Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie
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Regional accents- the last straw.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostMost regional accents blur into other ones. In Rhyl, for example, the Welsh accent is only slight, with a strong does of Scouse. Moving from Liverpool towards Birmingham, the modification of the twang changes very gradually; by the time Brum is reached, the change has not been at all great.
However - visit Southport, where the Scouse accent is quite significant, and travel along the road for a few miles until you reach Ormskirk. Here, you will experience a strong mid-Lancs accent. How can the accent change so suddenly? There's no physical boundary (river or mountain range) between the two.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostAnd then there's all the marked differences in accent separating the now-dormitory towns just north of Manchester such as Bolton, which maybe by consequence don't identify with Manchester in the way that a Croydon resident now thinks of themself as a Londoner.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostI do quite a good Professor Higgins party trick in identifying accents of Greater Manchester, Lancashire and West Yorkshire. I once accurately pinpointed a teacher in Driffield who was born in Delph - a small village.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostShe didn't say, but the old Lancashire/Yorkshire boundary wasn't particularly logical. The Pennine watershed would have been the obvious dividing line.
Dorset nicked Bournemouth off us.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostDorset nicked Bournemouth off us.
Lancashire was reduced to something rather small, losing out to Merseyside, Greater Manchester, Cheshire and Cumbria.
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I may be wrong but I suspect I am one of the few people hereabouts with a distinct regional accent ....
Yet I don't really think I have one it is only when I hear a recording of my voice that I have to accept that I have. I have never thought of myself as a professional Geordie but I suppose I must be, for my sins, a natural one??
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Once they discovered they had in me the best treble voice the school had heard since the 1930s, according to those who claimed to know, I had elocution lessons to rid me of the London accent I never knew I had so I could sing the solo parts in anthems such as "O for the wings of a dove" and play Papageno in the school opera. On leaving school and getting employment I admit to deliberately resuming that accent as I felt more at home with it in the early '60s as a Mod jazzer, also identifying more with my mum's soft Middlesbrough than my north London-born father's attempts to sound like Bertie Wooster: "I say, jolly good", etc.
Originally posted by antongould View PostI may be wrong but I suspect I am one of the few people hereabouts with a distinct regional accent ....
Yet I don't really think I have one it is only when I hear a recording of my voice that I have to accept that I have. I have never thought of myself as a professional Geordie but I suppose I must be, for my sins, a natural one??
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Originally posted by James Wonnacott View PostI was refering to listening to Radio 3 output, not the forum.
I feel I have to saty here if only to remind you that there are those who disagree with you :-)
BUT you still haven't really answered the question?
Saty ?
oooer mrs
n. derived from the Greek word Satyriasis which means uncontrollable sexual desire in a male. Comparable to the female nymphomaniac. The differance being when a female is a nympho she is a slut or a loose woman. When a male is a saty he is merely a player or a gigolo. It does not usually have the same negative connotation as nympho does.
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It’s the last straw because I've been getting more and more fed up with R3 and therefore listening to it less and less.
Putting up with the interminable babble of the announcers with the added irritation of regional accents would finally make me reach for the off switch for the last time.
Not sure what the relevance of "saty oooer mrs" is?I have a medical condition- I am fool intolerant.
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Originally posted by James Wonnacott View PostIt’s the last straw because I've been getting more and more fed up with R3 and therefore listening to it less and less.
Putting up with the interminable babble of the announcers with the added irritation of regional accents would finally make me reach for the off switch for the last time.
Not sure what the relevance of "saty oooer mrs" is?
Many people find RP accents phoney and irritating
saty:
n. derived from the Greek word Satyriasis which means uncontrollable sexual desire in a male. Comparable to the female nymphomaniac. The differance being when a female is a nympho she is a slut or a loose woman. When a male is a saty he is merely a player or a gigolo. It does not usually have the same negative connotation as nympho does.Last edited by MrGongGong; 04-10-15, 12:20.
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