Yorkshire Accent - Learn English Like A Native
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- Äas pĆidĂĄn 1. 05. 2024
- Yorkshire Accent - Learn English like a native.
Loren, a native Yorkshire lass, joins Anna English to explore the features of a Yorkshire accent and to offer some insight into some common Yorkshire dialect words. Interested to know the meaning of "Ee by gum" or curious to hear if Yorkshire-men actually call each other 'Duck'? Watch this tutorial to find out.
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Now that I listen to it yeah she sound like she saying fluffin about
Would I say wot are u on about then? Luv
Hahaha, Yorkshire accents can differ by postcode
Exactly. Leeds and Bradford are different yet they practically run into each other.
By Karachi postcodes
Yeah, I came here expecting Mel B, Lena Headey accent and this wasn't it lol.
aye up mate how ya doin i'm wearin a flat cap will wachin this wish is coool cause i'm from souath yorrksher
@@leedsman54 Sheffield, Wakey, Barnsley, and all the smaller towns and villages in between!
I'm here because of " car ont' road "
Haha! Me too!
SAME LMAO
LOL me too!!
'ere, surely :)
I thought I was the only one, lol.
I'm from the US and find the Yorkshire accents delightful. Don't ever lose them. â„ïž
Don't be fooled. Wait for the slang, Then This will be another language.
As a Yorkshire las myself I have to say she does have a Yorkshire accent but Redcar is proper high up so she definitely has a Geordie accent in there too especially when she says like, alright, hot ect.. the accents do change depending on which part your from.. Strongest Yorkshire accent tends to be more South Yorkshire.
She's not a good example of a Yorkshire accent , Barnsley accent is proper Yorkshire đ
1000%â@@mariaellender6014
Just as strong in North and West Yorks, but the are different from each other.
aye go to Barnsley and that is completley different.
this yorkshire woman's really charming.seems really down to earth.
She is lovely. :)
English Like A Native Lovely? Donâ ya mean luvlay? đ. Either way she is totally that đ
Aye, she's lovely đ
More like complete users.
she doesnt talk like a proper yorkshire lass
Had to think of Louis the whole time.đ
And I know who you mean instantly. \o/
Heâs the reason Iâm watching thisđđ
Samee
@@xRainbowCloud RP:Horrible
Louis: orrible
Despite speaking fluent American English I'm gonna start binge watching English tutorials because of how interesting they are
no one :
literally no one :
the comment section :
"who's here because louis tomlinson?"
@xwinniez louis tomlinson was one direction member! he's the one who is from doncaster, south yorkshire. and that's make a lot of ppl wanna know more about yorkshire accent. i'm one of their amazing fan btw!
@xwinniez yeaa
Omg yes
Tom Nook
@@wasabbie OMGG
A man goes to the vet because his cat is poorly. The vet says "Is it a tom?" and the man says "Nay lad, 'ah've got it 'ere in t'basket!"
Haha luv it.
I've never heard that one before, but it didn't half tickle me. Our accent is the best for taking the mick.
đ
I guto fut of are stairs...
British Scorpionđđ
Most people: come here to learn accents for plays or just for fun
Me: supposed to be learning a southern English accent but learning a northern one because I want to sound like Louis Tomlinson
Edit: Literally made this comment over a year ago and Iâm still getting notifs- why-
sameeeeee i was lookung for this
saame
LITERALLY ME,,,IM EVEN FROM ASIA
I'm here because I was reading Secret garden.
LITERALLY ME AHSH
I'm French and here just to hear the melody of Yorkshire accent that reminds great travel backpacking memories and people âșïž interesting language diversity too đđŒ
I'm here because I want to understand Louis Tomlinson's interviews and bc I want to have his accent đđđ»
Having a Yorkshire accent will just make ye friends look at you mad if your aren't from Yorkshire.
@eshal khan well are ur parents from Yorkshire
Me too
STOP SAME
same
Just put Louis Tomlinson speaking đ€Łđ
LMAOO
*oi ! Lest you forget ! Recall that im the beast of birkenhead !* đč
I was reading a book and the main character has a Yorkshire accent and I want to be able to read it with the proper accent, if you know what I mean. Which is why I went looking for something like this. This video was really informative and it turns out I was reading in the complete wrong accent. Thanks!
