Not to be rude @Brum, but I find myself laughing every time I hear them snubbing you.
That's cool, I aim to please!
Not to be rude @Brum, but I find myself laughing every time I hear them snubbing you.
That's not an accent, that's a speech impediment.Here's a proper accent for you, Somerset!
That's not an accent, that's a speech impediment.![]()
I say this with slight apprehension... I am from Somerset, but in no way have an accent like that!Here's a proper accent for you, Somerset!
Most people that have an accent believe they don't.I say this with slight apprehension... I am from Somerset, but in no way have an accent like that!Most people from Somerset don't even have the typical "Somerset" accent... Haha!
Admittedly there aren't many people left with that strong Somerset accent and there is a growing number of people with a sort of general southern accent but its certainly not the case that most people from Somerset don't have an accent, I don't think you can appreciate how strong the accent sounds unless you're from out of the areaI say this with slight apprehension... I am from Somerset, but in no way have an accent like that!Most people from Somerset don't even have the typical "Somerset" accent... Haha!
its certainly not the case that most people from Somerset don't have an accent, I don't think you can appreciate how strong the accent sounds unless you're from out of the area
I'm afraid I disagree, people sound proper rural to me. I do think that an expansion of the middle classes and a reduction in traditional working class occupations has watered-down the accent some what.
Up that to half in the summer haha! Many of our family friends are from Birmingham and moved down here the 90's so their accents have dulled a little.Ahh, didn't mention that. I've heard that a third of the population of Burnham are from Birmingham.
My accent is similar to Woody Harelson.
Coming from South Australia (the only Australian state not settled by convicts! *), we tend to have a very English accent - much more so than people from other states where Strine tends to be stronger.
When travelling in the United States, I was asked frequently whether I was English, to the point where I would make a point of greeting people "G'day mate, 'owzit gowin' ?" to try and give people a hint before they made an assumption.
(* - although ironically, my mother's family is directly descended from a 1788 First Fleet convict and my Grandmother and her family moved from Sydney to regional South Australia in the 1950s - while my father's side of the family emigrated from Germany to South Australia in the 1840s which was long enough ago that any German influence in accent has been lost, despite every generation marrying Lutherans until my Dad married my Mum!)