Maybe it comes from their ancestral home! I'd love to hear a cow with a British accent.
Some think its to do with the fact that cows have accents. So if they come from the north they would have a lower pitched moo. But most say it depends on the breed. Some cows are a lot more bulky whereas others are not so.
There are many very different US accents and there are also many very different Irish accents. They would be all very different, so would not sound like each other.
It's possible, but it's much harder to tell than it is with humans.
The British accents are spelled the same as American accents. The New England accents are spelled different than American accents.
First of all, there are many Scottish accents that are very different to each other and there are also many Irish accents that are very different to each other. It would impossible and only a matter of opinion at to which of these many accents is the coolest, so there is no answer to the question.
No they do not. There are many accents all around Ireland which are very different. Different parts of the Northern Ireland have very different accents. Different parts of the Republic of Ireland also have very different accents. So no matter where you are in Ireland, accents will sound very different.
That is a difficult question to answer, without being able to hear the accents. There are many different accents in Northern Ireland. There are hard accents and soft accents. Accents differ in different places, even in local areas. There are also different ways of speaking, and words used in different parts of Northern Ireland, which is also a factor. You really have to hear an accent and the way people speak and the words they use to notice differences.
coltish people have Scottish accents; garlic people have Irish accents
There are a few varieties of British accents similar to American accents it depends on the region where the person is from. Some of which include Liverpool and Manchester.
I read in a book on the English language that southern accents are an off-shoot of African accents. When the slave owners kids would play with the slaves kids they would pick up their African accents. This eventually evolved into the southern accents that you uhear today.
People in the south of Ireland have different accents. There is not one single accent. Like anywhere in the world, different areas have different accents, even when those areas are close together. So there are lots of different accents in the south of Ireland, depending on where exactly you are.
Yes, people in Minnesota can have a distinct accent known as the "Minnesota accent" which is characterized by elongated vowels and certain speech patterns. However, not everyone in Minnesota speaks with this accent as there is regional variation within the state.