What book is it?
@@bradcogan8588 Christina Lauren
Same
I came here because I want to read The Secret Garden out loud properly xD
@@eclecticdog2k901 samee
My mother was from Middlesbrough, and whenever I hear the accent it reminds me of her, my aunts, and my godmother. Something about the accent just makes me feel like i'm home. It's so inviting and friendly, even when they're giving you a hard time. :D
I'm actually from Redcar, it's great to see a video talking about my accent :D
Middlesbrough is not yorkshire, I think belong to CREVELAND so is Hartlepool and the ĂĄrea !!
but lovely place be side the river tees which they have tyne tees TV. from Spain regards.
đȘđŠđ
@@jaimevallespons1381 Middlesborough is in the Historical county of Yorkshire. Cleveland is a newly created district named after the Cleveland Hills in North Yorkshire.
Iâm not from the UK but lived in Scotland for a couple years. One thing that fascinated me is how in England, the closer you get to Scotland the more the Scots accent kind of slowly creeps into the language. At least thatâs what it sounds like to foreign ears when listening to Northern English accents, and makes sense geographically. I even understand the slang better since a lot of it is also present in Scotland (definitely have heard âproper chuffedâ a ton). Itâs so cool!
yeah, stuff gets more germanic and less romantic/French the farther ya go, regarding both pronunciation and wording
I'm led to believe that the Yorkshire dialects are very Old Norse influenced where as North of the River Tees going up to the Scottish Borders even Edinburgh, it's more Old English influenced.
Being a Yorky myself who travels to Whitley Bay a lot it interests me how 50 miles from Scarborough, North Yorkshire it starts to become even more Northern English. I think there's quite a difference between Hartlepool and Middlesbrough...also Redcar and Guisborough.
Also the Cumbrian accent comes across as a mix of Yorkshire and Durham Dale's speak.
Itâs not Scottish. Yorkshire is mostly Norse influenced
@@sophiefoster1311 Iâm not saying itâs Scottish. But it sounds more so. There are Norse influences into the Scottish accent as well. It all makes sense geographically, and I think that transition going north into the region is really cool.
Yes thank you it's basically Scottish culture I've been studying the roots my great great great grandmother was from Yorkshire but from the Nicholson Scottish clan
Louis Tomlinson (Doncaster) brought me here.
In my opinion, the Yorkshire accent is the best accent I've ever heard
it's so charming, cute and also sexy af
Love from Sri Lanka (Asian) Xx
Haha same
Aw thanks, you probably couldnât understand half of what I say tho lol
Tbh I do understand it actually đ I'm a massive fan of Louis Tomlinson since 2011 and also a fan of Yungblud plus I have some friends in Donny I speak to :) Your accent! It's really incredible!
Haha thank you Iâm from Yorkshire but sound nothing like this but probs cuz Iâm from Sheffield
Thatâs so cool!Im from Donny as well as Louis and my mum works in that place with his step-dad :)haha
Yeah, not going to lie, I'm only here because of Louis Tomlinson. đ
THE ONLY REASON IM HERE
SAME
Me too howâd you know
i feel you, i feel you lol
I feel attacked
I'm Asian but I'm here because I want to pick up Louis Tomlinson's accent, surprise my friends and start speaking like him all of a sudden
As an exiled Glaswegian Scot living in Iceland this brought back so many fond memories of my late Yorkshire grandmother from Pocklington and how she switched whenever she visited England's greatest (in both senses!) county. Well explained, a good pace, informative and fun.
đŽó §ó ąó „ó źó §ó żâ€ïžđŽó §ó ąó łó Łó Žó żđŹđ§
Great places you have in Scotland mate. Ullapool Inverness wick etc. nc 500 love you people mate
I'll never forget meeting my internet friend in person for the first time. She's a Yorkshire pastry chef. She she was explaining to my young son what she did for a living she said "I mehk the cehks" and I about lost it. I'd never heard anyone pronounce cake and make that way before!
