nerdylightbulb
hey, youngblood.
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2007
- Messages
- 15,746
Caps, ok. Well you said British and British includes people with stong Scottish accents and the Queen. And I highly doubt anyone could think a proper posh accent sounds the same as a strong Northern one, no matter what country they're from. Where are you getting your ideas of English accents from anyway? Because TV would use the same generic accent anyway.ENGLISH, not UK-ish. I mean accents within England/Britain, whatever it's called. Not including Wales, Ireland, etc. All ENGLISH accents sound the same to me.
I think you're immitating somebody...![]()
Caps, ok. Well you said British and British includes people with stong Scottish accents and the Queen. And I highly doubt anyone could think a proper posh accent sounds the same as a strong Northern one, no matter what country they're from. Where are you getting your ideas of English accents from anyway? Because TV would use the same generic accent anyway.
So if you have only heard one or two different types of English accents you can't really say they all sound the same..?Sorry, I enjoy using caps. When I say British I mean just England, I should have specified, I guess... And I'm sorry, I've never been to England. I've only talked to an English person once before in my life. I don't know anything about England... I honestly couldn't name a city besides London. We don't learn about England in school, and we definitely don't learn about the different types of English accents. Yes, TV is the place I've heard these accents on.
So if you have only heard one or two different types of English accents you can't really say they all sound the same..?
For Easter, instead of candy we're allowed to ask for stuff like giftcards.
My brother can't eat dairy and I can't have a lot of sugar so this works out better.