Match The Accent to the Person!!
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- čas přidán 13. 11. 2023
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Do you know the differences of English accents?
Can you match the accent with nationality?
Hope you enjoy the video
Also, please follow our panels!
🇰🇷 Soyoon @so._.xynn
🇺🇸 Britt @br.ittan
🇨🇦 Sydney @sydney.psh
🇬🇧 Fii @fiixii
🇦🇺 Yazmine @molkane01 - Zábava
The easiest for me was UK , not 'cause of the accent and yes for the way she describes the weather , since people from UK are always saying their weather isn't good 😂
I mean seriously, I'm British, and that UK weather stereotype isn't really true at all, people just seem to think that in the UK it literally rains all the time, which isn't true, we genuinely do have some nice weather all year round.
@@cpj93070 I think it depends where in the UK you're from lol, because I'm from England and it rains a LOT in the south part that I live 😂 it's definitely never been good weather all year round but in the summer it can get quite hot
Being a Canadian, it's still not easy to differentiate an American from a Canadian accent if I'm not actively listening for it, unless they have a very strong American accent or a very strong Canadian one. The easiest way to differentiate American English from Canadian English are in the words like "house, mouse, about, light, write, and sorry". The vowel sounds we make are slightly different, and it's called Canadian Raising. Generally speaking, an American would pronounce "house" as "how-ss", and a Canadian would pronounce it as "huh-wss". Americans pronouncing the words "rider" and "writer" would sounds identical. But a Canadian would pronounce the "i" vowel in "rider" the same way an American does (rye-der), but for the word "writer" we would pronounce it more like "ruh-yder". And for the word sorry, Americans pronounce it like "saw-ree", but Canadians pronounce it like "sore-ee" (rhyming with gory). These don't apply to every single person of course, but is a general difference between our accents.
As an American, I agree with this. If the Canadian accent is region-neutral, I usually can't identify someone's from there until I hear certain word sounds like "house, mouse, about" or like the sound in "again".
I’m American and I mostly agree. Sometimes it’s immediately very obvious to me someone is Canadian and sometimes it’s certain words. Sometimes it’s a matter of I think someone is Canadian who is actually American because of their accent especially if they are from a border state. I have heard people from places like Michigan and Minnesota speak the way you describe for Canadians. I have a friend from MN who says both as boaf. For example bayg for bag in Wisconsin. Do they do that in Canada?
@@anndeecosita3586 Oh yeah, I also heard that people from Minnesota or Wisconsin sound like Canadians. I was born and raised in Toronto, and grew up watching a lot of American children's television programs (Reading Rainbow was my favourite!) so ... my Canadian accent isn't as strong as people living in other parts of the country due to the American influence. I honestly don't know about the bag vs bayg thing. I personally pronounce it as "bag" (I'm pretty sure there's no hint of a y sound in there). And for the word "again", I say it as "a-gen", and not "a-gayn". And I know it's also a Canadian thing to say "been" as "bean" (as opposed to "bin"). I personally pronounce it as "bin", but I know a lot of Canadians that do pronounce it as "bean".
@@griffenangel27 I personally pronounce "again" as "a-gen" and not "a-gayn", but I know a lot of Canadians would say "a-gayn". But yeah, those certain words DO stand out.
@@LeslieKwanSorry I had a typo. I meant some Minnesotans say both as boaf. Like an f instead of th. Is that common in Canada? Also I met some from Michigan people who I thought were Canadian or Scandinavian because they kept saying aye after every sentence. Found out they were Youpers.
Canadians say "not" in a very particular way, as you can hear at the end there. I'm Canadian-American, and my accent kinda hangs somewhere between the two. It's basically American because that's where I was born and raised, but it definitely has an undeniable Canadian influence, especially on certain words. I also spell things the Canadian way, so my friends think I'm weird. 😅
Wow the UK woman seemed very convincing as American or Canadian. Her British accent isn't very noticeable. Same with the Canadian imitating the British accent, they're pretty good.
I think if someone isn’t listening closely (which most people don’t ) she can pass pretty well. She would be going along not sounding strongly British but when certain words like winter and north come out of her mouth she sounded like a Brit.