That sounds about proper scouse not yorkshire pud
@@usroye oh? She's from Middlesboro. But her folks are from Lancashire and Wexford.
@@PhillipsLacy Hmm, ok. đ
Middlesbrough is north east not yorkshire
@@user-bp1gx3qt3o her house (actually right on the border of the North York Moors Park) is definitely in Yorkshire. I write out the address all the time. I dunno why y'all gotta be extremely pedantic about it.
All you need to get you around Yorkshire, as follah's:
"Owzit goin''" - How is it going/how are you?
"Y'right?" - Are you alright? (covered in this video)
"Sinabit!" - See you in a bit/while!
"Shurrup!" or "Sh'rup!" - Shut up!
"Int ee ovver there" - Isn't he over there?
"Ow much izzit?" - How much does this cost?
"I ampt dun it" - I haven't done it
"Eey, lass/lad, amofta't park!" - Hey female/male, I'm off (going) to the park
"Canya gerrus sum torlet/bog roll?" - Can/could you get me/us some toilet paper? (optional: can pronounce 'roll' like 'doll')
"Izzit just me or izzit 'ot inere?" - Is it just me or is it hot in here?
"Bloody 'ell, it's crackin' t'flags aht there." Bloody hell, it's so hot outside the concrete and walkways are breaking apart.
"Am colder than a witch's tit." - It's extremely cold outside/I'm cold, also, 'Am bloody frozzen."
uhh it seems difficult
Thanks mate
What's tha laikin at? Weir's ta bahn? Tha mun do it thissen. Yoreight? Al sithee.
Say it slowly and then speed up. ;)
'ey, mummey, where's me keks? Jus' seen a huge attercop in't bath. Jus' put wood in't 'ole, laddie. đ€Ł
Owt o' nowt?
As an American from the northern Midwest, I was surprised by some of the similarities in pronunciation with our accent, especially the /ng/ words (we drop the g), /a:/ and /ei/ dipthong. Very interesting series.
When she said the long a sound words individually she almost sounded American
@@stevenkramer6217 or americans sound like her ;)
Michigan here, and itâs very similar. My family comes from apple tree wick Yorkshire.
I feel the same way about the accent comparison. I think there is a possibility that the middle /t/ might go from a /d/ to a glottal pause.
Minneapolis, Minnesota here. We do drop the g in some ing words. A main one would be "coming." Also "doing." But would only drop it in certain types of sentences. "Are you comin with?" "Whatcha doin?" But it also depends on the situation. Most here wouldn't drop the g in a formal setting like at work or school or even with grandparents/relatives, etc. It's informal so would be used with friends or immediate family for the most part.
I only came here to have a strong accent just like Louis Tomlinson. His accent is so attractive and strong that makes me want to learn it toođđđ„ș
My father, who is from northern California and born in the 1920s, used to say "by gum!" I hadn't heard the term in decades. There must have been a strong Yorkshire influence in the rural coastal town he grew up in.
love it when she says "bet put kettle on."
Speaking as a Midwestern American brushing up on dialects
"Eeee........ trouble a' t'mill........ " :)
New Zealander here - I **LOVE** the Yorkshire accent! It's **wonderful** and I hope it carries on for a very long time - I would *hate* to see it fade away!
I'm a Yank and I get a kick out of listening to the Yorkshire farmer characters on old episodes of "All Creatures Great and Small", not only the sound and distinct vocabulary (I esp. like "nowt"), but the dropping of articles "the" and "a/an" is interesting. I confess that sometimes those old "farmers" are hard for me to understand, but that's the beauty of language; there are so many dialects! I also enjoy hearing Derek Jacobi do a Yorkshire dialect in "Last Tango in Halifax", quite different from his Shakespearean roles!
*Louis Tomlinson liked this video*
HAHHAHAHAH
This is far easier on my ears than the standard British accent. I love it!
Woow you are so cute,,,
@@exestusidaudi7385 Why, thank you! đ
You are welcome
You look pretty !
