Tell us your accent
 

  You don't need to be an 'investor' to invest in Singletrack: 6 days left: 95% of target - Find out more

[Closed] Tell us your accent

167 Posts
132 Users
0 Reactions
363 Views
Posts: 17273
Free Member
 

....and then she saw your shoes and the spell was broken 🙂


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 11:10 am
Posts: 28680
Full Member
 

Scouser, but after 20+ years down in Berks, it's a lot softer than a proper one.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 11:11 am
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

Cougar - Moderator
Nah, then we'd just argue about whether it was a real accent or just a dialect with a lid.

😆


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 11:16 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

New potatoes in flour?

Raw potatoes would've been better but yeah, LOLZ reading that. 🙂

As Yak, really - southern nothingness. Even the little bit of Berkshire R has gone nowadays.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 11:17 am
Posts: 7169
Full Member
 

I grew up in Surrey, and haven't moved far. Accent is standard SE nothingness.

I can do a fair line in West Country drawl since my folks moved down there but that's just for taking the piss.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 11:25 am
Posts: 77347
Free Member
 

Americans melt at the sound.

Get away from the tourist areas and pretty much any British accent will do that. In Orlando no-one bats an eyelid; in Hicksville, Kentucky I've literally had jaws drop.

It's kind of weird, it felt a bit like being a rock star. It actually got a bit wearing after a while, everyone wants to know all about you and exactly where you're from (despite invariably having minimal knowledge of non-US Geography). I sussed the answer to this in the end. I tried "near Blackburn" (back when they were top of the Premiership and I figured reasonably well known) - nothing. "Near Manchester" - nope. "Near Liverpool" - "aah, Liverpool, the Beatles!!" Everyone knows and loves Liverpool (even if they couldn't find it on a map if their lives depended on it).


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 11:27 am
Posts: 17273
Free Member
 

Interesting that many of the folks from the South don't perceive themselves as having any accent at all.

You really do.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 11:31 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Born in North West Durham and lived half my life there ..a bit in the middle where I moved into Mackem territory for a while ( thankfully that didn't effect anything ) ..last 20 years in Noth West Nothumberland ..(but my Dad has lived here since 1969.)
So pretty mixed up ..kinda Geordie lite.. 😀


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 11:33 am
Posts: 5182
Free Member
 


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 11:33 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Interesting that many of the folks from the South don't perceive themselves as having any accent at all.

You really do.

Agreed, but it covers such a wide area that it becomes difficult to pinpoint exactly where in the south you hail from.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 11:33 am
Posts: 17273
Free Member
 

Get away from the tourist areas and pretty much any British accent will do that.

Unless you're Scottish, in which case, before they melt, you need to endure a twenty minute explantion of their "Scotch-Irish" ancestry before they ask if you might have heard of their great-great-great -great- uncle Willie McDonald from Skye.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 11:34 am
Posts: 1497
Full Member
 

Spent my whole life not moving more than about 30 miles so fairly broad Doric. Kids all speak "properly" as the wife says as we stay in what is basically a commuter town for Aberdeen so lots of different accents


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 11:44 am
 ctk
Posts: 1811
Free Member
 

Proper Caaardiff like, I'm from Basra innit. (sad but true)


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 11:44 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Faded Dumfriesshire (Annan). I've lived in Edinburgh for 22 years and needed to make myself understood to these well-spoken types (without ridicule) so dropped some of the more specialist tones/ language but retained the inescapable vocal indicator of a Dumfriessian upbringing: that a word with "ou" in the middle requires a "w" sound when spoken:

Pound = "Pouwnd"
Round = "Rouwnd".

Anyone from the area can spot a fellow Dumfriessian even when in disguised accent from that vowel pronounciation!

And I still use the term "coupit ewe*" Ewe being pronounced "yeouwe"! Meaning a tipped over sheep. As in

"Ah tripped ower that kerb when I was pished the ither night and was lying in in the street like a cowpit yeouwe". A cowpit yeouwe is the rural Dumfriessian's worst nightmare, I rescued many as a youngster.

And "shan" in Edinburgh is used interchangeably with shame but in Dumfriesshire a "shan" is an embarrassment.

"Ma mam keeps wearin' that aul'shell suit top when she gans shoppin, it's a total shan".

