American learned Indian Accent for the first time! (It is mind blowing!!)

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  • čas přidán 1. 06. 2024
  • So finally we could invite Indian cast !
    Did you want more variety of casts on our channel?
    Leave a comment so we know !
    🇺🇸 Callie
    / calliejo321
    🇮🇳 Seetha
    / sweatha95
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Komentáře • 965

  • @kushildevsharma861
    @kushildevsharma861 Před 2 lety +1267

    I'm from NorthEast India.. And I have to say your demonstration of english pronunciation is completely different from ours.. And it's pretty interesting

    • @no-one3296
      @no-one3296 Před 2 lety +91

      Coz she grew up in Mumbai and now she has been living in S.Korea. don't get fooled by her accent. That's not how a South Indian person would speak in English.

    • @iamyourgodofworld
      @iamyourgodofworld Před 2 lety +37

      @@no-one3296 yeah I'm from West india and 3 of my teachers are from south. So, I know how a south accent sounds like.

    • @Blessheed
      @Blessheed Před 2 lety +7

      I think it isn't just the accent alone but the regional influence, say an MTI and yes, we from the north east side doesn't at all sound anything like her.

    • @nava9754
      @nava9754 Před 2 lety +23

      Our north east Indian accent is different from her south accent ,I am from Assam tho.

    • @sumitabhattacharjee2327
      @sumitabhattacharjee2327 Před 2 lety +1

      So true!

  • @KimTaehyungSsiBTSarmy
    @KimTaehyungSsiBTSarmy Před rokem +833

    World: jokes about indian accent.
    Indian to fellow indians who try to speak like a native english speaker : wHY sO FaKe AcCenT

    • @Johnpranu
      @Johnpranu Před rokem +33

      Fact.

    • @SirinaX
      @SirinaX Před rokem +13

      😂😂😂

    • @hwasahasjiminsjam9065
      @hwasahasjiminsjam9065 Před rokem +14

      Exactly

    • @bukkarayyadu
      @bukkarayyadu Před rokem +16

      Fake accent? have been even to India or still roaming only in villages, there's been lot difference now days..

    • @ryoukwjdbwopqmqpzl73819
      @ryoukwjdbwopqmqpzl73819 Před rokem +22

      People joke a lot about British accent too, but they don't change their accent to appeal others though

  • @harshaillapakurti2073
    @harshaillapakurti2073 Před 2 lety +497

    Sometimes it is difficult for us (Indians) to understand what our fellow Indian has spoken in English. An Indian from our eastern states will pronounce the same word differently than us from South.

    • @mellifluous695
      @mellifluous695 Před rokem +8

      Yes and we Eastern doesn't sound like the mainland or the South and North at all. It's totally different.

    • @vampirehunter9303
      @vampirehunter9303 Před rokem +1

      When you have nest on your head.
      I mean go figure.
      Are you Mexican or African america.
      I am just joking.

    • @songoku-jj2to
      @songoku-jj2to Před rokem +1

      @@mellifluous695 yes we east indian from Bihar Jharkhand chattisgarh sound like mainland north people like up mp ok I think you are from north east not east

    • @manoramamannu235
      @manoramamannu235 Před rokem

      Sometimes ,it is hard to understand our orissa, Bengali, Bihari, Gujrati ,Adivasi
      I bet we have different accent, and sounds..
      Like,
      Gujrati accent is diff from Bengali
      Like one of my friend say tonty (20) instead of twenty

    • @AllhaSuarwala
      @AllhaSuarwala Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@manoramamannu235 hm.. And also it's hard to understand accents of North indian people.. They can't pronounce the sound Wā, Water will be Vater 😂 will be Vil
      And it's Odisha not udisha. always northies mispronounce it. bangalis don't know the difference between Rā and Dā

  • @BharatPremi
    @BharatPremi Před rokem +306

    I am an East Indian, and Seetha's pronunciation is more foriegn to us than Callie's.
    We don't roll our Rs and we don't pronounce Th the way she said, it's only in South India perhaps.

  • @hehehig
    @hehehig Před 2 lety +191

    I'm from South India (Kerala) and even people from the same state as me speaks English differently. Like I used to study in a convent school and they gave huge importance English and pronunciation, tbh it was so *British* . We cut out the 'R's in the end, the 'T' sound is exactly British instead of pronouncing *wa* ter we pronounce it like *wo* ter (of course we cut out the 'r') . I think it depends on which school you study and how much importance the school gives to the pronunciation and stuffs. Later when I started attending another school, it wasn't a convent school but just a normal aided school and some students spoke like how I speak and some students were like so different. Probably because we studied in different schools. And some other things too, like I'm SO good at pronouncing words, it's a given to me (looks like I'm bragging lol). So I can easily switch my English accent since I always watch these American shows, Australian shows, British shows and stuffs. Like I know how the accent works (not completely but I can see the difference). I always watch these videos and shows in CZcams which made my accent change little bit more. Like I mix the Aussie accent, American and British accent while talking. So yeah the school you study and stuffs like that depends, a lot.
    There might be so many typos but I don't wanna read my comment again just to edit those :')

    • @liv295
      @liv295 Před 2 lety +2

      I agree

    • @trishaagz
      @trishaagz Před 2 lety +4

      exactly, I don't think I've ever really heard any Indian person (I'm south and north indian) say "wah- *terr*" like that, it's always "wo-tuh" with more of a "uh" sound from the back of the throat kind of

    • @hehehig
      @hehehig Před 2 lety +1

      @@trishaagz I've heard some of them saying that, actually old generation like my grandma or someone like that. Kids nowadays are more British when it comes to English, it's always been like that but nowadays most of the schools are giving importance to pronunciation

    • @annapoorna1467
      @annapoorna1467 Před rokem +3

      exactly i agree!! (btw im a mallu too!^^)

    • @diverseindia6397
      @diverseindia6397 Před rokem

      You mean *wottah* ?