@@aarathibhaskaran7277 Sure i tell you i wish i could see you đ
Yorkshire the biges county of ENGLAND, the land of the White rose đâ€ïž from Spain we LOVE YORKSHIRE đđȘđŠ
I find it amazing how the Yorkshire accent is propagated through many American accents. With many of those accents being quite far from each other(distance), and not thought to be related/blended.
âcar onât roadâ vid brings me here
Same!
Omg same HAHAHA
Omg same đđ
I'm so happy you're doing another accent video!! They are my favourite ones !! It's very helpful!! đŹđ§â€ïž
Thatâs great to hear because I have made 7 more videos for you, they will be released as soon as I finish editing them. :)
definitely, but not because of the way she makes it but because we're in love woth that topic
omg a channel that explains different kinds of English accents you're exactly what I've been looking for!!! English accents are so fascinating bc there's so many in such a tiny area!! And they're so pretty!!
This is wonderful to hear the differences between the two accents! So cute đ
Mother was from Arkansas; I was born and raised in California: "By gum" was used so much that I know what the phrase meant before the explanation. Weird how language is passed down.
I'm from NC and by gum was common among older folks. Heard my grandparents say it.
By gum and Tarrar love would be reasonably common in Australia too. Faffing about would be understood, but possibly, more likely it would be Fluffing about
I pronounce âwaterâ as âwotahâ and my friends laugh at me for it đ
Harry in the profile đ
Bruh the first half of ur sentence i was reading it normally but when i passed reading 'wotah' the rest was read in british accent suddenly lol
"Wotahhh..."
-Bruce Lee
reminded me about "can anyone e're runnin wotah?"
@@lucia5495
oh my god i couldnt wait for someone to see the reference đđ
As an actor this is an amazing resource. Thank you for taking the time to put this together. I am proper chuffed!
The Yorkshire dialect is virtually a language, we have a unique culture and we definitely associate ourselves with the county first. Iâm Yorkshire first then British
Wow.. her accent is awesome. Itâs like a whole new cute language. You both are pretty too
Thank you so much. Which dialect phrase did you like the most, mine is "Ee by gum" lol
English Like A Native the omitted h and t. Ow did i appen. I ope heâs appy a ome. This is so cool, but so confusing to me because Iâm not nativeđâșïž
English Like A Native ooh sorry you meant dialect phrases. Proper chuffed is pretty amazing. Itâs so unusual way to say Iâm excited.
But I have a question for you, please. Isnât dialect and accent the same thing? I mean whatâs the difference?
@@salaheldinelhammady1804 Dialect = word Accent = pronunciation
@@EnglishLikeANative I've seen the other girls channel lucy. I'm a northerner who wants to learn to talk like lucy does or people in south east. I love your Manchester accent btw it's sweet! even though I wish i had a formal british accent definately girls from north seem friendlier just less classy with pronounciation and accent many people dislike that I wish to lose my yorkshire accent I can copy Londoners accents but it's more cockney then rp
I love accents like you, Anna and I also feel tempted to mimic them immediately. Thank you so much for this lovely video and please do more of these.
The thing I notice most about Yorkshire is that they usually drop the "the" in sentences. I have a feeling this goes back to their days as being Jorvik, and having strong Scandiwegian influences in their language, as the Nordics don't have the word "the" in their vocabulary, and instead modify the noun to make it an absolute.
Aye youâre right weâll say âgo t shopâ or âgo shopâ instead of âgo to the shopâ
@@Jack1121_ "gonnat shop" lol
The way Anna moves her hands for the diphthongs and such reminds me of a conductor. This is exactly how I perceive shifts in sounds in other languages!
Thank you Ms. Lauren and Anna. Keeping the tone while working under pressure is something to work on. Always a pleasure, and appreciated.
Love this series where you invite people from all over UK, so we can learn different accents besides RP English, thank u
My paternal Grandmotherâs family came from Yorkshire, and hearing this accent is just awesome. đ„°
Hearing Lorren with her yorkshire accent really warms my heart â€
Yorkshire accent is my favourite!! love from spain x
It is a wonderful accent :)
cheers love
I love Andalusian spanish :)
@@EnglishLikeANative it is literally the worst most annoying accent.
