Accent Training: How To Do A Bristol Accent

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  • čas přidán 24. 07. 2024
  • Hi there, it’s Matt from VoiceHacker. We do dialect coaching over Skype. We’re here to do a Bristol accent, and we’ve got 6 tips to help you out. Let’s get started. I had some trouble with the Bristol accent. There’s lots of famous folk from Bristol, like the comedian Bill Bailey, and creator of Wallace and Gromit, Nick Park.
    But as you can hear, they don’t quite have that distinctive Bristolian twang. Stephen Merchant certainly does. But I decided to turn to a rather more distinct voice: Football manager Ian Holloway. So here we go: 6 top tips for the Bristol accent.
    For number one, you’ll be able to hear straight away the ‘r’ sounds are very prominent. In ‘longer’ and ‘term’ - and all the way through this sentence. This means the Bristol accent is what’s called a ‘rhotic’ accent: you say every ‘R’ you see.
    Number two on the list are the ‘ng’ sounds. These tend to lose the ‘g’, and turn ‘doing it’ into ‘doin’ it - unforgiving into unforgivin’ and meeting into meetin’. This happens only on ‘-ing’ endings, so drop off those g’s when you can.
    For number three, it’s time to look at some vowels. The /əʊ/ sound is a big change here. In promoted - and open - it changes a lot, doing a lot less motion and keeping quite tight in the mouth. ‘So’ instead of ‘so’.
    For tip number four, the next vowel is the /aɪ/ in ‘delighted’ and ‘like’. It’s very similar to the Dublin Irish accent - think of Colin Farrell saying ‘life’. The jaw stays quite steady, and the tongue does most of the work. Keep your mouth still while you do it.
    For our penultimate tip, we turn to a classic: the old ‘Bath/Bath’ debate. RP speakers like myself say /bɑːθ/, with a long /ɑː/. But Bristolians say /bæːθ/, turning ‘passing’ into ‘passing’ and ‘last’ into ‘last’. They flatten like crazy - but they keep their length.
    Now we reach our final tip - Bristolians tend to use elision when they speak. In other words, they run words together. You can even hear this in Bill Bailey - as well as Ian. Notice that some ‘th’ sounds are getting lost there.
    So, to sum it up. Keep the r’s in, drop the ng’s, curl the /əʊ/’s, flatten the /aɪ/’s, stretch the /æː/’s and get that elision going. Easy. Thanks for watching, and make sure you subscribe for more accent hacks.
    Download our FREE APP at play.google.com/store/apps/de...
    Check out voicehacker.co.uk for more tips and to book Skype lessons.
    Twitter: / mpocock1
    Facebook: / mattpocockvocalcoach
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Komentáře • 138

  • @mohaamd_7505
    @mohaamd_7505 Před 5 lety +52

    It’s quite fascinating to me, how rather small the UK is, yet has such a rich and diverse variety of dialects.

  • @benirw1n
    @benirw1n Před 4 lety +14

    Ian Holloway’s Bristol accent sounds so much like a cross between Irish and Scottish to me. I searched for tips on doing Stephen Merchant’s accent, but this was definitely helpful and cool!

  • @perry714.
    @perry714. Před rokem +6

    It’s quite funny I’m Bristolian and when we chats to people from up north they can’t understand us because we join so many words together, not only that but we completely change words aswell, for instance if I said that last part out loud I wouldn’t of said aswell I would of replaced it with inall, there’s also the word something, depending the sentence we’re using it in we may change it to sumutt.
    This video is a great start to learning to Bristol accent but there is so much more to it than just sounding it out the same, it’s also the language you use, the order you put it in, we take letters out in some places and add some that were never there in others it’s very unique

  • @marioescobar2065
    @marioescobar2065 Před 3 lety +12

    Best British accent of all ❤️❤️❤️

  • @alorachan
    @alorachan Před 3 lety +7

    My entire family on my dad's side is from the Bristol area (I was born and raised in the US), I LOVE talking with my Bristolian family, especially my great uncle whose accent is SO perfectly Bristolian. Love the accent

  • @PapiDoesIt
    @PapiDoesIt Před 6 lety +91

    I grew up in the Smoky Mountains of east Tennessee. A Bristolian accent would be clearly understood there. Very similar to "mountain talk" in many ways.

    • @youandwhosearmy6339
      @youandwhosearmy6339 Před 6 lety +25

      I love this comment, because i have long thought that our accent (Bristol, England) is easily the closest English dialect that there is to American English. People tend to take the piss over here, because we actually pronounce our Rs here in the west of England. Americans always say their Rs too and I love it. I'm out to check out this Tennessee accent....

