That depends on whether you were raised in the US or the UK.
I'd say it was Midatlantic. More of an American "prep school" accent than a british one.
With lots of practice, yes.
Rob Pattinson has an English accent because he is English but he puts on an americian accent when he is in America cause no one can understand his English one. Or in easier terms, he has a british accent, speaks in either when he wants to depending on the role he is playing.
It is probably because you live in the states now and everyone around you has an American Accent. It is weird for me, because I have a closer British than American accent, and no one I even know has a British accent, so I guess mine is like a freak thing. (and no it is not a lysp or talking difficulty. everyone has actually told me I have a British accent, even British people..)
Yes, she does. She was born in england. On of her parents is british and the other one is indian. In the movie she was able to do an American accent. Hugh Laurie does the same thing on House.
One word: practice. It is usually easier for young people to adopt an American accent. However, it is not impossible for an adult to eventually speak perfect American English with practice. You'll have to make conscious effort, though.
As an American living in London it is quite easy to get a british accent (or fake one) you can either take speech classes with a british teacher or go live in England for a while and see the accent.
No one speaks British. They have a British accent.
Betsy Ross had a touch of a british accent and a southern accent as well
The Boston accent is similar to that of the English accent in London, but the words and dialects are different. It is the same accent that was spoken in Boston during the American Revolutionary War , when Massachusetts was one of the original British Colonies. And, is pretty much still spoken today.
Biscuit That's the only one I can think of, sorry.
If a Chinese speaker learned English from British teachers, an American might listen to him/her and hear some elements of British mixed with some elements of a Chinese accent. If a Chinese (or Mexican, or Russian) learned English from American teachers and then spoke to a Brit, the Birt would likely hear some words and phrases that sounded American, and others that sounded like the speaker's first language.