@@chall-us6de listen to jessica barden speak you'll understand lul
There's such a scottish gaelic tone in the yorkshire accent. If Lauren were to come to the Appalachian mountains in the USA where so many Scottish and Northern English settled she would fit right in. North Georgia, East Tennessee and the west Carolinas, get away from the city's the tourist towns and into the rural mountains where my folk are from and find the mountain folk, Lauren would be treated like Royalty.
i believe iâm a bit too obsessed with arctic monkeys at this point
really, love, it's fine
LKKKKKHKDKSJSNZNBSJDHKJKKKK
maybe just a little
I believe I am too with Louis Tomlinson
True, I'm with you girl
I'd been York,North Yorkshire.People always warm and lovely.Miss them and their accent so much.
i am from Yorkshire. You should've gone one further into detail upon the omissions of letters. there are 2 different Yorkshire dialects (i.e) "give over with it" becomes "gi' o'er wi' it", but it is dependent on the context, because....In Yorkshire; "over" can either be "o'er" or "ovver"
Agreed. We use both where I'm from. Poor examples of our language, to be honest.
As an American, I loved Northern England although the farthest north I got was Liverpool. I found the people much friendlier and the beer cheaper than around London.
I have to correct the statement above. I meant Liverpool was the farthest North I have been before Scotland. I'm not counting the Motorway. I forgot that I was in Blackpool but that was just a day shot from where we were staying in Cheshire. This was back in the 90s. Good times!
Being from West Yorkshire where I, my brother and mum (mam) are all from and a dad from Newcastle, I hear both accents coming out from her. The way Loren say's certain things, for instance "Dassn't", "Don't", "Your", "That" and "Like" is just like all my Newcastle family. But a lot of my Yorkshire side don't say it like that. It's beautiful to listen to. Live over in the States now and miss all my fam over there. Great video! Good job both of you!
Iâm from South Yorkshire which has 4 towns and in every single town the accent is completely different in all of them. Even some of the villages inside the different towns have completely different accents to the rest of the same towns. I think the Yorkshire accent is one of the most varied accentâs in the country and I would even go as far to say that my next door neighbours speak completely different to the people in my household. It is such and interesting accent and as much as we try to teach people our accents I donât think we will ever be able to be fully understood. Although itâs very funny and interesting to try and help people understand what Iâm saying. :)
Whereas on this side of the Atlantic, states the size of the UK itself will have a fairly consistent accent. Go anywhere in Oregon and the accent is pretty similar.
Oh aye, with the town I'm from in South Yorkshire I can tell quite easily roughly which part someone else from the same town is from đ€Ł. Even in my village (that I moved to from a different one in the same town age 10) I can pick out how long someone's lived here from their accent, and for people who moved away and back again like me I can tell that too! I do think being born in and living in South Yorkshire my whole life has given me a skill for differentiating accents from all over the world tbh!
And you're very proud of this huh lol
@@DaniCal1forn1a I lived in Castleford but studied/worked/played in Leeds, and consequently have an accent that mixes the two areas, although only locals would recognise that! I refer to myself as a proud Yorkshireman now that I'm living in the greater Europe, just to make it easy for people.
I know what you are talking about. I come from small Slovak region called Horehronie. This region is specific exactly for the same thing. I can tell you every single village in this region is speaks different dialect and has its own cultural habbits and even different religion. This region is so unique that people from neighbouring villages were often fighting or dislike eachothers because of theit differencies. Luckly nowdays lot of people are mixed because young generation seems to doesnÂŽt care about their differencies so itÂŽs peace a quiet there and itÂŽs a very beautiful tourist destination.
The best thing I'm really impressed by is that she is smiling and laughing all the time :) . Hope to get a Yorkshire accent one day. I really love your videos about accents..
I am glad you enjoyed it
Good luck đ. If you're not native it may sound really cringy to Yorkshiremen. Also this girl isn't really massively representative of our accent
If you weren't born and raised in Yorkshire, you're never getting that accent. It's one of those accents people just cannot do, and when they try it sounds painful to those of us who have one naturally. Just, don't do it.
