While recording and listening to yourself may help you change your accent, surrounding yourself with others who speak with a different accent will likely help you stick with another accent for a longer period of time. Before you intentionally change your accent, realize that it's part of your culture and many people like to listen to accents.
Yiddish has many accents, depending on country of origin. In order to learn an accent, the best method is to listen to native speakers carefully.
Having a proper accent coach or Speech-Language Pathologist will be ideal in this situation. They can listen to your speech, assess the differences in the sounds, grammar, and coach you how to change it. This requires a lot of practice and awareness. I am a Speech-Language Pathologist, and I have worked with people who want to change their accents.
No. It is worth noting that Ireland has many accents, so there is no single Irish accent. Accents in the west of Ireland are very different than those in the east etc. Wherever you go in Ireland you will find different accents. To hear Irish accents, try looking at videos or listening to Irish radio stations. Many broadcast on the internet.
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.
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.
Ireland, like any country, has many different accents. So there is no one way of saying it. You would just have to listen to different accents to see hear how they would be said. You cannot really type out an accent phonetically.
Yeah! He is British. He was born in Redditch, UK. February 1st 1994.
You may be thinking of syncopation, but it is a little unclear from the question. Syncopated rhythms are ones that have beats in unexpected places. In a standard 4/4 piece, the accents will usually be on the first and third beats, with the first beat having a more pronounced accent. In a 3/4 piece, the accent will usually be on the first beat. If you diverge from this very general rule and put strong accents on other beats, or on fractions of beats, you are creating syncopated rhythms, which are very exciting and enjoyable to play and to listen to.
Putting on an accent means speaking in or imitating an accent you do not normally speak. Actors or singers may take on an accent appropriate to a character or the background of a song. And someone might also take on a different accent to deceive--pretend to be from a different place, either for the purpose of fraud or simply entertainment. The first thing I would do if I wanted to put on a different accent is listen to samples. Thiese are fairly easy to find on Youtube. If you want to be really proficcient, get a person familiar with the desired accent to coach you, listen to your attempts, and give feedback.
'Scouse' is the name for the accent spoken by those who live in Liverpool. At one time it was almost a dialect with lots of local words. It tends to be much less broad than it was fifty years ago, as we all are exposed to different accents through the media. I can only hear my own when I listen to a recording.
The Armagh accent in Northern Ireland is part of the broader Northern Irish accent, which is characterized by its distinctive intonation, vowel sounds, and rhythm. The Armagh accent may have features such as the pronunciation of the "r" sound, the use of diphthongs, and specific lexical variations unique to the region. It is important to note that accents can vary greatly even within a small geographic area, so individual speakers may exhibit different characteristics within the Armagh accent.
To speak with a Yiddish accent, you can focus on pronouncing certain sounds differently, like emphasizing the "ch" sound (more like clearing your throat), adding a bit of a "d" sound after words ending in "t" or "s," and drawing out vowel sounds. Listening to native Yiddish speakers can also help you mimic the accent more accurately.