@cosita3586 Or people might just think she's from Boston. 😂
Welcome back Sydney! Hope to see you more here🤗🇨🇦❤
Poor Soyoon, the others playing tricks with their accents! But the trickery made it fun to watch! Even with Sydney, there were a couple of sentences that sounded Australian! I love Sydney from Canada 🇨🇦 is back! To me, Soyoon had the strongest standard Australian accent because the time she spent there.
I love Soyoon’s accent! It has got a really nice welcoming feeling to it! Overall, australian’s accents tend to be my favourite ones.
So Yoon shouldn't be too disappointed. I as a native English speaker only picked one correctly, my fellow Australian. The British and Canadian women were good vocal mimics.
Absolutely loved this video and all the new people! I liked that So Yoon really committed to figuring it out, much respect!
We haven't seen Sydney in a long time!
For me. Difficulty of guessing (I mean in general):
1.British-easy
2.American-easy
3.Australian- medium
4.Canadian-hard😅
She said that an easy way to tell an American was the way they pronounce their R's but several regions of the US is non-rhotic and does not pronounce their R's
America misses you Britt!!
*sees the thumbnail* GASP! sydney is back!!!
Sydney gorgeous as always ❤
Soyon its anglophone gal shes corageous to decode the phonologies of all countries and learned so much to differenciare them.
It's good see Sydney ( she is not from Australia lol ) back again , first time i see her with Christina , hope see more often
you mean Canada
@@LanguageLearning11 Canada
Sydney is right, the country is big and with a relatively small population spread so far out & the multiculture influence and the different settler influence (England/France), we all have different ways of speaking.
I've never used "eh" at the end of my speech in my life as a Canadian.
Wtf lol I live in Australia Brisbane and I used to live in Leicester UK😂 it’s so hard she doesn’t sound British, I thought she was American or Canadian but she spells colour I was like wait a minute, I was confident about the Australian but she was lying confused me lol
Unless Yazmine is Aboriginal, her ethnicity IS different than her nationality. Only Aboriginals are ethnically Australian.
this was so funny the girls were saying anything just to get soyoon confused plssjshdhshahah
I guessed correctly just by looking at them.
2:49 no, she doesn’t. That’s a weird cliché, but there’s obviously no „r“
She pronounced „no“ like „nöü“
Funny video.😅😅😅😅 So tricky
Should the title have been 🇦🇺 "An Australian Tries to Find Another Australian"? 🙃 Nevertheless, my favourite country 🇨🇦 mentioned! 🤪 As a hockey-mad Finn 🇫🇮, I've always wanted to learn Canadian English 🇨🇦, but the teaching of English was highly concentrated on British 🇬🇧 and American English 🇺🇸 in high school and in the university's minor subject. So, I decided that I write like the Brits do and speak like the Americans with a little bit of British flavour added to it. Obviously, I call a winter hat as "tuque". It was unintentional, but when I lived in 🇪🇸 Spain because of my studies less than ten years ago, I realized that I say "eh?" a lot in Spanish and English. Only at that point I noticed that it's a feature of CanE too. When I later travelled in Canada, a hotel receptionist warned me that some Canadians might perceive the use of "eh" as an insult. 😳 Since the Finns might say sorry (spelled sori) when speaking Finnish (the native word being "anteeksi"), it was easy for me to learn its CanE pronunciation with an o, not a (initially I used the AmE & BrE one).
I'm 13 minutes in and I can't even figure out who's british, and I am british!
Same. I thought the trick was there wasn't a British one.
muito bom !!!
Fi seemed Irish to me the second she spoke
Nice to see Sydney back on the show and Leicester yeah that’s pretty much how people knows about that place because of that football team’s legendary title run
yo avocado toast and salmon is the bomb
Just get them to say "roof" or "about" but naturally so they don't think to disguise it XD
Dropping the habit of saying "eh" is stupidly hard and it never quite goes away 100%, you still end up using it on occasion because "huh" or "right" just doesn't feel right XD
Having one girl named Sidney and another named Brit is pretty confusing
The easiest way to tell apart Canadians and Americans is in the way they pronounce Toronto. That gave it away for me anyway
I have heard Canadians who pronounce the second T and those who don’t.