@@xRainbowCloud I'm from Estonia and I have this terrible estonian accent when I speak English lol.
@@xRainbowCloud i agree . im a yorkshire man born and bred and i travel all over England and people try to imitate my accent .. and it sounds nothing like a yorkshire accent
This video was so helpful, I want to be able to speak in a Yorkshire accent and now Iâm reading these comments trying to perfect it!
Yorkshire is such a big county with a variety of accents! In the area of Yorkshire Iâm from, we very rarely pronounce our âTâsâ and our âHâsâ so the lady giving examples in the video has a VERY different Yorkshire accent compared to the part of Yorkshire Iâm from. Itâs like reminding non-Brits that thereâs more British accents than just RP and cockney. Youâve got your Sheffield, your Leeds, your Hull, your Doncaster, your York, your Bradford etc
I can't believe i haven't found this channel sooner! I find the UK incredibly interesting because of the very varied accents found throughout.
Yorkie accent is lovely! I made an London lady laugh one day mimicking it. The various accents are so interesting as they quite clearly show how our own Caribbean accents were developed! Our own local accents come from a mix of Irish, Cornish, southern Welsh and southern American mix.
So there is no African accents in West Indies? Just irish and british?
Please donât mimic us. We get enough of that
It seems like many English that emigrated to America way back when were from Yorkshire. The way she pronounces some words reminds me of folks from Massachusetts, Maine, New York and Canadian English.
I love this. I am learning the accent for my acting course for my production. Really helpfull. Thank you.
this is wonderful, im actually native to The United States, i was reading an audio book w/ some characters from Yorkshire and this helped, thank you.
This is literally well organised.. simply an outstanding work. Well done
This video is amazing, both of you are so nice, it was very entertaining and interesting to watch.
I'm looking forward to watch other videos about accents
Thank you â€ïž
I love the northern accents and could listen to her speak all day and this is coming from someone with a grandmother who grew up in the Three Counties and always has a light accent her family always joked was too posh but who's also grown up hearing the West Midlands and Derbyshire but also daily and how it sounds in a conversational sense.
This is si nerdy. And I have no particular use of this knowledge. Still canât stop watching. Great job !
Yew kneau nooffin, Jon Sneau.
Yer kner nowt Jon Sner.
What an elaborate style to make such a video! Very pleasant and informative, thank you! đ
And what a lovely woman Loren is!
I am from West Yorkshire and hadnât actually heard of maftin. I emigrated to Australia more than fifty years ago and when I first came had quite a strong Yorkshire accent and also spoke very fast so the Aussie friends I made would smile and nod but had no idea what I was talking about. Over the years my accent whilst still a Yorkshire one has âmellowedâ I think because Iâm married to an Aussie. People still say âyouâve still got your accent.â
Lots of lots of love Yorkshire and my teacher English like a native.
Hi Ms. Anna your video is fantastic! Highly recommended your channel to my friends and relatives who needs to learn english. I am lucky I found your CZcams channel. More power and Godbless.
Iâm doing English Language A level and this is really helpful đđđ»
I love the way Tykes say "tha/thee".
I was trying to learn the Yorkshire accent for the role of Dickon in The Secret Garden. This video was a HUGE help thank you so much.
Personally I'm from Doncaster and yes maybe so I don't know what I'm doing here ouo
Another one of my favourite accents
I love laurens spirit đ her expressions are hillariouz
I'm from North East Wales, in my mid 50's, and I grew up using these words - Jammy, faffin', chuffed, butty, ta-ra - and I still use and hear most of them being used, but not so much by the under 40's maybe. This is a great accent vid, thank you.
I have always heard and used "by gum" I am born and raised 8 generations in appling county, Georgia, USA. Actually, I pronounce at least half of the words pin pointed in this video exactly the same way. I've traced my ancestry to Yorkshire, though, which is what led me to this video.
Iâm also from Georgia and Iâve heard a lot of people say âdad gum.â Like, instead of âdamn.â
And I like how she said âgood evening Lorenne speakingâ it sounds like if you were to answer a call at a business or something
My Granny & Grandad emigrated to Australia in 1948, & she would ask for curry powder & no-one could work out what she was asking for as she pronounced curry as kerry. It is a lovely accent â„ïž
I love this accent. It sounds really nice and fun.