    • @texastea5686
      @texastea5686 Před 6 lety +7

      Lol yes. The Tennessee twang!

    • @emilygee6618
      @emilygee6618 Před 6 lety +5

      Same here! And yes it would!

    • @luxy2854
      @luxy2854 Před 5 lety +8

      Heya y'all. Mountain-mouth sounds like that because of the isolation that people in the mountains generally had, so most appalachian accents are actually very very close to the dialects of the settlers back in the 16th, 17th, 18th centuries.
      can't say about bristolian folk, but that's why appalachian accents sound the way they do

    • @fraserthomas6040
      @fraserthomas6040 Před 4 lety +4

      That's a really interesting comment. I was born in Bristol and now live in Seattle. I now need to go to the Smoky Mountains to see for myself!

  • @nihilusdirus
    @nihilusdirus Před 6 lety +45

    As an American from the South (Arkansas, which has an accent halfway between Texas and Louisiana), Bristolian accents are a lot easier to pull off than other accents. In Arkansas accents, words run together, r's are sharp, we shorten ng to n', we say the a's and o's the same way (though the a's are shortened a bit more in our accent). I thought it would be fun to throw out here for anyone interested in American accents as well

    • @orangegrey292
      @orangegrey292 Před 2 lety

      Hm I live in arkansas and want to learn this accent, Hope it does help lol!

    • @George-bi8sj
      @George-bi8sj Před 6 měsíci +1

      I'm actually a Bristolian who's been to Arkansas (Fort Smith). One guy there seemed to think I was Texan, lol.

  • @katcankan7129
    @katcankan7129 Před 6 lety +4

    This is the best way l have heard of getting across the different accents of the UK. Well done!👏

  • @MrAjripley
    @MrAjripley Před 6 lety +2

    Learnt some new things about my own accent!! haha! Great video, was a suggested video from my bristolian accent video

  • @john-paulconway240
    @john-paulconway240 Před 6 lety +3

    Great video Matt - very useful!

  • @excaliburhead
    @excaliburhead Před 3 měsíci +1

    I’m a Texan absolutely fascinated by the different British accents

  • @elbenni8786
    @elbenni8786 Před 6 lety +9

    Bristol was the principal port for all trade to Ireland from Anglo Norman times until at lest the 18th century, Bristol merchants had all trading rights for imports exports, the English spoken in Ireland especially on the east coast is very similar to this.

    • @FredBTs
      @FredBTs Před 5 lety +1

      damian kilbane no It isn’t.

  • @kelly-anntomasi788
    @kelly-anntomasi788 Před 6 lety +20

    Love this. I'm from Bristol yeah this is a good video aha :)

  • @matthewpaterson5216
    @matthewpaterson5216 Před 6 lety +1

    Thank-you, your video is quite helpful.

  • @George-lr4xi
    @George-lr4xi Před 5 lety +4

    This guy is so good he is constantly doing a Jamie Lannister impersonation

  • @gokith1119
    @gokith1119 Před 4 lety +4

    One of the most important accents that made up the American accent

  • @Rob-fs8vq
    @Rob-fs8vq Před 3 lety +2

    Good choice in Ian Holloway:- archetypal Bristol accent (along with Cathy Barry!)

  • @YourDadsUnclesFriend
    @YourDadsUnclesFriend Před 5 lety +9

    Why did I only become self-aware that I speak like this?

  • @dingus3443
    @dingus3443 Před 3 lety +1

    This is helpful, thanks

  • @naajohnnorthcott8267
    @naajohnnorthcott8267 Před 3 lety +2

    For an exaggerated Bristol accent, listen to Adge Cutler singing "Virtute et Industrial" and note the "l" on the end. In the same way, "idea" becomes "ideal".

  • @julianhermanubis6800
    @julianhermanubis6800 Před rokem +1

    This really does sound reminiscent of some American Southern accents, in particular "up country" and Appalachian ones. Every single feature discussed here is prominent in them.

  • @maureenm8462
    @maureenm8462 Před 4 lety +3

    I'm from brum and I leave the g off the end. And I didn't know what a bristol accent sounds like. I think we all say the same phrases where ever we r from

  • @bisoahmad772
    @bisoahmad772 Před 6 lety +1

    great video!

  • @TheEskimosPantry
    @TheEskimosPantry Před 4 lety +1

    Nick Park is from Lancashire. Has very soft Lancashire vowles.

