ONE language, THREE accents : UK vs USA vs AUS English!
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- κ²μμΌ 2021. 07. 03.
- Hi π!!!
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πΊπΈChristina
christinakd...
π¬π§Lauren
/ laurenkatemassey
π¦πΊGrace
grace.is.tr... - μν°ν μΈλ¨ΌνΈ
All these ladies were nice and respectful and fun and interesting...instead of acting as if one accent is better or worse...good job girls!!!
unlike their other American vs British video lol
@@nicolesanchez4229 exactly
@@nicolesanchez4229 very TRUE
@@nicolesanchez4229 Exactly. Christina looks A LOT more comfortable here.
Native speakers don't really care if one accent is better than the other or whatever
I get it.
America: we are sober
Uk: we are lazy
Australia: we have to catch a train
Accurateπ
didnt get it
Iβm not lazy
@@AE-gc3dp donβt take it offensive my guy lol
Yea that's a good conclusion XD
These ladies are my favorite trio, they always seem to have so much fun together πππ
I absolutely love this video! Had so much fun while watching it. Thank you, girls! Kisses from Brazil!
okay time for a comparision between swiss german, german, austrian
they won't be able to communicate though ^^
True German vs Catholic Hillbilly German vs Protestant Hillbilly German
@@Vlog1cal can they communicate using standard German?
@@matreen427 Ja, wenn sie sich MΓΌhe geben. Wenn nicht, dann nicht.
Es gibt schon Unterschiede, ob man "Hochdeutsch" mit ein wenig Dialekt spricht oder seinen Heimatdialekt.
Aber als Muttersprachler hΓΆrt fast immer, wo jemand her kommt.
Yes, if they make an effort. If not then not. There are already differences between speaking "High German" with a little dialect or your home dialect. But as a native speaker, you almost always hear where someone comes from.
Im up for that!! As someome that is from bavaria its so easy to understand austrians but i can imagine if you are from a different part you have a hard time to understand then
In my opinion,
USA = Gorgeous/sexy Accent
UK = Elegant/classy Accent
AUS = Cheerful/innocent Accent
hey lockey
Lemme do it
USA=Gorgeous/sexy Accent
UK=Elegent/classy Accent
AUS=hurry up,WEβVE GOT A TRAIN TO GET TO
@Blue Moan Iβm Irish
@@aynmwaYOUR SPITTING FACTS
agree
Honestly in the US we don't really say "inTerview" it's more "innerview"
speak for yourself lol just saying it like that makes me feel dumb
Well, I've heard most of the people say "innerview", so I was impressed when she didn't say it haha
In the US you're wrong.
There's a T in it just as there's a H in Herb and U in colour.
English is English
I think everyone says it differently
@@dcmastermindfirst9418 Just like the brits say fasta? Idiot. Or Aussies say idearrrrrrrrrrrr
I love this series, I am π¦πΊ and honestly love it seeing the reactions from πΊπΈ and π¬π§ for some of our pronunciations
Hi
Hi, mate
@@Kim2Kim11 Good on ya
American accent- soft
British -Classy
Australia- simple (like who cares about the pronounciation)
We still use correct English
Really enjoyed filming with Lauren and Grace! They make good accent coaches π€£ See you in the next video~ π
Bellaπ
Canβt wait! - Grace π¦πΊ
Omg is that you?
Is it actually you
@@Kate-qe6my noπ
This clip is very wonderful... I felt happy to watch it... For the first time I heard the differences in the English language between the United Kingdom, the United States and Australia...
This clip deserves a million likesπ€©π€©π₯π€ππ»
You can tell they're really having a lot of fun,and so are we,great job!πππ
It would be cool to have a bunch of Americans from different parts of the US to say these words. It would be interesting to hear a southern vs. New York vs. midwest vs. Cali, vs. whomever you get!
Right! Like interview we say it like innerview. We cut out a lot of Ts in Southern California.
krplus.net/bidio/cbmwiaqpl5_WfWk
From the boston area, that would be cool to compare with other parts of the U.S, especially southern
@@Matt-sz4ur Christina, american girl in the video is from Massachusetts. but i am not sure if she's came from Boston
Iβm not sure what kind of accent I have anymore. I was born and raised in NJ for 31 years then moved to SoCal for a couple years now Iβm living in the south east. Iβd guess my native NJ accent sticks out the most.
These girls work so well together and enjoy each others accents. Brilliant!
Thanks so much to this three nice ladies. For an English non-native speaker like me, videos like this help us to improve our listening comprehension and recognize the different varieties of pronunciations ... and they enjoy a lot with the comparison.
As someone who has grown up with entertainment from UK, US and some AU, Iβd find it really interesting if groups of people from different countries spoke certain phrases and these three dissected what similarities they find with their own accent.
