the same mother language don't understand each other and they argue about who's talking incomprehensibly

    • @magicmulder
      @magicmulder Pƙed rokem

      Low German is also mostly incomprehensible to people from other parts of the country. It’s closer to Dutch.

    • @voidseeker4394
      @voidseeker4394 Pƙed rokem +2

      I think it's not the divergence, it's actually the opposite: the local accents come from the old times, when most people stayed at their villages and towns and rarely traveled anywhere. So local dialects evolved in parallel instead of merging and spreading to the whole nation. This is why US accents are not that different, as USA is a young country and nation and settlers were mixed up more evenly, so dialects of settlers were able merge more evenly.

  • @vertigo35000
    @vertigo35000 Pƙed rokem +15

    I love Lauren : humble, very warm and so funny. Emily is elegant and her accent sounds very classy to my French ear.

  • @tanjimahmed1637
    @tanjimahmed1637 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

    I used to teach IELTS in my native country.I've been residing in Doncaster for three months.I feel so embarrassed since, aside from a few words, I have no idea what they are saying.I feel relaxed now after watching this video because, if British people from other parts of the country cannot understand different English accents, I am nothing. 😂

  • @lilzieeeeee
    @lilzieeeeee Pƙed rokem +1

    Glad that i am a mixer -> Little Mix fan (a girlband in UK) and 2 of 3 has geordie accent so i kinda familiar with the accent, yes it's a HARD accent to understand

  • @user-zz3ie8uu3o
    @user-zz3ie8uu3o Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci +4

    did the ginger come to the uk from another country or live abroad? Her accent doesn’t sound like a regular Oxford one. 2:59 3:05 2:48 sometimes she slips up when she pronounces things. It sounds like her mother tongue could be Arabic or French Eastern European?

    • @-shayldn
      @-shayldn Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci +1

      thats what i thought

  • @noza26
    @noza26 Pƙed rokem +119

    I, as a person who studies English, calmed down when I saw that even native speakers do not understand the accents of other native speakers 😅😅

    • @mlpricebr6301
      @mlpricebr6301 Pƙed rokem +2

      Me too hahaha

    • @liukin95
      @liukin95 Pƙed rokem +5

      Yeah as a native speaker even we have a hard time understanding sometimes! So don't stress haha

  • @itellyouforfree7238
    @itellyouforfree7238 Pƙed rokem

    it really helps turning down the volume of the clips and putting a loud music on top, thanks

  • @user-kr5hh1ev1n
    @user-kr5hh1ev1n Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci

    This gives me flashbacks to 2019 when I taught an 11 year old kid at Lostock High School. I was an Australian teaching overseas until COVID. He had the West Country accent and literally sounded like a 50 year old man.
    Being unable to understand him, I picked a kid to translate.
    Unfortunately, he was from LIVAPUL.
    Needed a translator for the translator.

  • @ish4638
    @ish4638 Pƙed rokem +7

    A lot of Scottish people do speak a different language: it's called Scots, and it's officially separate from English.

    • @gerald4013
      @gerald4013 Pƙed rokem

      + 57,000 speak Gaelic, mainly in the Hebrides. Mur a bheil ach Beurla agad, cha tuigeadh tu facal sam bith.

    • @rachelcookie321
      @rachelcookie321 Pƙed rokem

      The vast majority of Scottish people can only speak English though. Most Scottish people don’t know Scots.

  • @mimosomim
    @mimosomim Pƙed rokem +3

    The scout accent is soo fun. Lol.

  • @mahadislam8666
    @mahadislam8666 Pƙed rokem

    I lived in Bristol and have the accent but I moved to the West midlands and it was different but I'm used to it now

  • @TetsuyaMcCuddin
    @TetsuyaMcCuddin Pƙed rokem

    1:56 - THE DOG!! (Look at it, it's adorable.)

  • @01ivi3r
    @01ivi3r Pƙed rokem +24

    Your normal accents may well be London/Oxford & Scouse/Lancashire but they've become international (almost Americanised) British English.