  • @x-man5452
    @x-man5452 Před rokem +496

    India is like a compilation of atleast 15 different countries with huge diversity in languages, cultures, traditions, food, climates, looks, accents etc.
    Everytime you cross borders between states you feel like you're in another country.

    • @greenpoison9342
      @greenpoison9342 Před rokem

      India Is a Euro Zone.

    • @naveencan7612
      @naveencan7612 Před rokem +15

      Yeah i would say india has diversity as much as the whole continent of Europe

    • @Badmoh._aadmi
      @Badmoh._aadmi Před rokem +8

      Sometime even within the states their is a lot of diversity.
      As I am from Himachal I don't know that people from my neighbouring district speak some different language. I don't know the name

    • @SyedSaifAbbasNaqvi
      @SyedSaifAbbasNaqvi Před rokem +1

      It's like we don't even understand each other half the time. I don't understand any South Indian languages the 4 main once.

    • @naveencan7612
      @naveencan7612 Před rokem +1

      @@SyedSaifAbbasNaqvi considering those are from a completely different language family yeah

  • @pooh9176
    @pooh9176 Před 2 lety +103

    I belong from northeast india and we northeastern mostly prepare british or American accent but it's like going back and forth! and for the record i speak 5 indian official languages maybe 6 if i include my broken tamil 😆 and not to mention in northeast every tribe has it's own mother tongue and most of em are not not even listed in indian constitution* and technically if i include that languages i can literally speak like 8 languages she said it perfectly "it's like battling 8 languages in my head"
    And their is no such thing as indian accent its just made up word..

    • @lilstar3705
      @lilstar3705 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah in south also the new gen prefer to speak in British or American accent

    • @sasmalprasanjit2764
      @sasmalprasanjit2764 Před 2 lety +1

      Lol, Assamese, Nepali language (sikkim) are listed in Official 22 languages of Constitution.. As YOU HAVE mentioned NO NE language is MENTIONED in INDIAN CONSTITUTION.

    • @joyid
      @joyid Před rokem +5

      @@sasmalprasanjit2764 many tribal languages and not listed as official but recognised, still there could be few left which has like really low percentage of speakers. I am from Rabha tribe we have like two different languages very unintelligible to each other but belongs to same Rabha tribe. The language is recognised as single language I think, I mean we have very few speakers now, it's on the verge of extinction, even I had to learn it from books because I was in the Rabha students Union and was curious about my heritage. Being from Assam, dialect of assamese is what we come across, and we identify as Assamese mostly even though we also take pride in our tribal heritage.

    • @joyid
      @joyid Před rokem +3

      Assamese here, 👋🏼😊 my mother tongue is Assamese, tribal language Rongdani Rabha is what I learnt, I also know Bodo which is another tribal language as I am from BTR(Bodoland territorial region) and we have a lot of Bengalis here and a lot of my friend are Bengali so they taught me bengali language and also I listen to a lot of Bengali songs, and read many books in bengali language, Bengali language is lot easy to learn as it's very similar to assamese. I think every assamese understands basic bengali language . Nepali language was fun learning when I was in junior college made a lot of assamese nepali friends there, hindi and english is like most Indian learns at school, through entertainment. So its Assamese, Rongdani Rabha, Bodo, Hindi, Bengali, Nepali, English, total seven.

    • @n_.p
      @n_.p Před rokem +8

      It's so sad that the people in the north east are getting a lot of discriminated by the others. I hope people somehow start using their brain and understand that they are part of the country. It just boils my blood much. Love from Kerala.

  • @KnightWithAnAssaultRifle
    @KnightWithAnAssaultRifle Před 2 lety +89

    As a North Indian I got to know that South Indian English is really different from ours, example thousand, we say 'थ' but she said 'त'

    • @ksrv
      @ksrv Před rokem +6

      "Coz they watch lots of English movies and all of them have friends from the US"
      🤣🤣🤣

    • @imfoive4473
      @imfoive4473 Před rokem +7

      @@ksrv what the heck

    • @ksrv
      @ksrv Před rokem +1

      @@imfoive4473 that's what the indian lady in the video is sayin 😅😅

    • @swapnilchaudhari3796
      @swapnilchaudhari3796 Před rokem +6

      @@ksrv lol complete lie and non-existent assumption.
      No one south indian have friends US and it has nothing to do with region.
      Also Hollywood movies earn more money in south india than in North India.
      South Indian English accent is also worse than North Indian.

    • @wild_sunflower
      @wild_sunflower Před rokem +8

      South Indian accent differs from person to person. It depends on the school you study in. Some schools give more importance to english and most people I know from those schools talks exactly like this. So there's no one type of south indian accent.

  • @STARRYEYED_
    @STARRYEYED_ Před 2 lety +248

    I'm a native South Indian and the reason we roll our rs like RRRa it's because of the more native language, Tamil. Well, atleast from where I'm from. There are two 'r' sounds. One that sounds like ra and another RHa. RHa is more used so anyone that learned how to speak tamil before English they'll definitely have the rolling r.
    FACTS :D

    • @shubhamsinha7
      @shubhamsinha7 Před 2 lety +8

      man you tamil people really roll your tounge .... rrrrrrrr ... from northeast ... we have thick accents here ...

    • @STARRYEYED_
      @STARRYEYED_ Před 2 lety

      @@shubhamsinha7 oh :0

    • @ashaypallav4158
      @ashaypallav4158 Před 2 lety +13

      That's why we made RRR movie 😂

    • @resoxfever5933
      @resoxfever5933 Před rokem

      Try Hindi it get fixed.
      I never use tongue 👅 rr rolling

    • @RPS112k0
      @RPS112k0 Před rokem +7

      @@ashaypallav4158 but that is Telugu movie not tamil

  • @jagatdeuri3261
    @jagatdeuri3261 Před 2 lety +46

    As a Northeast indian. We don't roll the R and the Th sound, we don't prounce it like that.