  • @starfish7486
    @starfish7486 Před 6 lety +47

    bristolian accent not bristol accent 😂

  • @IlIlIlIllIlIlIllI
    @IlIlIlIllIlIlIllI Před 6 lety +13

    Im from bristol

  • @dojokonojo
    @dojokonojo Před 3 lety +3

    Were the first American colonists from Bristol? Sounds like a lot of these same features are heard across the pond.

    • @wearlybird
      @wearlybird Před 2 lety +2

      Yes, many of the earliest colonists to Virginia were Bristol royalist cavaliers escaping the roundheads. They laid down the basic American accent which evolved slightly over the centuries due to climate, immigration and passage of time. If you travel to isolated places such as Virginia's Tangier Island in the Chesapeake Bay you can still hear a preserved 17th century port of Bristol pirate accent.

  • @PIANOPHUNGUY
    @PIANOPHUNGUY Před 2 lety +2

    Cary Grant was from Bristol, England? He didn't speak Bristolian, did he? Did he speak mid Atlantic 30's and 40's English?

  • @xiaomarou9890
    @xiaomarou9890 Před 2 lety +3

    What’s with the famous L-endings after vowels??? e.g. radiol, cowl, operal.

  • @ladylaois8184
    @ladylaois8184 Před 2 lety

    Oh my gert days like! I’m a Bath gal but I’m 35 years outside Bristol. So I have picked up the accent.

  • @dmitribovski1292
    @dmitribovski1292 Před 4 lety +5

    You missed replacing a lot of TH's wiv V's

  • @gdsongwriter
    @gdsongwriter Před 6 lety +8

    Actually Nick Park was born in Preston and didn't move to Bristol until he was 26 and although Bill Bailey grew up just outside of Bristol I do believe he left the area when he went to university, so neither are likely to have notable Bristol accents. As a Bristolian, whose alter ego happens to be Geoffrey Mountstevens, Professor of Bristolian, I think I can add some rather valuable additional insights into the Bristol accent. For example, the Bristolian 'th' sound doesn't usually get lost, and is rather interesting because the tongue touches the teeth much more lightly when Bristolians pronounces the 'th' sound than is the case in RP English. Likewise, the famous Bristol 'L' at the end of words ending with an 'a', although dying out, can still be heard. Geoffrey Woodruff described it very well on an EP from the 70s "Sounds of Bristol", saying It's actually more like an 'aw' sound and the 'l' is hardly pronounced. So America becomes Americawl. I could go on but you only have to check out Josie Gibson or Tricky on CZcams. They have even stronger accents than the great Ian Holloway!

    • @brianiles7443
      @brianiles7443 Před 6 lety

      Just turned to this comment after the latest posting of Matt Pocock's piece. Good stuff gd. I think Woodruff must be referring to a Bedminster or other variant of the schwa sound - the unstressed vowel. In my kneck of the woods ( Hanham, Kingswood) it's certainly not aw, rather uh, and you'll get clear examples of this in 'The Mystery of the Bristol L' CZcams posting. This was a talk at Hanham and the mainly local contributors will give you the 'flavour'. Our mutual friend, Des Bowring, however, did give a brilliant, hilarious , instance of when L can follow another sound, when the girl he quotes says, 'I ain't got no bra-l-on. I've discussed the subject a lot with the Bristol Centre of Linguistics at UWE whom I ran the talk past. Sadly, their recent surveys have not come across the L. I know very well it's still quite common in my area - mainly but not exclusively amongst the aged .I think that - as with the John Wells evidence in the 1980s - none of the students/ linguistics surveyors were actually Bristolians who might have been more attuned to the sometimes elusive character of the L

    • @faegibb4043
      @faegibb4043 Před 6 lety

      Bill bailey sounds posh to me haha

    • @mavsworld1733
      @mavsworld1733 Před 6 lety

      Francesca Gibbens Bill Bailey has a Bath accent, because that's where he went to school. Bath is an expensive place to live, and so has a very middle class accent, heading towards RP.

    • @FredBTs
      @FredBTs Před 5 lety

      MavsWorld in Bath the I think the accent is less harsh and a bit more country than Bristol. To me, coming from the outskirts of Bristol, Bristolian is not typical “West Country “. I went to school in Bristol but later did my clubbing in Bath.

  • @SidVicious152
    @SidVicious152 Před 3 lety +2

    There's also this middle "t" sound disappearing in two syllabus words : "a bo'le of wa'er" being said for "a bottle of water"

  • @pipsta
    @pipsta Před 5 lety +1

    What accent does Brian May have?