@@anndeecosita3586 I think it depends on proximity to Toronto. If you're from the city itself, you'll probably say something close to 'Trawno'. Most other Ontarians will probably be saying 'Turono'. But outside the province, you have better odds of hearing the full 'Toronto' -possibly because the extra 'T' makes it sound like you're spitting on the word itself, which approximates the sentiment the rest of the country has towards Toronto.
@@dgthe3im from quebec i say it like ToronTo
16:50 thanks!
Fii could probably pass as a Bostonian. 😂
I’m English and I could tell the British and Australian by their vibe lol
We don’t even call it grade we just call it year omddd 😭
There are so many Canadian actors that you couldn't tell apart from Americans because the average Canadian accent is basically "TV" American. We have a lot of regional accents though.
Plus I think a lot of the Canadian actors work to eliminate certain Canadian aspects of their accents. I forgot her name but I met a Canadian actress at a sci fi convention who told me a director told her to get rid of her accent because she sounded too Canadian. I said I didn’t think her accent was thick but she said previously she had a rural Canadian accent. To me Ryan Reynolds leaned more Canadian as a child actor than he does now.
The same happens in the USA with actors with strong regional accents. Anthony Macke says when he auditioned for Julliard they told him to drop his New Orleans accent. He doesn’t use it even in interviews whereas British and Australian actors tend to go back their initial accents when they are not working. I suspect part of it is biases against certain accents as lower class.
LOL I love how the one named Britt is BY FAR the worst at sounding like a Brit. 😂
I knew the Aussie straight away - being an Aussie myself.
Soyoon's accent sounds more rhotic now, likely a result of being around an international community
She still sounds VERY Australian
This is my first time seeing her, but I only hear Australian from her. Not saying youre wrong, Im just saying from a first impression it is still Australian hahaha
Its a bit mixed but she does sound Australian
With Austria, Swiss and Germany would be interesting too haha 😂❤ guess the accents 😊
Il’m American and commenting before the reveal. I wouldn’t think any of them were Americans if I met them. 😂 But sometimes I mistake people from the Northern border states for Canadians. They tend to hit their vowels differently than the rest of us.
The American lady was indeed from an area close to Canada. Her accent bleeds over. She sounds much more Canadianlike to me than most Americans I hear.
would be cool if someone could "judge" my english where it comes from and such
One clue, Fiona said it was "colder in the north, warmer in the south", so that means she's not Australia, New Zealand, or South Africa. She has to be from the northern hemisphere. She puts on a very good US/Canadian accent, though.
19:02 Canadian accent is basically just American but with minor changes let’s be real now. Canadians don’t like to admit this
No, Sydney is right. There are a wide variety of Canadian accents, just like there are a wide variety of American, English, Australian, etc accents.
If I'm completely honest, I think the typical Canadian "accent" is actually a near quintessential example of how English is to be spoken. The only exception is their pronunciation of the letter O, which is subtle, but makes them unique.
Oh and also, Canadian and American are nothing a like for the reasons I've stated lmao 😅😅😅
It's not just accent. I think I could tell an American from a Canadian with "when do you eat Christmas crackers?"
@@smorrow You eat Christmas crackers? The only thing I know by that name is a little popper-thing that you pull open and there is a small bang & it has a little toy or something inside. But that's more of a British thing than Canadian.
@@dgthe3 It might but more British than Canadian but at least you've _heard_ of it. An American wouldn't.
The pain of relegation on her face when she says "We won the Premier League . . . ONCE" 😩😅
Don't worry though, they've been dominant in the Championship and they'll be back up next season! 🙂
Success! Thanks to Vardy sticking with the team.
I can tell that the Canadian accent is far different than British and Australian
British chick was my favourite. She nailed the word "Toronto", even Canadians from other cities do not pronounce "Toronto" without the second "T" like the Brit chick did. Fact (not a real census); 98% of Torontonians pronounce "Toronto" as "Torono", there's no exception.
For some reason I can't tell the difference between Canadian and American accents. I love the Australian accent tho
14:09, Almost all countries say toilet. I say restroom or toliet.
