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Does the UK have its own language?

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39 messages over 5 pages: 1 2 3 4
akprocks
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United States
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 Message 33 of 39
20 December 2012 at 10:30pm | IP Logged 
I've heard that American English is staying more conservative while British English is undergoing rapid change. Anybody care to elaborate?
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FELlX
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Groupie
France
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 Message 34 of 39
02 January 2013 at 2:14pm | IP Logged 
Camundonguinho wrote:
British pop singers sing in American English ;)
I've never heard /ˈɛvrɪbɒdi dɑːns/ in a pop song.
:)


Murder on the dancefloor ['dɑːnsflɔː] — Sophie Ellis-Bextor

You should also listen to other bands such as Texas, The Cure...
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Camundonguinho
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 Message 35 of 39
03 January 2013 at 1:42am | IP Logged 
Sophie is an exception to the rule.
Her pronunciation was parodied in the UK as ''Murder on Zidane's floor''
Furthermore, she's not a good example because she talk-sings. If someone is actually singing (like Spice Girls or Adele) instead of Keshaing/rapping, you can only hear their "pop accent." which is American for 99% of UK pop artists.
Like once Oasis sang: [ænd æftɚ ɑ:l jɚ maɪ wʌndɚwɑ:l ].


Cherlyl Cole's Geordie accent was voted the sexiest British accent last year,
but she does not use it in her songs.
She was banned from the American idol because of her accent.
She refused to put on an American accent in speech.

Vernon Kay has had better luck, but still:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-1332335/Skating -With-The-Stars-Vernon-Kays-accent-causes-problem-viewers.ht ml

''Skating With The Stars viewers struggle to understand Vernon Kay's northern accent as he tries to crack America''




Edited by Camundonguinho on 03 January 2013 at 5:02am

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TobaccoSmoke
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England
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 Message 36 of 39
03 January 2013 at 2:07am | IP Logged 
It seems only British English accent that Americans are prepared to listen to is RP. Any other British accent is just regarded as obscure and frankly unintelligible.

I guess this is for two reasons, one, the only British accent most Americans will have ever heard is RP, courtesy of actors like Hugh Grant and Colin Firth.

Secondly, regional accents are heard much less on American TV than British TV. In America, broadcasters, regardless of their regional accent are expected to speak with a General American accent.

British TV on the other hand seems to encourage its broadcasters to speak with their regional accents, which is not really compatible with the ethos of American broadcasting.

Basically, to most Americans, RP IS British English. Any other accent just sounds non-native to their ears.

The only other regional British English accent that most Americans are aware of is Cockney, although, usually only through some Dick Van Dyke-esque interpretation of it and not through ever actually hearing it spoken by a native.

Edited by TobaccoSmoke on 03 January 2013 at 2:15am

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Camundonguinho
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 Message 37 of 39
03 January 2013 at 2:55am | IP Logged 
Nah, I think it's because in popular movies like H. Potter or Lord of the Rings...
the most used (if not the only one used) British accent is RP.
If characters of the Harry Potter and LOTR franchises spoke with a broad London accent, or with a Bristol accent (similar to that of Vicky Pollard),
people all around the world would be more familiar with nonRP accents...

Edited by Camundonguinho on 03 January 2013 at 2:59am

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vonPeterhof
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 Message 38 of 39
03 January 2013 at 8:29am | IP Logged 
TobaccoSmoke wrote:
British TV on the other hand seems to encourage its broadcasters to speak with their regional accents, which is not really compatible with the ethos of American broadcasting.
This wasn't the case a couple of decades ago - there's a reason why the RP accent used to be called "BBC English". The idea that people with a higher education, including newscasters, are supposed to sound like they come from nowhere in particular, i.e. speak with a RP accent, didn't start dying out until around the Fifties, and the Beeb took a little longer to catch up. A "democratizaiton" like this could happen in U.S. broadcasting, but I don't find it very likely. Unlike RP, the General American accent wasn't based on the historical speech of the country's elite; it seems like it was from its very beginning a phenomenon of the mass media.
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beano
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 Message 39 of 39
03 January 2013 at 10:08am | IP Logged 
When I was a small boy, my parents took us on holiday to a caravan park in the north of England. My brother
and I started kicking a ball around and two local lads came over to join in. I genuinely had no idea what these
boys were saying as I'd never heard a Geordie accent in my life before, despite living just 150 miles up the
road. You didn't hear thick regional accents on kids TV back then, not northern ones at any rate.

Of course, a native speaker can tune into a strange accent after a while, but initially I was completely baffled.
So I'm not surprised that American TV audiences found Cheryl Cole hard to understand. But there has to be
give and take on both sides.


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