  • @aaryabhatt9195
    @aaryabhatt9195 Před 2 lety +147

    Actually today I learn about south Indian english...cuz here in north india we usually dont roll our R's a lot 😃

    • @Pluzoel_Dashmi
      @Pluzoel_Dashmi Před 2 lety +14

      Yes we just eat them up or just pronounce just a quite like r sound

    • @xyx1598
      @xyx1598 Před 2 lety +5

      By north you mean where? In himachal pradesh we have our own language which has lot of R's . Our language share more words with sanskrit than hindi.

    • @aaryabhatt9195
      @aaryabhatt9195 Před 2 lety +4

      @@xyx1598 I am from bharatpur rajasthan, well my parents are tough enough so I dont know bharatpuriya or UP one's....just hindi but yeah I can understand them...(kameene dost)😆😅

    • @frustratednoob6186
      @frustratednoob6186 Před 2 lety +3

      punjabis does, and in south kerala is different from tamil and bangalore

    • @aaryabhatt9195
      @aaryabhatt9195 Před 2 lety +2

      @@frustratednoob6186 oh well I have some punjabi friends but they dont do it .....there english is really good maybe they know the difference 🙂😇

  • @user-tx4pq2hn3b
    @user-tx4pq2hn3b Před 2 lety +59

    I'm from Mexico and I had an friend from India and most of the time we used to make fun of us a little because the pronunciations and majority his own one, when he tried to pronunce my name it sounded like a name from India and sometimes was a little hard to understand him by his pronunciation but it was fun to realize another type of culture

    • @MultiSciGeek
      @MultiSciGeek Před rokem +6

      Out of curiosity, what is your name?

  • @ayush2977
    @ayush2977 Před rokem +27

    Being a North Indian, I have noticed that fluent speakers here try to speak in sort of American accent. But when I watch some English content, British accent is what I understand the most despite the fact that I myself never speak or tried to speak or learn British accent.

    • @nagumosdilemma8419
      @nagumosdilemma8419 Před rokem +1

      That's the posh british accent, u hear in content. If u ever hear working class accent of London alone(not even talking of northern accents), u would change your mind.
      Think of accents in Peaky Blinders... Take longer to register in brain than American

    • @moriarty969
      @moriarty969 Před rokem +2

      I think the British accent is more difficult to understand than American accent😅. I'm from Kerala and I can watch American shows, series or contents without subtitles but man,when it's come to British I'm struggling.

    • @skooo7
      @skooo7 Před rokem

      @@moriarty969 Because they f~up
      The local convos are so difficult

  • @SohanDsouza
    @SohanDsouza Před rokem +34

    The swallowing of "e" sound in "camera" in American accent is known as vowel reduction, where unstressed syllables' vowels get weakened into a "neutral vowel" or what is known as a "schwa". English as spoken in native Anglophone countries tends to be spoken stress-timed. Indian languages tend to be spoken syllable-timed, so English in India also ends up being spoken that way. Therefore, Indian accents would render "automatic" as enunciated "awe-toe-mah-tic", while American accounts would render it as "awet'maht'c".

    • @masoncrowley2777
      @masoncrowley2777 Před rokem +1

      Of course, us Americans practically pronounce "T's" as "D's." That is an obvious difference that does not pertain to what your comment focuses on, but I think it is important to mention.

  • @meghana9290
    @meghana9290 Před 2 lety +25

    *Wahh....this is the first i realised that i roll 'R' a lot (I'm a South Indian)😂*

  • @avii377
    @avii377 Před rokem +6

    Next time bring an Indian FROM India

  • @supreethadevarakonda7480
    @supreethadevarakonda7480 Před rokem +20

    ok there needs to be at least about 20 versions of those videos to accurately cover all the English accents that happen in India and she's clearly has a more American touch to her Indian accent than the average Indian English speaker who is really fluent

  • @victorkash4718
    @victorkash4718 Před rokem +22

    this is the first video that i ever saw that truly understands several flavours of "indian accent". There is no one Indian accent becuase accent comes from your native language which India has a ton of. There are so many instances when even Indians have a hard time understanding english accent of people from different regions.

  • @yellowishyoutubechannel3900

    I'm from West India
    I can speak Gujarati, Hindi, Marathi, English
    I know little very little bit of Japanese and trying to learn it
    And I want to learn Sanskrit

    • @StayCurious829
      @StayCurious829 Před rokem

      Bro Most of the Indians can speak minimum 4 languages....like Hindi(1) and English(2) is Mandatory in North and The mother tongue(3) and then the state/regional language(4)

    • @yellowishyoutubechannel3900
      @yellowishyoutubechannel3900 Před rokem +1

      @@StayCurious829 I know I am just telling which I can speak and which I want to learn

    • @earthplanet2239
      @earthplanet2239 Před rokem

      I can speak Hindi, Marathi, english, German, harayanvi and little bit Kannada. most of the Indians knows at least three languages so there is nothing special in it

    • @tyshadonyxs2008
      @tyshadonyxs2008 Před rokem

      @@StayCurious829 its three. Most mother tongues *are* the state language

    • @StayCurious829
      @StayCurious829 Před rokem

      @@tyshadonyxs2008 no bro...I come from Eastern U.P there are several languages(Usually referred as dialects- like Awadhi,Maithili,Bhojpuri,,Braj,etc) are Mother tounge but Hindi is considered state language....so for Me and most people from U.p and Bihar it's 4 languages considering the fact that most people reside in other state's rather than their Home state, that's West Bengal for Me so it's Bengali My 4th language.