  • @v.polonez5945
    @v.polonez5945 Před 4 lety +2

    This is British I love I hate london accent but this sounds lovely and yes it is similar to irish a bit american too

  • @elisemacer6564
    @elisemacer6564 Před 6 lety +4

    I’m Bristolian I pronounce all the like that 😂 my teacher used to hate me cuz I didn’t pronounce my t

  • @huongvu137S
    @huongvu137S Před 3 lety +1

    Cool and hard.

  • @W1LL1AMPA1N
    @W1LL1AMPA1N Před 5 lety +1

    What about Russel Howard

  • @faegibb4043
    @faegibb4043 Před 6 lety +5

    Stephen merchant has a particular bristolian accent - we are both from Hanham waaaaayyyyy

    • @vanylla3859
      @vanylla3859 Před 5 lety

      Omg I am too!!

    • @kurluk04
      @kurluk04 Před 4 lety

      He does, hes got a softer Bristolian accent, im from downend so its also quite soft - but places like filton, southmead, bedminster, hartcliffe - tend have a heavier accent 👍

  • @katnjny
    @katnjny Před 6 lety +1

    Thank you for this! Is there any chance you can post an IPA transcription of the "long o" as in GOAT sound, please? I'm not quite grasping what you mean by "curling." Thank you so much!

    • @matthewlewis2072
      @matthewlewis2072 Před 6 lety

      "Goat" would be quite short in the vowel sound, almost like "go". Don't pronounce the "t", although it is sort of there...

    • @katnjny
      @katnjny Před 6 lety

      Thank you. It's actually addressed in the video (long o sound). I'm not sure how I missed it the first time.

  • @ankicat3425
    @ankicat3425 Před 6 lety +4

    Is it very similar in wording to the American accent? From a none native speaker, trying to learn more accents ;)

    • @Person01234
      @Person01234 Před 6 lety

      An accent isn't really the same thing as a dialect, if you're talking about differences in wording you'd be talking about different dialects for the most part.

  • @coreyldr
    @coreyldr Před 4 lety +2

    Bristolians don’t say the t in promote though so it would be Pruh-mow-)

  • @twistedcoffee1187
    @twistedcoffee1187 Před 4 lety

    This vid gives me which part of people moved to new continent.

  • @jareddwija8839
    @jareddwija8839 Před 4 lety +4

    It sounds like an American accent

  • @arianan4380
    @arianan4380 Před 6 lety +1

    That last one is hard

  • @loonylinn8824
    @loonylinn8824 Před 2 lety

    The “L” at the end of a vowel?

  • @we1330
    @we1330 Před 2 lety

    What about the Bristol 'L'?

  • @jonalynjungiereck5562
    @jonalynjungiereck5562 Před 5 měsíci

    Need to learn Bristol accent ,bf lives there ..

  • @mcwaivi7349
    @mcwaivi7349 Před 3 lety +1

    As a Bristolian I’ve also heard i dont pronounce my t’s lol

  • @hasjan652
    @hasjan652 Před 6 lety +2

    This was not too bad (I am Bristolian).

  • @peterneate607
    @peterneate607 Před 3 lety +3

    There are different Bristolian accents within Bristol. South Bristol is more like a Somerset accent. Ian Holloway is from Hanham, so his accent is more Gloucestershire sounding. Then you have the "posh" Bristol accent from Clifton, Redland and Stoke Bishop. However, this is a good video for any actor trying to learn the accent. I am a Bristolian a girt posh un :) Oh and Bill Bailey is not from Bristol. He was born in Bath and grew up in Keynsham. Steve Merchant is from Hanham like Holloway.

  • @damaracarpenter8316
    @damaracarpenter8316 Před 6 lety +2

    Is it common for bristolian accents to change "th" sounds to "f" sounds? My boyfriend and his siblings are bristolian and do this for many words but his parents don't seem to.. I quite like it lol.

    • @srin3897
      @srin3897 Před 6 lety +2

      Damara Carpenter Yea me and alot of my mates do that and we're from bristol

    • @damaracarpenter8316
      @damaracarpenter8316 Před 6 lety

      Srinxx x cute! I notice it in a cockney friend from London so it must be a English thing that appears in various regions.

    • @Clodhopping
      @Clodhopping Před 2 lety

      It's a London thing ("fing") that's become popular across the country.

