It doesn't. A Glasgow accent is totally different from a 'Geordie' accent.
The short answer is...there isn't one! Obviously almost everywhere people speak very slightly different, but there is no particular, known regional accent for Salisbury, such as there is in Manchester or Newcastle. This is largely because Salisbury is a small city!
The A in accent has a short A sound, as in back, and the E has a short E sound (ak-sent).
A heavy ukranian accent will sound russian, a lighter one will sound german.
The accent in "être" goes on the first "e" - étre. This accent, called an acute accent, changes the pronunciation of the letter "e" from a regular "e" sound to an "ay" sound.
The word accent has a short A and a short E.
An accent is basically the sound of a particular word that is said (taken from my Sociolinguistics textbook). Apparently, everyone has an accent.
Cockney
Fair
Depending on context, accent can be translated as:noun:AkzentBetonungDialektBetonungszeichenSchwergewichtSchwerpunktverb:betonenakzentuieren
YES!! definetly yes(: it would sound weired without the accent...and the accent goes in the ''u'' like this: fútbol
The accent in frequencia is on the i. If there is ever anything that ends in "-ia", the i has an accent mark.
An accent is there to change the pronunciation of a letter. an accent that goes up from left to right (acute) makes the word have an 'ay' sound, this accent only works on an e. an accent that goes down from right to left (grave) gives the letter a more rounded sound and works on an a, e, or u.