  • @nahyd9965
    @nahyd9965 Před rokem +22

    I'm from Assam and been to a Missionary school, and I gotta say how really diff our accents are from the one demonstrated here. Cause in my school we were taught mostly along the British accent and now having watched all the web series and stuff, I've somehow acquired a mixed British- American accent lol so the other girl's accent was a bit more relatable to me tbh

    • @ridaaa5486
      @ridaaa5486 Před rokem +1

      Bruhh fr i've got a British accent too idk where the f it came from we literally speak assamese all the time, I even stopped reading out in class coz Ik I gotta be judged after that as I have started speaking in an accent😭

    • @nahyd9965
      @nahyd9965 Před rokem +1

      @@ridaaa5486 dude same, when I talk to my friends from other states they sometimes legit think I'm faking it, like bruh no that's just how it is😭

    • @ridaaa5486
      @ridaaa5486 Před rokem

      @@nahyd9965 even kids of my own school think I'm faking it🗿

    • @SUDARSHANABORA-kw7mt
      @SUDARSHANABORA-kw7mt Před 5 měsíci

      Same here with me , I'm from Assam too. Most of the time I don't feel like speaking in english as it's hard for Me to speak in a stereotypical Indian accent, but if I speak naturally that'd be a solid reason for some people to judge me. Moreover I never got a chance to speak in english besides speaking to my cousins and some of my friends. The school I went to was an Assamese medium school under govt though but our teachers were skilled and talented in matters of teaching us languages.

  • @Noah_ol11
    @Noah_ol11 Před 2 lety +149

    "I grew up in Dubai" That's normal though , many people from India go to United Arab Emirates 🇮🇳🇦🇪

    • @nitishsaxena1372
      @nitishsaxena1372 Před 2 lety

      There are more immigrants in Dubai than the locals and Indians make up the majority of those immigrants.

    • @gavins.9254
      @gavins.9254 Před 2 lety +4

      going there and growing up there are very different

    • @KPOP-editz
      @KPOP-editz Před 2 lety +2

      Me also ... I am currently in dubai studying in 11th

    • @nikhilreddy8550
      @nikhilreddy8550 Před 2 lety

      If "many" people from India go to UAE, it will sink.🤪

    • @dfguko
      @dfguko Před 2 lety +5

      Indians are everywhere same goes for chinese,vietnamese and filipinos. If you see one of them on the street there are many more somewhere nearby in the Town. 😂😂😂

  • @meekopal2369
    @meekopal2369 Před rokem +3

    the girl with the Indian flag doesn't seem sound an Indian accent. She admitted she grew up in Dubai and she is not the perfect resource person to explain the Indian accent.

  • @bluescarmob
    @bluescarmob Před rokem +2

    Awesome Bosses, please bring back and KEEP this Indian lady

  • @user-zt4ng3yh6v
    @user-zt4ng3yh6v Před 2 lety +24

    I liked this video! I tried to listen more Indian English on CZcams but Seetha really demonstrated the difference in pronunciation.

    • @hammyjammy
      @hammyjammy Před rokem

      but why lol
      or just because it was interesting?

  • @zulfikarasyari3987
    @zulfikarasyari3987 Před 2 lety +3

    Nice to see you again in the show, Callie

  • @onlysecret3337
    @onlysecret3337 Před rokem +10

    every language and it's accent is beautiful in its own way...
    👁👄👁

  • @gazibizi9504
    @gazibizi9504 Před 2 lety +55

    The main difference between North and South Indian accents is that South Accents are singsongy while North Accents are 'not-singsongy' for a lack of a better word. Her accent is a bit a toned down but pretty much okay.

    • @muralikartik6813
      @muralikartik6813 Před 2 lety +5

      @yesn't regular human being test : PASSED

    • @sasmalprasanjit2764
      @sasmalprasanjit2764 Před 2 lety +7

      Wtf is NORTH INDIAN accent? South Indian Accent? And WTF is Even NORTH INDIA?
      .
      Is West India : Guj, Mah, Goan Accent is same as East Indian Bengali, Odia, Jhk?
      .
      In Guj only Gujarati, Kathiywadi, Marwadi, Kaachi, Sindhi, Bhili, Konkani is spoken.. Imagine the Confusion we are having.
      .
      What about North Himalaya State? LADAKHI? KASHMIRI? DOGRI? KUMANO?
      DO you even know there are 465 language in total..

    • @general123ist
      @general123ist Před rokem

      Typical north Indian way of thinking

    • @gazibizi9504
      @gazibizi9504 Před rokem +2

      @@general123ist typical people understand this way

    • @kamilshah8966
      @kamilshah8966 Před rokem

      Well i have met some south indian people and her accent is way different from them.

  • @krishnamohan6831
    @krishnamohan6831 Před rokem +9

    I am from Uttar Pradesh (north India) but I don't speak like that as sitha told about north indian people and north Indian people have also lots of foreigner friends even lots of north Indian people married to foreigners. My English is not perfect because I studied from government school but private school students speak fluent English like sitha speak.

  • @rohanchoudhury8043
    @rohanchoudhury8043 Před rokem +12

    I am from NE India & I must say our English pronunciation though can't be said close to perfect but it is very similar to British English
    Coz our mother tongue is very soft if compared to South Indian languages or Hindi , Punjabi of North India . And we often use to watch Hollywood films unlike many Indians who grew up watching Hindi or South Indian films . So, when we speak English we usually follow the British English accent instead of Indian accent . Although , it can't be said perfect but our English is more similar to British English than Indian version of English
    Since , south Indian languages have strong , heavy pronunciation its natural their English would contain their south Indian heavy accent ...We don't stress on R's as she said in this video

    • @Akramism
      @Akramism Před rokem +2

      It comes down to our native languages' consonants. You heard how he said we use w and v interchangeably? It's because some languages like Tamizh have only one consonant for the w sound. One thing I know for sure is our country is more diverse than Europe and the US and it always is amazing.

