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Are you able to hear the different English accents?


Roger5 1 | 1,448
29 Sep 2017 #91
Just having fun, Z.
Atch 22 | 4,125
29 Sep 2017 #92
"a ole Scott"

I think that would be Maf's second category of Scots which I suppose is really a dialect of Old English and is spoken in Lowland Scotland.
mafketis 37 | 10,894
29 Sep 2017 #93
which I suppose is really a dialect of Old English

Judge fer yoreselfie, lassieroo!

youtube.com/watch?v=vRnQ8lYcvFU

I can just about follow the general drift but when he starts listing words I have no idea what most of them might be
Lyzko 45 | 9,420
29 Sep 2017 #94
Northumbrian does, at least did, until recently (perhaps changed with the advent of social media) pronounce "there" as "thar" and evidenced numerous vestigial elements of much older English.
Ironside 53 | 12,424
29 Sep 2017 #95
So to which group would you assign that "a ole Scott" language mentioned by Irony?

Why don;t you ask me or consult wiki?Why are u asking those little p..., they are low key engliush tichurs and their English is only ;just' better than mine if at all lol!

I mean lowland Scotch - a r u not shamfully c..less for someone that profess a kin interes in linguistics? That what I would call irony.
rozumiemnic 8 | 3,862
29 Sep 2017 #96
lowland Scotch

lol is that like Bells? or more upmarket like Glenmorangie?
Lyzko 45 | 9,420
30 Sep 2017 #97
Glaswegians have an almost American-style "flat" 'a'-sound as in their pronunciation of "past", "half" etc., haven't they?


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