Which could also be said as "ma mam aie ways shans us up when she gans shoppin in her aul' shell suit top"

I love accents and dialects. 🙂


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 11:49 am
Posts: 5182
Free Member
 

Forgot to say, if yow wotch tharold bleck countray pubs videeyur on yow chewub (the one worropowstid) - switch them captions on iss a good loff ayet!? (LOFFOL!)

(them compyowters n thet, they cor gerret royet)


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 11:50 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I love Yam Yams (Wolverhampton?) too.

And worked in Shropshire for a few months and was more than impressed with their language of Salopian and took massive offense when someone said to me "how bist thou jockey lad?" thinking they were ripping me for being Scots. Not realising jockey was a term for mate. 😀


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 11:54 am
Posts: 17273
Free Member
 

And I still use the term "coupit ewe*"

I actually said that this morning in reference to our puppy who was lying sleeping in the middle of the floor on her back with four feet in the air and her tongue hanging out. 🙂


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 11:54 am
Posts: 8819
Full Member
 

As close to no accent as I can get, but most people would probably label it as generic southern England.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 11:55 am
Posts: 4166
Free Member
 

educated northern, I guess, probably identifiable as just about yorkshire. It's what I was brought up speaking and I was given a hard time at school for being posh. Many years elsewhere inc 14 of London didn't do that much to it, except of course when giving directions in the street ("yeah mate, you wanna do a left dahn there init!"), that still kicks in when I'm down there, which I often am. In London I was often told I spoke like a northerner but now I'm back with no accent...


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 12:02 pm
Posts: 4331
Full Member
 

North West Cumbrian. But not Maryport/Workington.

I've been accused of being Geordie and Scottish too.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 12:07 pm
Posts: 444
Free Member
 

queensferry with a twist of leith...

very scottish and sweary


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 12:08 pm
Posts: 19914
Free Member
 

I’m common coal mining north Notts. There’s no Hs where I come from - I went to school in ‘Ucknall - and there’s a lot of slang -
Gioore scrattin!
‘E c**t stop a pig inna gennel
Oo worra wi? Worra wi me mam or worra wi mesen?
Etc

I’ve lived Hampshire for over 25 years though and my brother reckons I’ve picked up some southern (I do say ‘laatte’) but we’re moving to Sheffield next month so I’ll probably revert to type in about a week..... 🙂


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 12:16 pm
Posts: 3831
Free Member
 

Glaswegian, which tends to become thicker the further I get away from home? Depending on where I find myself it can have a Dowanhill slant or a Blackhill inflection.

I work in Stirling, eh? Never ceases to amaze me, they all talk like there in a different planet, ken. It's only 20 mins from Glasgow.

Without a doubt whilst traveling up the Uists on my bike, the people there and their accents are the best bar none. Thoroughly charming.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 12:30 pm
Posts: 3300
Full Member
 

fairly neutral from spending time in the smoke, light worcestershire/herefordshire with the odd bit of black country and cornish and a very subtle hint occasionally of posh glasgow.

when in cider country though, i'm a hobbit.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 12:36 pm
Posts: 34376
Full Member
 

nice one Malvern, what a great little film. Thanks for posting


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 12:48 pm
Posts: 632
Free Member
 

Yorkshire/Barry Island/Warwickshire combination. I just sound like a farmer.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 12:49 pm
Posts: 2091
Full Member
 

Manx, a proper one yessir, not the sort that sounds more like a Scouser. Cav, for example.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 1:02 pm
Posts: 1298
Free Member
 

Originally from Motherwell here too, but my accent's pretty much standard-issue soft West of Scotland.

Not sure I could explain the difference between a Glasgow and Lanarkshire accent, but I reckon I could distinguish between them in a "Pepsi-Challenge" type scenario.

Feeling very nostalgic at the mention of Gowky. Witnessed a fantastic duel between two guys there, one armed with a butcher knife, the other with a tiny milk-pan.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 1:05 pm
Posts: 17273
Free Member
 

Witnessed a fantastic duel between two guys there, one armed with a butcher knife, the other with a tiny milk-pan.