  • @tan0.013
    @tan0.013 Před rokem +3

    9:34 true cuz when i speak english like naturally with my friends they are all like what accent that was cuz i watch a lot of english and korean shows or like yt videos and thats what makes my english ( vocabulary ) better than most 😅 im not bragging😅

  • @asifhussain700
    @asifhussain700 Před 2 lety +2

    Although we indiand are adapting to any sort of language nowdays, we can manage to speak in any accent in a second compares to most of people on this planet, on the top of it the only key difference between indian accent and us or uk that we stress on certain words more than any other words like read hard for instance. R we say like Rrr, o like oooo, t like taa, or teee, la like laaa so basically wr make more stress on certain words may be because we used to how our native language hindi we delivers.

  • @gauthamvadlamudi3500
    @gauthamvadlamudi3500 Před 6 měsíci

    Best video online to at at least tries to represent the indian accent very authentically as genuinely as possible at least in her own experience and yet still mentioning that it does very a lot based on different regions of native tongue of the speaker or their background.
    The accent changes within the family, what to speak of different regions and people with different backgrounds.

  • @krishnakarthik9835
    @krishnakarthik9835 Před 2 lety +5

    Awesome conversation 😍😉

  • @adityaprabhakar7368
    @adityaprabhakar7368 Před rokem +10

    You can understand the reason for every English accent if you study the persons native language( especially its consonants and vowels).

  • @rogerspeaisha19
    @rogerspeaisha19 Před 4 měsíci

    Love these accent videos! It’s so interesting hearing different Indian accents. I’m American btw

  • @rudrakshkavari6400
    @rudrakshkavari6400 Před rokem +5

    As an Indian I do agree to some extent to the fact that we pronounce our 'R's slightly more than that in the USA but this was too exaggerated..... I have personally never seen an Indian rolling their 'R's that much

  • @bucketlist7419
    @bucketlist7419 Před rokem +7

    I'm from the Northeast of India, we don't stress the R like that! I haven't heard my friends from the north India speak this way too!

  • @arnabrajdutta4505
    @arnabrajdutta4505 Před 2 lety +3

    An Indian brought up in Dubai teaching Indian English quite ironic. Better bring and compare someone who is a complete Indian who has done graduation or schooling in india itself, there are 2 official language, 22 national languages which are used for local official purpose and over 19500 dialect and over 121 recognised languages spoken. Also we are the inventor of Hinglish which is combination of Hindi and English mixed

  • @shre33
    @shre33 Před rokem

    these two ladies were soo cute

  • @kirtirekhamishra549
    @kirtirekhamishra549 Před rokem +3

    Also the fact that most of the Indian languages have more letters for more sounds than the US, like there is a significant difference between ka and kha. The way Americans prounounce cat is more kinda Khyat with the kha sound while we prounounce it as kyat. Thats because there is no letter kha in English. I may be completely wrong but thats what I think.

  • @off_grid_javelin
    @off_grid_javelin Před rokem +4

    This Indian girl said that the Indian accent shown in big bang theory was north Indian... while the guy is literally named "rajesh ramayan koothrapalli"...
    it can't go more southern than that.
    English accent as well as "grammatics" are much better in north India. Because southis focused most on IT rather than english.

    • @ryoukwjdbwopqmqpzl73819
      @ryoukwjdbwopqmqpzl73819 Před rokem

      She's a Tamil, they can't a lose an opportunity to say dumb shit about North India

  • @arri111993
    @arri111993 Před rokem +5

    Yeah, I say Cam-ra while speaking my sentences in Hindi and English both. It happens most of the times because Indians don't speak only only langauage and likes mixing two langauges. But when I speak with someone in only English I would say "camera" instead... I don't know about South but yeah it is prevalent in NI...

  • @Iwonderhow0
    @Iwonderhow0 Před 5 měsíci

    I really appreciate that they accepted the fact that you can say that whole country speak English words in that particular way that there could be many variations to it according to the region that you can represent a whole country that way

  • @Gadavillers-Panoir
    @Gadavillers-Panoir Před 2 lety +44

    It's interesting that a lot of South Asians who grew up in the Middle East speak with a perfect American accent. I know quite a few Sri Lankans who are the same and who have never even set foot in America.

    • @Gadavillers-Panoir
      @Gadavillers-Panoir Před 2 lety +15

      @nothing nothing actually i don't think it is fake. Being foreign students, they go to international schools in the middle east where i believe a lot of the teachers and pupils are American. So the accent is acquired naturally. Callie even says that Seetha's accent sounds very American.

    • @Gadavillers-Panoir
      @Gadavillers-Panoir Před 2 lety +7

      @nothing nothing but is the accent fake if the only English that you have known since you were born is American English and the person who first taught you English is an American and all your teachers since then are also Americans and the school you've attended is a school run by Americans where most of the pupils are children of Americans stationed in the Middle East. American English will be the only form of English that you know and speak, which is different to trying to learn and imitate the accent as a foreigner.

    • @Gadavillers-Panoir
      @Gadavillers-Panoir Před 2 lety +1

      @nothing nothing oh well. Anyway in Seetha's case her natural accent sounds 100% American. Definitely not Indian.

    • @spilltea4241
      @spilltea4241 Před rokem

      @nothing nothing idk how is that fake
      If u r speaking a second language u r obviously concious about how u r speaking it

    • @spilltea4241
      @spilltea4241 Před rokem +1

      @@Gadavillers-Panoir it doesn't sound American
      But it does sound like what an immigrant wld speak in America.

