No, just most of them
Everyone has a different accent in different countries. England is like America the different places you go you get different accents there not all the same. For instance an individual can have a Essex accent which is different to the London accent. Also, other accents are Lester accent or a Manchester accent a Nottingham accent a Scottish a Welsh accent and a Hull accent.
Correct. The black people in South Africa do not all speak the same language or share the same culture. Just as the white people in South Africa do not all speak the same language or share the same culture. It has nothing to do with black or white.For the languages of South Africa, click here.
We do. Everyone has a different accent according to someone else. Within the US there are many different accents. I live in the south and we have a southern accent. People from the North east have what we down south call a Yankee accent. People from the Midwest have a distinct accent from other parts of the country.
When an accent sounds very unpleasant to people, they might well call it a "noise", it all depends on which accents certain people like to hear and which ones they find unpleasant!For example:folks who speak English with a British accent may sound very pleasant to some people whilst other people may find that same accent very unpleasantfolks who speak English with an American accent may sound very pleasant to some people whilst other people may find that same accent very unpleasantsome native English-speaking people find others who speak English with a French accent very pleasant to listen to whilst other people may find that same accent very unpleasantfolks who speak English with a New York accent may sound very pleasant to some people but at the same time may sound very unpleasant to othersfolks who speak English with a Boston accent may sound very pleasant to some people but at the same time may sound very unpleasant to othersdo you get the idea..?
All of us have an accent. I may feel the general public in Atlanta have an accent, but they feel the same way about me in terms of how I articulate. So they may say to me (coming from the New York Metropolitan area), "ya-all talk funny."
We all speak different and pronounce different. Some People might speak the same but face it we are different. Byee Lol
Yes, it is possible to have the same dialect but a different accent as another person. Dialect refers to the specific words, grammar, and pronunciation used by a group of people from a particular region, while accent refers to the way in which an individual pronounces words. Two people can speak the same dialect but have different accents due to variations in pronunciation, intonation, and speech patterns.
No, people do not have an accent when they cough. Accent refers to the way someone pronounces words and carries a distinct regional or cultural influence. Coughing is a physiological response and does not involve language or speech patterns.
That question is impossible to answer. First of all, there are many accents in Ireland, so there is no such thing as a southern Irish accent. There are lots of very different accents in the south of Ireland. Secondly, you cannot in writing explain an accent. You can only have an idea of an accent by hearing it. You would need to hear a genuine Irish accent, not something in a movie where actors are trying to put on an accent. You can try to tune into some Irish television or radio online or some video websites of genuine Irish people.
That question is impossible to answer. First of all, there are many accents in Ireland, so there is no such thing as a southern Irish accent. There are lots of very different accents in the south of Ireland. Secondly, you cannot in writing explain an accent. You can only have an idea of an accent by hearing it. You would need to hear a genuine Irish accent, not something in a movie where actors are trying to put on an accent. You can try to tune into some Irish television or radio online or some video websites of genuine Irish people.
There are many "English" accents from England. Scots and Welshmen are not from England, so would have their own accents, which again differ from place to place. That said, just as often people from elsewhere often accidentally say "England" when they mean "Britain" and vice versa, an English and British accent is often used to mean the same thing, a relatively posh accent from South-East England.
All of these countries were colonized by British people from different regions of Britain, not to mention to earlier populations and immigrants from other countries. Not all people in Britain speak with the same accent--RP, what most people outside of Britain think of as a "British accent" is actually spoken by a very small number of people. Based on the political and social climate of the British Isles, people from different regions would be more likely to emigrate to one place or another. The English spoken in all of the countries you mentioned was also influenced by the accents of the people who came in from countries other than Britain as they learned English, and you can't discount the words and accents borrowed from the native inhabitants of each of the former British colonies.