Most Americans don’t say toilet unless we mean the actual apparatus and then some of us don’t call the apparatus a toilet. Bathroom and restroom are more common for us. Also ladies/men room, latrine, lavatory, washroom, powder room are some less used others. As a Spanish speaker I am the same way. Toilet is the object and baño is the place.
I see. I also say bathroom sometimes.
Sydney, but not from Australia, eh?
When I hear that "English people sound posh" stereotype, I always wish I could introduce that person to the very un-dainty working-class ones I know and see their reaction. 😂
Trust me, she isn't the only one who was mixing up Canada and the UK 💀
I would ask all of them to pronounce house or about to identify the Canadian. Not sure if she can hide it.
Australia says fairy floss
The Korean has a bit of an Australian accent
A good question is do you say petrol or gasoline?
Except they can lie about that. They can't lie about "when do you eat Christmas crackers?", "how do you make a sandwich?" etc. If I'm American and trying to lie about when you eat Christmas crackers, I'm probably going to be all "uhhh I don't eat Christmas crackers" Yeah mate nobody does
She says she can tell American accents but not Canadian.. girl, Canada is American too, it’s in America and North America too along with the US and Mexico and others
I don't know if you're really ignorant, or if you're just trying to be rude.
Canada is _not_ American.
As for "it’s in America and North America too along with the US and Mexico and others," that makes no sense whatsoever.
That squeak in that background drove me crazy. I couldn't find the video because of it.
Why does So Yoon has more of an American accent when she used to live in Australia?
I've never met a Canadian that spells colour without the u. But there are many other words that Canadians might spell the American way, such as the words: catalog, plow, donut, story, mold (vs. the Canadian spellings: catalogue, plough, doughnut, storey, mould)
Aren't storey and story two different things?
@@TheDesertwalker If you're Canadian or British, yes. They are different. If you're American, no. But many Canadians would use the American spelling of " story" to mean the levels of a building.
@@TheDesertwalker Americans spell the two the same. Brits, Canadians, Aussies and Kiwis distinguish them.
Canadian here. For some reason, I have it in my mind that 'mold' is the fungus/rot/whatever while a 'mould' is a form used to shape things. But as I type this, the Canadian-english spellchecker gives 'mold' the red squigglies. So I guess I'm wrong.
As for donuts vs doughnuts, I defer to Timothy Horton & his small chain of coffee shops. If they say that Dutchies and Apple Fritters are donuts, then they are.
Day 23: request for Fictional Character Pronounce Names in different world
This video too long for one language that has accents that are not so different when you compared to other languages.
I’m Japanese.
It was difficult to distinguish their nationalities by their accents.
I got British and American, but I didn’t do other accents. I don’t know the features of Australian accent and Canadian accent.
As a Canadian, I find it hard to distinguish Australian and British accents sometimes.
The 'standard' Canadian accent is about 99% similar to a generic American accent. The common way to tell the difference is with words like 'out' and 'about'. Americans poke fun at us all the time because, to them, we sound like we're saying 'oot' and 'aboot'. But conversely, Americans (to us) often sound more like they're saying 'owt' and 'abowt'. There are other differences, but they can be quite subtle. Its probably easier to tell a Canadian from an American with vocabulary, rather than pronunciation. But even then, the differences are rare.
Only annoying teenage girls say the Australian ‘no’ as ‘naur’ most people say it normally and Yasmine said it normally.
More content with Turkish people 🇹🇷❤
do abetter job with your subtitles please
World frieends 😃
To be honest, Britt's upstate New York accent could pass as a working class Ontarian accent.
As an Ontarian (and quite possibly within a 2hr drive of where she grew up), I could tell quite clearly that she was American. But I think what gave it away was more the 'style' of speaking rather than the accent. The little filler words and cadence and stuff like that. So I guess you could say she 'felt' American, rather than 'sounded' American.
Fii was the only one I didn't get, her accent was all over the place.
Really nice to see a Canadian and Australian for a change.
This channel needs more Canadians, Australians and Kiwis.
Right her accent was all over the place 😂
O primeiro🎉
Waiting for ur content ❤
We want Pakistan's accent plz make video Pakistanis accent plz
The whispering in the back💀