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The way people speak based on their culture and geographical location is called dialect. For example, most people in the United States speak English, but people from the Boston area, or people from the South, or people from Montana all have a reputation for speaking differently or with an accent. The difference in the way they pronounce certain terms, or the fact that they have different colloquial terms for certain things, is known as their dialect.
An accent specific to a region, sometimes so pronounced as to have a name. In England recognised accents include Cornish, Devon, West Country, London, Birmingham (brummie), Black Country (yamyam), Liverpool (scouse), Lancashire Mill Towns, Yorkshire, Newcastle (geordie), Cumbrian and so forth. People from any of these areas will have strong accents which are not readily understood by people from another area.
La exhalacion (accent on final 'o', which is also the primary accent)
Every place has an accent if you're not from that place.
You must mean French accent. Yes, voilàrequires an accent grave above the a.
The dominant language in Liverpool is English. Scouse, which is a distinct accent and dialect of English, is also commonly spoken by people in Liverpool.
If you mean Eliza Doolittle from My Fair Lady, she has a Cockney accent but it is an accent and not a dialect.
A few synonyms for dialect are accent, lingo, and vocabulary.
It is a slight mix between a cockney accent, a southern Scottish accent, and an Irish accent attributed because of the Liverpudlian ports. They adopted different accents, with a different accent on their own.
accent. idiom.
scouse
Obviously, yes; he was from Liverpool, A Northern City in England, Great Britain. He spoke with an English dialect known as 'Scouse', which is native to Liverpool and its surrounding areas. While the other Beatles had/have seemingly contrasting voices, they too were from Liverpool and all of their speech is Scouse. Due to the nature of its history, the diversity of accents and dialects in Great Britain is surprisingly huge. There is no single "British accent" in reality.
American English is considered a dialect of the English language, as it shares a common linguistic foundation with British English but also has distinct vocabulary, pronunciation, and grammar features that set it apart.
You can only learn an accent by listening to someone speak in that accent. In the case of Liverpool, the Beatles were from Liverpool and spoke with lovely Liverpool accents; listen to interviews of John Lennon and Paul McCartney.
Accents are relative things. To have a "Japanese" accent you have to be speaking a language other then Japanese. Japanese speaking characters can have an American accent or a Korean accent, or a dialect within Japanese like an Osakan accent or a Tokyo accent (assuming the intended audience isn't in Osaka or Tokyo). Generally Japanese shows do cast Japanese voice actors, however.
A "dialect" is simply the form of a language spoken in a certain place. For example, the Southern dialect of English (Howdy, y'all) or the Brooklyn dialect (Fugghedaboutit!). Can be compared to accent, although an accent is explicitly the result of learning multiple languages and a dialect is simply the way everyone around speaks.
An accent refers to the way specific sounds are pronounced within a language, whereas a dialect encompasses variations in vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation that distinguish one group of speakers from another within the same language. In short, an accent is a distinctive pronunciation, while a dialect includes variations in broader linguistic features.