Since I have so many Brits and UK types in one place, I was wondering if you all could classify or tell me the names of the different British accents.
I think most in the States could be grouped by region and then each region divided into regular folks and folks with cash.
For instance in theStates, you basically have North East which is can be characterized by your classic New York or Boston accents. Your long o's are very long, "what are yoooo dooooooooin". When you say "car" you say "cah". A northeasterner with cash most likely will talk like a Kennedy.
Southern accents have several variations based on geography. I think one of the peculiarities is that southerners tend to add syllables to some words, "Matthew" would be pronounced "Matth-a-yew". Some words have vowels removed.
Midwesterners probably have the least interesting accent. You mostly get the distinctions when you go to certain geographic areas. Wisconsin, great north types tend to say the "th" sound as "t" at end of words and 'd' at the beginning. Chicago types have a peculiar way of pronouncing the short 'o'. "Mom" is pronounced as almost as "mam".
California West coast types tend to sound more like stoned midwesterners. For instance "mom" is pronounced more like "mawm".
So explain the different Brit/UK type accents to we "proudly-ignorant-of-other-people's-culture" Yank types.
(and I don't want to hear any crap from the various Yankee accents nitpicking my description. Get a life. Learn to masterbate. Something. This thread is not worth your time to nitpick. It was barely worth my time to write!!!)