That's a good way. You could also do what Sidney Poitier did and study British films and recordings to master the accent.
He speaks English, with a Scottish accent, because he's from Scotland. When he starred in Doctor Who, in the episodes he used his English accent.
Exactly the same as in English. Only accent differs.
Only if you start living there as a child.
Sólo means "only" in English. Without the accent, "solo", it means "alone" or "single".
No.No.Accents are acquired from those who are around us most. You can pick up an accent any time in your life after you have learned to speak. As anyone who has been in the Army can attest, accents come and go depending on whom you are around and what parts of the world you find yourself. Move to the American south and you will likely pick up a southern accent. Germans I knew who learned English from Brits spoke with a British accent but an underlying German accent as well. So, in answer to your question, you would not likely have a Belgian accent unless you picked it up from your Belgian-speaking parents, and yes, you would have an accent that corresponded to the region of the US to which you had moved.
You pronounce it the same way in french as you do in english, only with a french accent.
With an English accent, the only letter in "Impulse" that isn't clearly pronounced is the E.
i do not think there is no difference because grammar is grammar the only difference in accent
The name Harry is pronounced the same in Hebrew as it is in English, only with an Israeli accent.
With an English accent, the only letter in "Impulse" that isn't clearly pronounced is the E.
The British English way of the past tense word learn is learnt. The American English way of the past tense word learn is learned. "Learnt" is more used in UK and Canada while "Learned" is more used in USA In addition, either term can be used as an adjective ("the learnt material" vs "the learned material") following the same rules. Also, there is a 2 syllable word, learnéd (though the accent on the e has been more or less completely dropped since the advent of modern English, meaning you'll only see the accent in Shakespeare's works and that of his contemporaries or predecessors). "Learnéd" (pronounced learn-ed) is an adjective meaning that the subject has done a lot of learning. It is more or less synonymous with "wise."
English is a language used by business. It also has many great authors that have written in English from Shakespeare to Mark Twain. Learning English in England will give you a British accent. So the only disadvantage is if you wanted a job on American television, where they want an American midwest accent.