😆

I think i might have witnessed the rematch where an unarmed man was repeatedly stabbed with a madeira cake.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 1:07 pm
Posts: 21016
Full Member
 

Mostly

[img] [/img]

Slightly softened by 20 years amongst yonners, but still there.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 1:07 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

pyoor workin class ruggie/glezga south east. I suspect half of you would struggle to understand me! 😆


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 1:11 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Not sure I could explain the difference between a Glasgow and Lanarkshire accent, but I reckon I could distinguish between them in a "Pepsi-Challenge" type scenario.

further east you get from motherwell the more chookterish it gets, you really start to tell the difference when you hear the differences in the words glezga/glezgy. cheeri-o/cheerie. When you start hearing the latter is where banjo sales start to increase exponentially! 😆


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 1:15 pm
Posts: 77347
Free Member
 

Speaking of dialects, I posted this a couple of years back. I'll unlock the thread if anyone wants to have a go.

http://singletrackmag.com/forum/topic/prabux-imbux


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 1:29 pm
Posts: 2258
Full Member
 

North Leeds tempered by living in Bristol for over 20 years - fortunately I haven't picked up any Bristolian inflections.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 1:33 pm
Posts: 806
Free Member
 

Luton, softened after 8 years in Bristol but not picked up any accent from down here.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 1:38 pm
Posts: 5182
Free Member
 

fairly neutral from spending time in the smoke, light worcestershire/herefordshire with the odd bit of black country and cornish and a very subtle hint occasionally of posh [s]Glasgow[/s].

You're me and I claim my foihverr!


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 1:47 pm
Posts: 7270
Free Member
 

I was once told I had a strong hampshire accent by someone who has no idea where i was from (they were correct). which is kind of bizarre as i didnt know hampshire had an accent (its a massive and varied county after all), let alone it could be strong.

Good god man, one of our greatest judges, Lord Denning, and one of the greatest voices to grace our airwaves, John Arlott, possessed fine Hampshire accents.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 1:52 pm
Posts: 14233
Free Member
 

Ive been asked by if I was Edinburgh born and raised on three occasions this month. I put it down the them being from the west coast.

Theoretically, I should be a mix of rural Norfolk and rural Northamptonshire.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 2:22 pm
Posts: 56564
Full Member
 

A great comment on regional accents

If you've not read it then Pies and Prejudice by Stuart Marconi is a great read about why northern towns so geographically close have such wildly different dialects

My dad is from Leigh. When him and his old mates get together over a few beers they might as well be speaking Urdu, it's that incomprehensible

He spent a lot of time working in France and speaks the language fluently, but there is truly nothing funnier than hearing my dad launch into fluent conversational French in a broad Leigh accent 😆


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 2:25 pm
Posts: 1310
Free Member
 

Like others a bit of a mongrel. Born in Nottinghamshire, moved to Yorkshire until I was 18, then went to uni in 'ull, then lived in Brighton for 3 years and now lived in Sunderland for 8 years.

So it's mainly Yorkshire with a bit of Mackem/Geordie thrown in. If I got back home for a day or so though I go full Yorkshire and start dropping h's left right and centre. Does my other half head in as she can't understand anything. We told her we were going to the 'arbour bar down Scarborough seafront, to her it sounded like a Moroccan souk. It most definitely is not that.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 2:36 pm
Posts: 91000
Free Member
 

I'm a mix of generic/southern, Welsh and Herefordshire, but lots of people say I sound a bit Welsh even when I don't think I do.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 2:40 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I was brought up in a council scheme in Glasgow, but my mum thought she was posh as she'd moved out of he singleend in Maryhill. So she always made sure we spoke properly. I went to school with a bunch of neds and my dad was in the police, as you can imagine I had a tricky time at school.

So anyway 'posh' glaswegian, a hint of ayrshire and as I married a Yorkshire lass then a few yorkshire words in there too. I know that sounds incredibly glamorous 🙂


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 2:43 pm
Posts: 4607
Free Member
Topic starter
 

I'm a mix of generic/southern, Welsh and Herefordshire, but lots of people say I sound a bit Welsh even when I don't think I do.

I was wondering if you were going to weigh-in on this. I find your accent very difficult to pin down, so the fact that you describe it that way makes me feel a bit better.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 2:43 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

'sake, Gowky's could end up with a right bad name if this keeps up.
I mean, it's not the prettiest place in the world but it's no Forgewood.
Did I mention I worked in Ellsmere Port once. That's a wonderful part of the world.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 2:44 pm
Posts: 11937
Free Member
 

NE is has a vast array of accents many within just a few miles.

