Want this question answered?
Some people from rural areas of Illinois might have a slight country accent, but overall, Illinois is diverse and accents can vary depending on the region. Areas in southern Illinois might have accents similar to neighboring southern states, while northern Illinois accents may align more with the Midwest.
The word you are looking for is "accent."
Yes, not only compared to how other countries (Brittan, Ireland) talk, but how the whole country talks. For instance, people in New York and people in Louisiana or Texas, even I, as a Nevadan, have a slight accent like how I pronounce crayon CRAN, accents are everywere, not many people talk the same.
To talk with a Jersey accent, try emphasizing the "r" sound and using a slightly faster pace of speech. You can also incorporate New Jersey slang terms and phrases into your conversation to fully embrace the accent. Practice listening to native speakers to better understand the nuances of the accent.
If it is a distinctive pronunciation, it would be called an accent. If it is a distinctive vocabulary and grammar, is would be called a dialect.
Some people from rural areas of Illinois might have a slight country accent, but overall, Illinois is diverse and accents can vary depending on the region. Areas in southern Illinois might have accents similar to neighboring southern states, while northern Illinois accents may align more with the Midwest.
in Canada people talk English and with a accent
You can get lessons to learn to talk without an accent. Or you can make the accent part of your character.
With a British accent.
With Russian accent.
If they can talk with a GOOD British accent.
English but with a diffrent accent.
Nope :)
because, if they talk with a southern north American accent and act as such, they just are
Yes, not only compared to how other countries (Brittan, Ireland) talk, but how the whole country talks. For instance, people in New York and people in Louisiana or Texas, even I, as a Nevadan, have a slight accent like how I pronounce crayon CRAN, accents are everywere, not many people talk the same.
The word you are looking for is "accent."
A black person's accent depends on where they learned to talk. If they learned to talk in England, they might have a British accent. If they learned to talk in Nigeria, they might have a Hausa accent or a Yoruba accent, etc. depending on which Nigerian languge they learned. If they learned to talk in the southern US, they might have a southern accent.