  • @kevinchamberlain7928
    @kevinchamberlain7928 Před 2 lety

    They also drop "L" at the end of some words eg Bristol = "Briiistoh"

  • @Zeldaschampion
    @Zeldaschampion Před 5 lety

    Strange....why is the DrunkenMasterPaul song playing in the beginning...

  • @alexspareone3872
    @alexspareone3872 Před 3 lety +1

    Ive watched a bunch of videos on this. This is the only one that managed to make the topic borng. I can watch no further.

  • @lynphillips2109
    @lynphillips2109 Před 6 lety

    Cary Grant

  • @DemonKitty666_
    @DemonKitty666_ Před rokem

    Westcountry accent = Lazy Irish accent. Am I right or wrong?

    • @Rosie6857
      @Rosie6857 Před rokem

      Wrong. They are quite separate sounds.

  • @abhiramn474
    @abhiramn474 Před 2 lety +1

    Sounds the way a stereotypical pirate talks.

  • @InvisibleTower
    @InvisibleTower Před 6 lety +1

    3:40 hmm

  • @louistillsonphillips
    @louistillsonphillips Před 5 lety +2

    Bill bailly is from bath not bristol

  • @erkkinho
    @erkkinho Před 5 měsíci

    Em is a relic of OE, not an elision.

  • @shadowestrella1351
    @shadowestrella1351 Před 5 lety

    what about the ts? XD

  • @nicw6316
    @nicw6316 Před 6 lety +33

    It's Bristolian accent not Bristol accent

    • @lucyivanova3265
      @lucyivanova3265 Před 5 lety

      nic w can you explain what the difference is ?

    • @lupa3041
      @lupa3041 Před 5 lety +4

      @@lucyivanova3265 one is correct grammar one is not

  • @Miguel-he7bj
    @Miguel-he7bj Před 6 lety +11

    Some of these rules seem similar to the standard American accent. Am I wrong?

    • @MattPocock
      @MattPocock  Před 6 lety +5

      +Miguel G True! Both are rhotic accents, which means that some words are super-similar.

    • @Miguel-he7bj
      @Miguel-he7bj Před 6 lety +2

      Matt Pocock and the Bristol accent vowels you cite also seem to be the same for the standard American accent. That is, we say "promoted" the same way, "like" the same way, and "bath" the same way. The Southern American accent do drop the ng in ing-ending words. Like Hank Williams when he sings "Hey good lookin', watcha got cookin' ". If you have time, can you do a Minnesota accent video. Btw, love the videos. They're great. Accents fascinate me. I should've been a linguist. (is that the name of your trade?)

    • @ThomasBahamas
      @ThomasBahamas Před 6 lety

      Specifically the Philadelphia accent at least to me

    • @cyrusthagreat6649
      @cyrusthagreat6649 Před 5 lety

      most settlers in early america came from southwest england, where bristol is located, thus the reason for the lexical similarities. later on, when the british decided they, for example, didn't like pronouncing their r's in the syllable coda, we decided they were mentally incompetent (i mean, come on, its right there) and so we kept saying it the way we always had, thus the reasons why the bristolian accent is similar to american english

    • @dkroll92
      @dkroll92 Před 5 lety +1

      @@cyrusthagreat6649 I'm from California but most of my early ancestors came from southwest England (Devon and Cornwall at least) - long time ago, admittedly. But I notice that I use every thing they bring up in the video, obviously the rhotic Rs and sharper As like most Americans but the dropping the g from -ing words and slurring words together; all of it. Ian Holloway has more of the "pirate" thing going on but is basically what I'd sound like if I tried to do a pirate accent until my voice got a bit hoarse.

  • @Stiggs-bu2fz
    @Stiggs-bu2fz Před 6 lety +1

    Where's David prowse?!

  • @hoagy_ytfc
    @hoagy_ytfc Před 6 lety +2

    Bristol accent without mentioning putting a spurious L on the ends of many words?

    • @Rosie6857
      @Rosie6857 Před 5 lety +1

      Does that still occur? It must have done at one time or the city would be called Bristow, so I have read. The spurious L must be what phoneticists call a dark L. My own speech is near-RP with a dash of Croydon but I find the Bristol accent quite agreeable and pleasant.

    • @kurluk04
      @kurluk04 Před 4 lety

      Popping down asdawl 😂

  • @zigado4017
    @zigado4017 Před 3 lety

    Forgot destroy the T in water

  • @beththefantastic8069
    @beththefantastic8069 Před 5 lety +1

    shire born and raised haha

  • @needleboy17
    @needleboy17 Před 3 lety

    Numberblocks Four and Forty!