I have a Darlington accent. It's totally different to a Bishop Auckland or Durham or Teesside or North Yorkshire accent.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 3:02 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Apparently I sound like a Mancunian Wurzel Gummage, 😕 proper Mancunian though, which is a bit more farmyard than the 'eeeearrrrre maaaate' scouse/Liam Gallagher accent..


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 3:10 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Cheltenhamshire born and bred, not as coarse as a Gloucester accent but no where near as thick as a true forester accent.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 3:39 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Finest Sheffield Yorkshire for me, the g.f is German, but spent time in the USA some years back so she speaks English with a US, Yorkshire, Deutsch mix

Which is much better than my attempts with "Sheffield German"

Don't get me started on the Swiss German accent.....


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 4:00 pm
Posts: 986
Full Member
 

Used to be a fairly generic south east ish southern accent but after 6 years in Western Australia i'm told I have picked up a a wee bit of the natives accent. I can't hear it myself and think its just my mates giving me crap.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 4:45 pm
Posts: 10539
Full Member
 

West Cumbria, but try not to use much of the local vernacular. Most people here in Bristol think I sound like a Geordie until I introduce them to my friend Gary who IS a Geordie and they can barely understand a word he says 🙂


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 5:42 pm
Posts: 91000
Free Member
 

I find your accent very difficult to pin down, so the fact that you describe it that way makes me feel a bit better.

I do shift when talking to people though, since I consider you pretty neutral I become more neutral myself.

You only seem neutral to me though because I live with a North American so I am used to it. I'm sure the rest of the forum wouldn't think s0.

I'm not sure I could pick you out as Canadian instead of something like New England with enough confidence to not worry about causing offence...


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 5:48 pm
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

There is a Hampshire accent, you just have to venture into the Downs or the upper Downs to find it. Forget the conurbation that is Sotty/Pompy/Eastleigh/Waterlooville/Winchester because there are a lot of folks from Up Landan way and it’s all sort of mockney with a bit of round tones..
But a true Hampshire accent is something similar to rural Dorset or Wiltshire, a bit colloquial farmer and very rounded with lower registers.. beautiful to hear and surprising too when you are in a Pub in the Downs and someone asks for a Pint and you have to take stock of what you’ve just heard.
Lovely.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 5:51 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

West Cumbria, but try not to use much of the local vernacular. Most people here in Bristol think I sound like a Geordie until I introduce them to my friend Gary who IS a Geordie and they can barely understand a word he says

Fukn ay up marra.

I'm pure Barrovian with a hint of South Cumbrian yacker. Do my best to hide it though.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 5:59 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I've lived in Cheshire and Manchester and have a general northern accent, a bit boring maybe but very different to RP.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 6:02 pm
Posts: 10474
Free Member
 

Merseyside meets Oxford with notes of entitled bellend.


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 6:03 pm
Posts: 2582
Free Member
 

Fife one here and happen to work too,i can always spot a Fifer on radio and it is not a great listen but cross the Tay to the Dundee schemes and it's like being on a different continent you need subtitles if not used to it


 
Posted : 29/09/2017 6:38 pm
Posts: 3131
Free Member
 

I'm going to guess mine is clipped RP with a mass of Scottish idioms thrown in.

Raised in Hertford but have lived in Scotland for almost all of my adult life. The current Hertford accent isn't what it was when I was growing up, now being a definite estuary drawl.

Stirling - the accent changes within a few miles. I lived for 10 years in Fallin, a former mining village to the east, and the accent there was very different to that spoken by my colleagues born and bred in Stirling.

Wifey is from North Ontario. My boys speak with lightly Scottish accents (I think) and they definitely pronounce some words differently to me. Poem being an example.


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 6:15 am
Posts: 60
Free Member
 

25 years of living in Yorkshire but don't think I have picked up the accent but luckily my original Kidderminster accent only comes out when I am drunk!


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 8:34 am
Posts: 151
Free Member
 

Born in Wiltshire had the worzel corrected by my very posh grandmother, then went on to live in various bits of Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Lincolnshire before moving to Sheffield 20 years ago.
I once had a lengthy conversations with a woman and at the end of it she asked me where in the country I was from. She was a professor at the university studying dialects and couldn't place me - I quite like that.