I love the accent and the people ! Quite friendly people â€
I'm from West Yorkshire and I feel like we have the strongest Yorkshire accent. To me, when I heard Loren I didn't even think she was from Yorkshire. I think the diversity comes from the large amount of farmland so a lot of Yorkshire is quite sparsely populated (except city's like Leeds and York etc). Very interesting tho, some words we use here are things like chuck the same way you would duck, sithee as well as tarra and also tea cake instead of bun which I heard her use.
I'm from South Yorkshire, and I definitely agree that West Yorkshire has the stronger accents, especially nearing north Yorkshire. And we say teacake here in Barnsley as well, it's so good to finally find someone else who doesn't call it a bread bun or bread roll or whatever ridiculous names they've come up with. XD
@@xRainbowCloud agree, Loren here sounds more north east than Yorkshire to me
For sure! Iâm from South Yorkshire and have family in West Yorkshire and we sound completely different ! Iâm from the farming area and even the Barnsley accent is completely different from mine! (Which is 7 miles away!)
Wouldn't say "stronger", just different. Very different tbf đđ
Same she sounds Lancashire
Thanks so much. I'm in Australia and preparing a monologue about a 17th century cunning-woman so I just need the flavour of a Yorkshire accent. Very helpful and fun!
Iâd love to hear Louis doing those small clips đ
coming from yorkshire is brilliant cause no one can understand u except from a our other lads
i feel like it shunt be that difficult to understand us, i mean same language. I can understand, pretty much every accent fine, even like the toughest to work out Scottish ones
Come to the states and visit the Appalachian area, especially Tennessee. Most will understand you.
I can love the down to earth people say what u see i say heiio love if it looks rainy I'd say looks dark over bills mums house and aye up and hello duck and don't mean to be crude to the If and an buts the word would be if my aunt had balls she would have been my uncle x
@@flightlesslord2688 if you listen carefully you can understand even Scottish accent. Just have to expose yourself to it more.
Yorkshire accents sounds American, and its actually more understandable than any British accent lol
Iâm originally from Poland. Before I came to Sheffield I lived in America, I was fluent in English and reyt proud of myself. 5 minutes after my arrival in Yorkshire Iâve realized Iâm on the different planet and itâs not the language I know. Now 5 years later, I know all dialect and I love using it with my polish accent to make people laugh.
A belated welcome to the insane asylum!
Ope thi like it ere, âad never wanna leave ere. Me sen is from Sheffield.
Lauren is absolutely adorable. This was excellent.
Would love to see a video comparing Yorkshire to Georgie or which features to look at for differentiating between different accents
When mentioning the TV Programmes our regional soap is actually Emmerdale. It's set between Leeds and Harrogate. Which are both urban areas in Yorkshire. Coronation Street is more Lancashire and Manchester. Their accents are slightly different to ours and use words we're not familiar with. Hollyoaks is a mixture of Scouse and the traditional Cheshire accent.
When I read The Secret Garden I was really confused cause Iâve never heard a Yorkshire accent before and didnât know how they sounded like. Thanks for the video!
That's why I'm here too!
Thank you for the fantastic linguistic education. Iâm a Yank who grew up in New York and now live in New MexicoâŠaccents have always fascinated me and itâs interesting to see the different British accents that lend themselves to American English, though we have so many regional and dialectical differences here as well.
Brooklyn New York, and Boston accents always cracks me up too.
This was a well done, useful and interesting video to watch. Thank you
This video is My dream. I love yorkshire accent!! S2
cheers m8... Im from Yorkshire
G'day.
I'm about halfway through your video and I'm loving it.
My wife is from Leeds but we met and live in New Zealand. And she's never been too forthcoming about the dialect of Yorkshire.
So this is a dream come true for me.
I'll probably start calling the her and our kids Duck now.
And I try using some of the phrases too.
Thank you very much!!đ
This is the best language channel ever