  • @dalzvert9206
    @dalzvert9206 Před 5 lety +1

    Similar to the southern accent

    • @qwoc
      @qwoc Před 5 lety

      No, I’m from London we don’t sound like him

    • @Ridley369
      @Ridley369 Před 5 lety +3

      @@qwoc He's referencing the Southeast American accent(s). Tidewater Southern and Appalachian dialects and accents are direct descendants of West Country accents, primarily Cornwall, Bristol, and Somerset.

    • @qwoc
      @qwoc Před 5 lety

      Ridley369 oh

  • @elliot7404
    @elliot7404 Před 4 lety

    Wheres the Welsh accent mate?

  • @jkrazy13
    @jkrazy13 Před 6 lety

    This sounds so much like Cleveland, Ohio.

    • @jonchurch-fraser3233
      @jonchurch-fraser3233 Před 6 lety +1

      thats comost o americas setlers came from th west country.

    • @texastea5686
      @texastea5686 Před 6 lety

      I once met a girl from Ohio who same down to Texas for college and instead of saying "wash", it sounded more like "warsh" or "worsh"

  • @jackhaynes6013
    @jackhaynes6013 Před 5 lety +1

    Who ere from hartclife

  • @Marymooau
    @Marymooau Před 6 lety +2

    My dad was born in Bristol. Still has the accent despite us living in Australia for 26 years. I got rid of my West Country accent ASAP lol

  • @masondooley7338
    @masondooley7338 Před 2 lety

    I am bristolion no clue why I'm here lol

  • @thearcticlord3920
    @thearcticlord3920 Před 2 lety

    A Brizel accen'

  • @matthewlewis2072
    @matthewlewis2072 Před 6 lety +1

    Skeletor is a good example but he's bothering to pronounce some of his "t" sounds, particularly in the middle of words - these often get omitted. Plus the "th" sound is often pronounced "f", so "things" becomes "fings".
    But, yeah, bung in a couple of "minds" and the odd "luvver", and you've got half a chance. But as with all accents, be very careful - get it wrong in the wrong place and people may take offence - but mostly us Bristolians are pretty easy going, so warn us first and we might let you off!

  • @j.s.h6980
    @j.s.h6980 Před 2 lety

    Utg

  • @dolmanf
    @dolmanf Před 5 lety

    OTIB

  • @jasminev1482
    @jasminev1482 Před 6 lety +2

    Spaniards r better than us really 😂

  • @mycuppatea6108
    @mycuppatea6108 Před 6 lety +2

    Why would anyone want to try and do a Bristolian accent? I hate my Bristolian accent :)

    • @colliecandle
      @colliecandle Před 6 lety

      You are not alone in that sentiment !

    • @FredBTs
      @FredBTs Před 5 lety

      Nyxtroos Bristolians that are famous have a different accent from the general population because they are speaking to a national audience. My American wife has been to Bristol many times but still has trouble understanding them especially when it’s an animated conversation. The accent is nothing like American.

    • @Ridley369
      @Ridley369 Před 5 lety +1

      Because it's about culture and heritage...

    • @Ridley369
      @Ridley369 Před 5 lety +1

      ​@@FredBTs Come to the Tidewater region of the Southeast US (Southern Maryland/Eastern Shore, Central Virginia); Our accents come from Cornwall, Somerset, and Devonshire. 'S' sounds become 'Z' (Briztol), 'R' sounds go where they don't belong (warsh), 'V' sounds get bastardized ("seven" -> "seb'n" / "Devon" -> "Deb'n"), 'O' sounds get rounded as noted in this video ("go" -> "geh'o"), and more fun characteristics!

    • @FredBTs
      @FredBTs Před 5 lety

      ‘Ridley369 The “S” at the end of a word is often pronounced as a “Z” but I’ve never heard anyone say “Briztol “ maybe “Brissle”. Somerset and Devon have {to me} a very different accent and use “Z” more. I’ve never heard anyone say “seb’n” or “Deb’n”. Have you been to the West Country?

  • @supernova6015
    @supernova6015 Před 4 lety

    Me,a Bristolian who don’t sound like it ~ 👁👄👁

  • @ihavenocockandimustcream
    @ihavenocockandimustcream Před 6 měsíci

    i live in bristol and i always get asked where I'm from bc of my accent [im polish but i sound vaguely american/irish/australian for some reason], i'm here to try n learn to mask it better because it gets annoyin havin ta explain it all the time