More recently I was told at a party that I had the accent of a middle class girl who'd gone off the rails - that's probably also quite accurate! 😆


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 8:40 am
 lerk
Posts: 185
Free Member
 

Grew up in Derbyshire but within a stones throw of South Yorkshire and Nottinghamshire borders.
More or less sock in between Sheffield, chesterfield and Mansfield.

Therefore I’ve got a real mish mash of Dee-dar, me-duck and Water with an ah.


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 8:47 am
Posts: 1421
Free Member
 

Broad Lancashire, mainly a cross between Chipping and Goosnarian.


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 9:11 am
Posts: 990
Full Member
 

Finnish rally driver.


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 9:42 am
Posts: 1014
Free Member
 

Me earlier on today.... 😉


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 9:44 am
Posts: 130
Free Member
 

South Lancashire,not quite as 'full on' as Johnny Vegas...
People from up the road,Preston think I'm a bit scouse.
When I'm in Yorkshire or East Lancs they often think I'm Scouse.
When I'm in Liverpool they think I'm from Lancashire or Yorkshire.
I've had New Zealander's ask me what part of Scotland I'm from !! 😯


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 9:58 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

east Devon estuary


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 10:18 am
Posts: 11381
Free Member
 

Black Country that’s been beaten out of me by my Geordie Mum and North Yorshirist Dad whilst growing up..... Mixed with a hint of whoever I’m talking to at the time..... it’s annoying and no idea why I do it


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 10:21 am
Posts: 960
Full Member
 

West Yorkshire, with a strong Barnsley flavour which has rubbed off the better half over the past 29 years.
A Polish guy I used to work with in Leeds once told me that I'd got a strong accent. 😀


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 10:38 am
Posts: 1
Free Member
 

posh scouse


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 10:42 am
Posts: 4736
Free Member
 

I have retained my South London accent despite 10 yrs in Liverpool and 25 odd in Scotland.
The Mrs changes accent like I change pants, took her about 3 weeks to get a scouse accent and when she talks to Eastern Europeans its frankly embarrasing, sounds like she's taking the piss.
The weird one tho' is when she gets angry she develops a strong Geordie accent- despite [i]never[/i] having been there.


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 11:11 am
Posts: 1930
Free Member
 

Mancashire but can go full Salford when fuming. In such situations I apparently sound like my dad.


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 12:22 pm
Posts: 2350
Full Member
 

Born and lived in Brum till I was five , moved to small village in Worcestershire , worked in Gloucester for 20+ years -
I guess its a bit sproutyyamyam .


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 1:23 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

A mancashire accent a mixture between Bolton to full on Manc when I'm angry or drunk.


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 5:45 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

transatlantic Bolton toned down through lecturing mangled with Swiss German and Norwegian infections

my old friends from Bolton are ashamed to know me


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 6:11 pm
Posts: 785
Full Member
 

Or right mo mon, ah bin ya.
Black Country born in wall heath and only moved about 5 miles.
On holiday “are you from Birmingham “
"no I'm not from fu%=##g Birmingham “


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 7:08 pm
Posts: 239
Free Member
 

I have a working class London accent, I don’t use the stereotype dialect though lol. If I’m angry I sound like a bank robber apparently...


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 8:15 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Dublin with a hint of cockney and teesside


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 8:43 pm
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

Mix of Wigan / Bolton / manc, depending on where I've spent most time.

Those towns are within 20 miles af each other but the accents really differ.

I went out with a girl from Australia 10 years ago when she was working over here and I developed an Aussie twang....


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 9:46 pm
Posts: 6902
Full Member
 

simmy - Member

Mix of Wigan / Bolton / manc, depending on where I've spent most time.

Those towns are within 20 miles af each other but the accents really differ.

Not really mert, a wool is a wool 🙂 Need to get into Liverpool to hear linguistic distinction.


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 11:24 pm
Posts: 843
Free Member
 

North east London, not quite east London Danny Dyer but not far off.

Missus is from Leeds but has been down here down south for 38 years and has lost most of her Yorkshire accent, if I hear a strong Yorkshire accent come back I'm running for the hills as I know I'm in trouble! 😀


 
Posted : 30/09/2017 11:56 pm
 sbob
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

coolhandluke - Member

posh scouse

Oxymoron.


 
Posted : 01/10/2017 1:50 am
Page 2 / 3

6 DAYS LEFT
We are currently at 95% of our target!