Loved filming with Christina and Lauren again π Learning new accents is always fun, and I canβt wait for next time! - Grace π¦πΊπ¦
First comment also hi grace
Music, pictures of women, touching and cuddling of men and women, etc., are not permissible without a legitimate Islamic marriage. May God guide you to Islam
We kind of have more than one accent in Australia, it's just that it's not regional like the US and UK but more about how close to the cities you live and also age. The more rural you go the more you'll hear the stereotypical Aussie accent like Steve Irwin (RIP), and the older someone is can also affect it.
Australian accents make you smile for some reason...makes me want to visit.
Yep. That said, cultural backgrounds also change the Aussie accent in some ppl - e.g. if they're Indigenous, Asian, Mediterranean etc.
I think generally the broader accents are north like Queensland and more UK proper sounding accents in the southern states. Just generally but not everyone. But I agree itβs also broader in country areas and less broad in cities.
One of the most interesting things in the Australian accent, at least to American ears, is the long "o" sound. It's like a trip-thong of three vowel sounds rolled together. It sounds to me like "aou" or "ayow."
There are definitely some regional differences but it's not as pronounced (no pun intended) as in the UK or US. It's mostly a sociolect difference.
Here in Australia I guess youβll hear 3 accents. The best examples I could give is
1. The Cate Blanchett accent (slightly uk influenced)
2. The Steve Irwin/crocodile Dundee accent (the stereotypical Aussie accent lol)
3. Hugh Jackman (which in my opinion is the more common accent I hear here in Aus)
Iβm more of the Hugh Jackman lol but with my own ethnic touch to it. but depending on your ethnic background/cultural background, that could affect your accent too!
So Rusty Crowe grew up in South Sydney and has Kiwi parents. He has a more typical Aussie accent. Where Steve was over the top.
Are you from Australia
Margot Robbie sounds different. Where she is?
I noticed while watching the Australian show, Glitch, a few years ago that the dialects in their part of AU that the 'teens' tended to be pronounced as 'deen,' such as 'thirteen' sounding like 'thirdeen;' 'fourdeen,' etc. It's a lot of fun to recognize some of these patterns and definitely help for prospective voice over work. Thanks for sharing and having a good time as well.
I'd say that Aussies have 3 types of T. First is a light T (like the British woman uses in the video) , and its used immediately after some vowel sounds. Both lit and light use that light T sound. Then there's the thicker T like in water, used after A and E vowels. And then there's the stopped T that is almost a glottal stop rather than being fully said (like in apartment in the video). But I would distinguish between the thicker T and a D, which is heavier still, I think because the tongue hits further back behind the front teeth to make the sound. Whereas for a thicker T, the tongue hits right behind the top teeth. Does that make sense?
Australia broadly has 3 different accents they are usually described as the following: General (Hugh Jackman); Cultivated (Cate Blanchett); & Broad (Mick Dundee/Steve Irwin).
yess
Yeah, she doesn't claim that different accent
I feel like its "Normal" (Jackman), south african sounding (Blanchett) and Bogan ( Irwin/ Dundee), and these days the 4th option of "eshay" that anybody over 25 wants to kill with a hammer
Music, pictures of women, touching and cuddling of men and women, etc., are not permissible without a legitimate Islamic marriage. May God guide you to Islam
Broad is the one people thinks Aussies sounds like
Come to India youβll see all the people here, having their own accent !
Edit: Thank you for the likes
literally
mix of all three..lol
@Ocean Blue how is it even related
@Ocean Blue bruh thatβs just plain out rude Iβm offended as a indian
In india i say mcdonald mackdy
Es muy interesante escuchar los diferentes acentos, sin duda mi favorito es el aussie
Eres de las mΓas xD
Same here π
Aussie accent is easy for foreigners, but when you speak English you match the wrong vowels and it's hard for us until you get experience with our sound.
I love these girls. They were so friendly and iteresting. Thank you girls. Good luckπ
As an American, I never thought I would describe someone as having a heavy American accent, but this person here sure does. So I don't think she 100% represents what we all sound like, but is definitely good for a comparison since her accent is so extreme.
iβm from the east coast so i thought she had a light to average accent π
She has a very East Coast sound to her voice, which she mentions herself. It's the type of accent people abroad hear in our movies.
Most American accents are extreme! Personally I do not like American accent is too much RRR .. is grot . No offence. British accent is clear and nice also Australian is quite cool
@@francescamancini3880 I wouldn't call the British accent exactly clear, the US accent, maybe, the British accent depends on the region, often times it just sounds so gargled to me like they are leaving out half the letters.
@@MrZeev76 well yes u a right . It depend on the region especially the broken English and the northern English is very hard to understand they say something and it sound something else
Even in the US, the pronunciation on things are so different between different states!!
