Listen carefully and imitate the speech of native speakers around you. Take an accent improvement class. Practice. Give it time.
Speak English (or any other language) at a very early age, or converse often in English (and other languages). Some people born outside of an English speaking country can lose their native accent if they speak English often, while some cannot lose it. For some Chinese people losing their accent will be easy, but for others it will be difficult.
It is possible to lose or modify your accent after living in a different region for an extended period of time. However, some aspects of your accent may still persist. Surrounding yourself with people who speak with a different accent and consciously working on modifying your own speech can help in this process.
Losing an accent can vary greatly depending on the individual, their language learning experience, and daily practice. It can take several months to years to reduce or modify an accent significantly, but complete accent elimination may require consistent effort and professional assistance. Practice and exposure to the target language or accent are key factors in accent modification.
The poem DE would lose its intended meaning and impact without the accent because the accent is an integral part of the poem's structure and pronunciation. It is likely that the accent is used to convey a specific rhythm, emphasis, or cultural context that would be lost if it were removed from the poem.
c lose the trunk replace the latch I did and solved my problem
The word for "accent" in French is "accent."
Aside from a documented but extremely rare form of brain injury or medical condition, humans gain or lose accents according to their environment. People learn to speak the language of those around them from birth, and will pick up other languages or accents according to their social environment throughout their lives. Some will retain their birth accent even after living since childhood in an area where the same language is spoken with a totally different accent; others will quickly lose that accent and adopt that of the area they live. Even so, the person considered to have retained their original accent might still, on returning to their birthplace, be assumed to come from another area altogether. Our instinct is to be as similar to those around us as possible; we are a communal animal. Therefore, we will make an effort, even if unconsciously, to speed up our adoption of the accent of the region we are living in. Our adoption of the accent of a new place of residence, though, will be slowed if we are living or spending a lot of time with others from our original homeland.
the Southern Accent
possibly an English accent
It doesn't. A Glasgow accent is totally different from a 'Geordie' accent.
Russian accent is slavic based, Romanian accent is Latin based
I like your accent! This color will accent that color.