  • @manishyadav-gr3dj
    @manishyadav-gr3dj Před 2 lety +10

    She exactly looks like my chemistry tution teacher , omg 😮😅😂😂 I'm gonna show her this 😂
    But on the topic , indian accent differs from person to person I think , cuz if I speak with a haryanvi guy .. he's gonna sound different and same with south indian people and northeast indian people🙏

  • @johngalt7159
    @johngalt7159 Před rokem

    Both are gorgeous… ❤

  • @vinaybandi4470
    @vinaybandi4470 Před rokem +2

    She is a non-resident Indian , bring a native Indian to know real Indian accent

  • @bhavna1051
    @bhavna1051 Před rokem +10

    being a south Indian, Andhra ... seetha's representation is so accurate

  • @Hanging_in_there
    @Hanging_in_there Před rokem +10

    India has more than 22 languages and every speaker Of each of them will pronounce English differently...and r is not rolled in North east or west India it's just in south

    • @haarynetha1359
      @haarynetha1359 Před rokem +1

      I have been reading comments saying south Indians roll thier tongues while pronouncing R. Actually not everyone. Maybe In Kerala or TN(because I saw people supporting the above statement). But nor Telugu people(People from andhrapradesh and telangana). we just pronounce in a simplier and easier way. People here see you a bit differently if ya roll ur tongue when pronouncing R (because it is considered abit exaggerating and western kinda pronounciation rather than indian and native ones). I really dont know about kannadigas.

  • @bharathmkulkarni9411
    @bharathmkulkarni9411 Před rokem +2

    As an Indian, I would like to confirm that she is faking it.

  • @MattMorgasmo
    @MattMorgasmo Před rokem +2

    3:35 They Indian way Seetha pronounces the word "twelve" sounds quite Dutch or Low German to me. Very interesting. Maybe it's because of the common Indo-European language roots?

  • @E-hab
    @E-hab Před 2 lety +22

    Pronouncing W as V is a European thing also (in some countries).

    • @dutchgamer842
      @dutchgamer842 Před 2 lety

      No, it's not. It depends on where in Europe.

    • @E-hab
      @E-hab Před 2 lety +1

      @@dutchgamer842
      I didn't mean the whole Europe

    • @nitishsaxena1372
      @nitishsaxena1372 Před 2 lety +7

      It's a German thing for sure but don't know about the rest.

    • @dutchgamer842
      @dutchgamer842 Před 2 lety +2

      @@nitishsaxena1372 I'm from Europe, to us this sounds typical German to do it like this.

    • @jackhammer8343
      @jackhammer8343 Před 2 lety +4

      Specially German

  • @JosephOccenoBFH
    @JosephOccenoBFH Před 2 lety +15

    4:39 Love Callie's try
    on Indian accent 😆

  • @debayondharchowdhury2680

    This Indian doesn't sound much Indian. She sounds more like an American.

  • @msmkp01
    @msmkp01 Před rokem +1

    i work with a LOT of south indians who are tamil, kannadigas and malayalis, or from andhra/telangana and almost none of them sound like Seetha tbh. The hard 'R' of their languages (not just the rolling one) shows up a lot plus almost a cute sing-song way of pronouncing sentences, and emphasis on last letters of words, even consonants (e.g. thousand sounds more like thaaousanduh' for stronger accents, (and same for that 'th' sound with H a lot more pronounced for some indians).). Plus what Callie is sounding like is more middle eastern than indian with those soft 't' sounds, if she hears Seetha and most indians, they pronounce the t and d hard, not soft.

  • @tulyamahamunigotrasya
    @tulyamahamunigotrasya Před rokem +5

    Seetha's English is perfect representation of educated class English from Andhra (Telugu Speakers). I believe it's perfect representation of educated class of all Dravidians. Educated class usually have light mother tongue accent compared to Literate class who have heavy mother tongue accent.

  • @manoj8881
    @manoj8881 Před rokem +5

    I am so happy to hear that you are part malayalee. Because Im from Kerala too...Its not a common thing to see malayalees here and there.. So proud..

    • @hammyjammy
      @hammyjammy Před rokem

      her accent is american

    • @tomorrow.
      @tomorrow. Před rokem

      ​@@hammyjammy so are most NRI malayali's it's very common in Kerala

  • @kimjong-un8462
    @kimjong-un8462 Před rokem +1

    I like her hair ❤️

  • @alphacompany4837
    @alphacompany4837 Před rokem +1

    Finally south India 🇮🇳 is represented! Im from Tamil Nadu too but I don't roll r that much her accent sounds greek English

  • @prasantoraon4540
    @prasantoraon4540 Před 2 lety +3

    Interesting 😆🔥

  • @cerveauy8782
    @cerveauy8782 Před rokem +2

    Literally no one in India calls it the Queen's language 😑🤦

  • @TheSajanGupta
    @TheSajanGupta Před rokem

    Seetha is good, she is smart, fare and fun to listen to

  • @takumatsuchida
    @takumatsuchida Před 2 lety

    Oh I like her outfit, Indian girl.

  • @debraj-kayal
    @debraj-kayal Před rokem +5

    In East India, we talk normally. There is no forced accent. That's flipping it. Maybe we use the American accent sometimes with the British grammar. And as far as I have heard people from South India usually go hard on 'r' sound, but I don't know much about it. I think we have the second highest number of English speakers in the world, may be the first because I am talking about a very old cencus which does not even consider anything other than their mother tongue even if they are English scholars like Dr. Shashi Tharoor.

  • @leeleeneeta
    @leeleeneeta Před rokem +3

    After rolling R, in India, A is also becoming very interesting. For example , older person will pronounce Assam as Aasum but younger generations are pronouncing it as Ae-sum. Nagaland as Naegaland, Shanghai as Shenghai, Kashmir as Kaeshmir.

