As is the case in any country, there is no single accent for Ireland. Ireland has many different accents, right down to the various counties. Some of those accents sound very different to each other. A Cork accent is very different to a Sligo accent which is very different to a Dublin accent which is very different to a Monaghan accent and so on. Even within individual counties and cities, there are variations of accents.
Cook was from the North Riding of Yorkshire. He may have sounded like Ser Alliser Thorne from Game of Thrones.
There are many different Irish accents. They are usually just described by the county in Ireland that they are from, so a Limerick accent or a Waterford accent or a Roscommon accent etc.
Apparently they do.The Irish accent was voted the sexiest accent in the world in a survey of over 5,000 women a few months ago,beating the likes of the British and French accents.However,it can be irritating when talking to Americans and they all keep commenting, 'Oh my gaaawd,your accent is so coool'!
A brogue.
any word that starts with W say wah and with the U sound say Yuh and any word like doing is like Duin so like: Wah are yuuh Duin Wuuh aare yuuh Duhin and try to sound hearty and thick and talk about bagpipes muh lad
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.
A heavy ukranian accent will sound russian, a lighter one will sound german.
A German accent is often characterized by precise and guttural sounds, with a tendency to pronounce "th" sounds as "t" or "d". An Irish accent is known for its melodic lilt and variation in vowel sounds, as well as rolling "r" sounds. Both accents can vary depending on the region within each country.
No, i can do a irsh accent and im not Irish
As it is in the middle of Ireland, the people there would have an Irish midlands accent. You would have to hear one to know what it is like.
Depending on context, accent can be translated as:noun:AkzentBetonungDialektBetonungszeichenSchwergewichtSchwerpunktverb:betonenakzentuieren
Cockney
Fair
The Irish accent is generally considered closer to the English accent than the American accent, as both the Irish and English accents belong to the British Isles. However, the Irish accent has distinctive features that set it apart from both the American and English accents.
A broad Irish accent is commonly referred to as a "thick" or "strong" Irish accent. It is characterized by its distinctive pronunciation, intonation, and unique speech patterns.
No.
the Irish accent you here in most films is actually a dublin accent, i come from derry and although the accent has some simalilarities is isn't the same, and it is the same for all the counties, each county has its own accent. and the dublin accents you here on tv are pretty much the same as the natural dublin accent, except the natural accent may be a bit rougher. Whenever I hear a foreign actor doing an Irish actor I recognise it as an Irish accent. However there is not one person in the country who would talk like that. I don't know how you think its a Dublin accent mate. Most Irish accents in movies are bull. They're either a bad Northern Ireland accent on a guy who, predictably, was "in the I.R.A." or a very terrible, barely recognizable Connaught accent, exagerated so it sounds like a leprechaun. IRISH ACCENTS IN MOVIES ARE NOTHING LIKE THE REAL THING. Bear in mind the Beatles. They all had godawful Scouse (Liverpool Irish) accents, but affected "American" accents for vocals and interviews. Then watch "The Commitments"