    • @MrsLizziee
      @MrsLizziee Pƙed rokem +5

      British english? You mean english accents? Because "british" is not just England.

    • @liamsohal-griffiths1094
      @liamsohal-griffiths1094 Pƙed rokem +5

      In some places their accents were noticably Americanised. This made me wonder whether they even realise this themselves. I'd imagine it's because they're both CZcamsrs and probably consume lots of social media on a daily basis.

    • @01ivi3r
      @01ivi3r Pƙed rokem +1

      @@liamsohal-griffiths1094 I think it's more down to how much they absorb from their peers. They seem an international group based in Korea, so there are probably some Americans among them. Also regional British accents can be difficult for non-native English speakers to follow sometimes, so Brits living abroad after a while tend to neutralise to be easily understood.

    • @01ivi3r
      @01ivi3r Pƙed rokem +2

      @@MrsLizziee I'm well aware that within the UK there are different accents, but I specifically said an "internationalised British English".

    • @samdaniels2
      @samdaniels2 Pƙed rokem

      @@01ivi3r Yeah just to be clear; Britain is not the UK, the UK is Britain plus N.Ireland

  • @TheMartianGeek
    @TheMartianGeek Pƙed rokem +6

    These two girls almost sound American, honestly. Their accents are very mild.

  • @zerefplayz7532
    @zerefplayz7532 Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

    The left girl is so pretty and the right's a vibe ❀

  • @IXxJordan
    @IXxJordan Pƙed rokem +1

    I see a lot of people use that clip for the Glasweigan accent, as someone from there - please dont, that clip needs to die. Not because of thick accent but because it is heavily cut and modified and there is a huge jump cut that splits whole sentences in half at 7:01 when the camera gets covered - so it is not even a close representation to the accent after the first couple of seconds.
    Its something along the lines of this, mind you I omitted a couple stuff:
    "well its very hard to bring them to mind, this is the thing. Its only- its alright- when y-" [HUGE CUT]
    "-on eh- in eh-, heart to heart- as us?" -> "hm?" -> "you understand?"
    Thats why when they said the start is fine at 7:18 and how the more he talks the more its lost,
    thats cause it is - the first like 3 seconds is the only actual sentences and the "you understand" part. The rest is just heavily cut audio or jump cut / edited out.

  • @jek4477
    @jek4477 Pƙed rokem +4

    As an Hungarian who doesn't have sense of language but needs to know English because we are live in 21th century, I feel like girls with those accents. Mostly I hope noone see on my face how I feel lost. Anyway I love the English accents

    • @user-tw4xs8hi2v
      @user-tw4xs8hi2v Pƙed rokem

      I thought Hungarians didn't like the British that much?

    • @tomriddle8933
      @tomriddle8933 Pƙed rokem

      Only ones that bought the wrong dictionary.

    • @gerald4013
      @gerald4013 Pƙed rokem

      "needs to know English because we are live in 21th century"
      Most human beings don't speak English.

  • @cr9153
    @cr9153 Pƙed rokem +7

    The people with the accents in Hot Fuzz are supposed to be impossible to understand that's the joke.

  • @rosemarionnaud2027
    @rosemarionnaud2027 Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci +1

    I'm glad to see English people struggling to understand other English people, makes me feel better for all the times I don't understand English people 😂 Just at lunch, I was with people and it was the same as the red-headed girl on the elderly's house, like I smiled and nodded but didn't know what was going on 😂😂😂

  • @carlisroy6666
    @carlisroy6666 Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

    Also worth noting that Steve Coogan who plays Alan Partridge in the clip of "Michael" the Geordie, is Mancunian.

  • @mattleistner313
    @mattleistner313 Pƙed rokem +4

    Me when I was on my holidays in Scotland - as a German!đŸ€Ł

    • @italixgaming915
      @italixgaming915 Pƙed rokem

      Holy Moly, did you make it back to the airport? đŸ˜±