    • @SkinnyGuyDahn
      @SkinnyGuyDahn Před rokem

      I've heard people pronouncing Assam as A-Sam (Sam is pronounced like the English name Sam)

  • @andrews.y.h.2099
    @andrews.y.h.2099 Před rokem +1

    Callie reminds me of my high scjool English teacher, she is from Baltimore. I don't know where Callie is from, though her accent and way of speaking is just so similar.

  • @hasansameer1235
    @hasansameer1235 Před 8 měsíci

    Seetha's fashion acumen though!

  • @chapterleo8351
    @chapterleo8351 Před 2 lety +5

    If this girl identifies as an “Indian”, then i am Narendra Modi.

    • @nitishsaxena1372
      @nitishsaxena1372 Před 2 lety +8

      I'm sure she has an Indian passport since it's impossible to get the Dubai citizenship and that definitely makes her an Indian.

    • @Sathish_12
      @Sathish_12 Před 2 lety +4

      dolund trump please vijit our contry

    • @ashaypallav4158
      @ashaypallav4158 Před 2 lety +1

      Then I am from Amreeka

    • @general123ist
      @general123ist Před rokem

      Time to blow your little bubble

  • @sigmasingh849
    @sigmasingh849 Před rokem +3

    The amount of different English accents in India is mindboggling

  • @chinninaveen000
    @chinninaveen000 Před rokem +2

    In telugu south indian style we role r's more in daily english. She speaks exact south indian english. Good work seetha.

  • @dwshredder4870
    @dwshredder4870 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Her (Sita's) english similar to South ( i guess she has tamil or malayalam origin), in north and other parts of india we have different accent. There is no such thing as Indian Accent, as our country is so diverse.

  • @thewayiam30vamshi90
    @thewayiam30vamshi90 Před rokem +5

    Not sure about South Indians having a neutral accent unless they are working for a process that requires theme to have an accent neutralization.
    The accent will have strong mother tongue influence. Almost all people from respective states will have some mti, you should rather talk to someone who is from south india itself or north.

  • @Ferdinand..
    @Ferdinand.. Před rokem +3

    This is fake Indian accent and I guess it's because she's actually an American.

  • @WildEastChannel11
    @WildEastChannel11 Před rokem +1

    I want to join this show for once. Try me. I will be brutally honest with all these accents. I have had quite some experience from all parts of india and also living abroad

  • @Aksharaluvsuh
    @Aksharaluvsuh Před rokem

    This woman needs to be back she represented India very good!! Newer ones are just yk those American influenced culture ppl

  • @mercedesbenz3751
    @mercedesbenz3751 Před rokem +5

    There's not a single english accent in india. All people have different accent of english.
    Goddamn we have tremendous diversity even in people's accent🤣

  • @Gizamalukeix
    @Gizamalukeix Před rokem +22

    Indian people speak the words very correctly and without skipping letters. Indian speech is more accurate with the tones and so natural.
    It becomes annoying at times when people do not understand me, but I am speaking perfectly well. But when they speak they think it is just so perfect.

    • @shangsvlog9016
      @shangsvlog9016 Před rokem +4

      Can you pronounce tsunami 😆😆
      dude be like te-su-na-mi "without skipping letters".....
      Anyway i'm from northeast India nagaland and we have a huge different accent and pronunciation from mainlanders India.

    • @msmkp01
      @msmkp01 Před rokem +5

      you don't get to dictate 'correctness' of a foreign language mate. English, when spoken BY english, has so many words missing. You cannot just start to speak them out loud and then call it 'very correctly'. or maybe you are saying things like 'knowledge' while pronouncing the k

    • @sunnyk007
      @sunnyk007 Před 11 měsíci

      @@msmkp01 English itself is a bastardised language that has its roots in the Germanic languages, from which German and Dutch also developed, as well as having many influences from romance languages such as French and Italian.

  • @moonchild6952
    @moonchild6952 Před rokem +2

    As a hollywood movie watcher.. I think many urban Indians now tend to slurr their accent now more leaning towards the Americas. So it becomes very stylish in a way.. I really like how the new gen speaks actually... Esp the Bangaloreans!!

    • @Riya-px9db
      @Riya-px9db Před rokem +2

      Well, this is something that has always been sitting on my throat and you have just phrased it like a beautiful butterfly, much appreciated 👍

  • @subhaschandrabose8454
    @subhaschandrabose8454 Před rokem +1

    Some people in comments cringe me by trying to defend they doesn't have indian accent.listen , having an accent is natural and there is nothing wrong.

  • @prosdontfake2582
    @prosdontfake2582 Před rokem +3

    Being Indian she says mehico? Bruhh its mexxxico

  • @jolik1028
    @jolik1028 Před rokem +7

    Seetha is stunning 🔥

    • @okyt12
      @okyt12 Před rokem

      AISHHA IS RUNNING 🔥

    • @ninjastar4076
      @ninjastar4076 Před rokem +1

      @@okyt12 seetha is the name of the Indian women in this video 🙂

    • @okyt12
      @okyt12 Před rokem +1

      @@ninjastar4076 ok so what...

    • @ninjastar4076
      @ninjastar4076 Před rokem

      @@okyt12 so it has nothing to do with religion

    • @okyt12
      @okyt12 Před rokem

      @@ninjastar4076 when I say about religion?

  • @tarass8737
    @tarass8737 Před rokem +2

    Actually the accent demonstrated on big bang theory was a south indian accent because that's the most familiar to Americans because of the demographic that goes to America majorly, atleast in the time that this stereotypical voice evolved. Also, the actor Kunal Nayyar is south indian, and he plays south indian. The appu accent is also inspired by the southern indian English accent. Its because the languages have a very different tone in the south. A north Indian doesn't sound like that at allllll. A north Indian would sound very different and i can't really compare to any other accent because it's very different and southern indian accent sounds nothing like a Latin American accent, shows how little this woman truly knows about Indian accents. This girl sounds more like a north Indian but a proper north Indian who was raised in india alone would have less of the American accent she has in her speech and it would be slightly slower and the words will be pronounced with a little more enunciation. Although, a Punjabi person who mostly speaks Punjabi and has a strong Punjabi accent will have a very different accent to most other North Indians. The eastern and north east indian accent become very different again. I don't think a person who grew up all over the world but india can really tell you how indians speak.

  • @GCArgentino
    @GCArgentino Před 2 lety +4

    Wish all scammers had that English 🤣

  • @arghyachatterjee3008
    @arghyachatterjee3008 Před rokem +3

    Indian English has several different accents - Each four regions have underlying variations. Simply by listening to the Indian English accent of people, Indians can sometimes predict, which part of India they are from.

    • @beautiful_sky111
      @beautiful_sky111 Před rokem

      Even local dialects get intermingled with English into the accent.

  • @Sillybunnie
    @Sillybunnie Před rokem

    As an northeast indian we have any kinds of accent some have those kinds of a bit latin accents and some american some british and some australian accent for sure, sometimes i make my own english accent and anyways i think that is very true becoz in movies many times when they use english they use it like latin so yea. I really want to go to south indian tho.

  • @rothasaji5623
    @rothasaji5623 Před rokem +1

    As an Indian , I would say Seetha couldn't able to present the real Indian accent , she used more western accent in pronunciations ...

  • @ahamb3948
    @ahamb3948 Před 2 lety +32

    Apu accent is like how South Indian poeple speak ( Tamil person )

    • @no-one3296
      @no-one3296 Před 2 lety +13

      Exactly! This girl Seetha is totally lying.

    • @user-tt8tz8pt5u
      @user-tt8tz8pt5u Před 2 lety +16

      why do we as indians keep throwing our own ppl under the bus? North Indians think south people are the reason of stereotypes and South blames north. Every person is different and they speak different accents, dont classify them as South/ north..

    • @nikhilreddy8550
      @nikhilreddy8550 Před 2 lety +1

      @@user-tt8tz8pt5u Erm, Apu is a Simpsons character.

    • @user-tt8tz8pt5u
      @user-tt8tz8pt5u Před 2 lety +7

      @@nikhilreddy8550 My fault, i was talking about the big bang theory one. Apparently, the voice actor's not even indian. 😒 Tired of stereotypes.

    • @sociallyinept33
      @sociallyinept33 Před 2 lety +3

      @Prajwal Devanga Neither it was north Indian accent north Indian accent is way different

  • @terror10gaming55
    @terror10gaming55 Před rokem +2

    Hate it when someone who's barely lived in India 🇮🇳 represent India in vids💔

  • @lightninggoateditz
    @lightninggoateditz Před rokem +2

    Even I'm Indian I knew how to speak English like a Foreigner just Difference is in flicker the toung

  • @rajdas1201
    @rajdas1201 Před rokem +2

    This Indian girl (or the girl who grew up in Dubai) has no idea of Indian English. She only has a brown skin colour and so is ethnically Indian. But she has not grown up here so she has no idea of Indian English accents. In fact, the other girl says in 02:52 "you sound like you could be from the US..." This shows that basically the brown girl who grew up in Dubai had a strong American accent and I can tell you as an Indian person who happens to teach English at the undergraduate level that she is not an ideal candidate to represent Indian English accent in this video.

  • @knowledgehunter_
    @knowledgehunter_ Před 2 lety +7

    She's right. South Indians do that latin R sometimes, I saw that. But not all Indians as she said.

  • @ohkeydan6357
    @ohkeydan6357 Před 2 lety +17

    Hello world Friends I hope you can make a video comparison between Filipino English ,india english, South African English, malaysia english and other?

  • @karinaTzy
    @karinaTzy Před rokem +1

    Y no one is talking about Indian girl beaty her hair so cool. I love her everything 😍

  • @30-nishidarshan81
    @30-nishidarshan81 Před rokem +2

    I am from north India and we speak different.

  • @realintex
    @realintex Před rokem +3

    Nobody in India talks like that.

  • @entrepreneurmindset6378
    @entrepreneurmindset6378 Před 2 lety +3

    Which English is spoken the most in the whole world? British English or American English? Please reply 🙏🙏🙏🙏

    • @scientificagent
      @scientificagent Před rokem

      British in colonial states, American in Other states

    • @general123ist
      @general123ist Před rokem

      In terms of number of speakers, Indian English

  • @lalramzote9839
    @lalramzote9839 Před 2 lety

    Wheel is vill in India, i'm from India too but from north-east india, i have many problem in south india accent.

  • @p1ngh
    @p1ngh Před rokem

    Omg Seetha is so beautiful 😮

  • @lydiaschulz1439
    @lydiaschulz1439 Před 2 lety +4

    Grrrrreat Video! ♥

  • @kev_naughty
    @kev_naughty Před 2 lety +6

    Thank god Callie is not from calfornia, else she would've to introduce "Hi I am the Callie from the Valley" 🤣

    • @hiranwijeratne9686
      @hiranwijeratne9686 Před rokem +1

      If u meant the valley accent from "Callie from the Valley", then, a valley accent is way better than any stereotypical Indian accent I have heard my friends from India speak, to me. Besides, Seetha's accent here is unique and close to an American one. So everybody could understand it easily. Otherwise, it would have been more similar to the one shown in the clip from the Friends and also would have needed a lot of repeating. So pls don't laugh at any accent. Valley accent is the easiest to understand to someone generally because they kinda drawl a lot. However, It all depends on the person. Someone more familiar with a strong Indian accent might like people with an accent closer to an Indian one. Thanks.