Thereβs also a lot of different dialects in the UK.
krplus.net/bidio/cbmwiaqpl5_WfWk
Exactly!
not really. accents dont follow state borders, they are regional.
@@rbunebula_1551 Nah, some of em are just straight up different language, those thick Irish dialects sounds god awful to my ears.
I am happy that you gave some sentences for the examples, not only single words.
1:45 - Dog! (saying faster)
-We don't have time, we gotta move fast!ππππ€£π€£π€£
Grace looks so friendly and I really love her accent π¦πΊπ₯°
I really like the British accent ... I feel that it is a very clear accent and precise. Greetings from, π·πΊ
Me tooπ₯
Basically the American accent is more clear 'cause they pronounce the "r" more and you can understand better what they're sayin'
@@marakasgiannis no !!! not for me really
Π ΠΌΠ½Π΅ ΡΡΡΡΠΊΠΈΠΉ ΡΠ·ΡΠΊ Π½ΡΠ°Π²ΠΈΡΡΡ :)
ΠΡΠΈΠ²Π΅Ρ ΠΎΡ ΠΠΎΠ»ΡΠΊΠ°!
@@Boguslaw91 ΠΡΠΈΡΠΈΠ½Π° Π½ΠΎΠ²ΠΎΡΡΠ΅ΠΉ
Hi
Salut
Thank you so much for your interesting information.
I like your way of teaching.
Excellent conversation
As an Indian I can say we use mixed accent of all of threeπ€£
Indian bro
The again there r billion of use
Ya, true
π
No one is asking
The new Charlie's Angel line up looks dope.
Me literally at 3am: how did i not see this coming?! π
That's very funny ππ, and informative in the same timeβ€
Greetings from Yemen
This is the only content that I've looked forward to! So appreciate -korean
On the East Coast of the U.S. there numerous accents, and the main ones have fundamental differences. The classic Boston accent has a non-rhotic "r" sound, as does the low-country Carolina accent. New Yorkers also don't heavily pronounce their "r" sounds. All the accents in between, though, have heavily rhotic "r" pronunciation. I come from the mid-Atlantic, where the word "water" is often pronounced "wooder" or "worder." Where I come from, "merry" "Mary" and "marry" sound exactly the same, but farther north they have distinctly different vowel sounds in each word. I can tell when a person is from New York, Boston or Philadelphia, and I can tell which side of Baltimore they come from.
This is a VERY broad generalization of English accents. Iβm glad the English gal mentions that an accent can depend on what region youβre from. This applies to all three nations; itβs not simply East and West (USA) or North and South (UK), there are regional and subcultural accents in any country. Also, Australia DOES have accent variations, perhaps not as many, and not as varied as the US and UK, but it exist.
Christina, the American girl said that first lol
But this accent is the one you hear in movies often then the others.
Music, pictures of women, touching and cuddling of men and women, etc., are not permissible without a legitimate Islamic marriage. May God guide you to Islam
Not to mention Wales and Scotland
Yes Australians does have a few accent variations. Mainly bogan accent and normal Australian accent. Bogan like Warwick Capper. Normal like Hugh Jackman or Malcom Turnbull.
Good and great ladies, may God bless them in every respect
Itβs very interesting when you actually hear those words in different accent. I grew up in Australia and now moved back to Thailand. I always wondered how people can pick my accent as Aussie. Now I know why. Also Aussie we have Outback accent too but not sure if today itβs still around.
I think in India, we go after British for the vocabulary but we go after American for pronounciation. Esp how that East Coast girl sounded, mostly like that. But Indians have different accents of English too. East Coast kind is mostly for North and East Indians.
it's because all the countries ruled under British Empire study the U.K. English curriculum and grow up watching American movies and TV, hence the dual (kind of confusing) English standards developed among us : )
@Blue Moan they both make fun of our accents from what I have seen but now I have an America accent
@Alfred Markovic bold of you to assume all indians eat curry
@Blue Moan Well at present all over the world is like that I think. Even hardcore brits are picking up american vocab due to tv series and filmsπ
The advantage of not have english as a first language is that we can easily understand the different accents with different pronuciations. Just because we don't have to do a specifically accent, but change it or mix all of them together.
Ahaha, you read my thoughts
Music, pictures of women, touching and cuddling of men and women, etc., are not permissible without a legitimate Islamic marriage. May God guide you to Islam
That's true, this is because English actually doesn't have rule regarding their alphabet.
English words basically mix of different languages and then William Shakespeare uniformed it into a language
Thanks, that was great job. And, of course, the girls are lovely)
This is a very useful video .thank you
I'm obsessed with these kind of videos, thanks for uploadingπ₯°
For me is most easy understand the american accent. And the aussie girl spoke really really fast.
For me uk cause i am from uk i have a london accsent
@@musfira2660 For me UK , RP accent it's the most easier
As an Australia, that girl wasn't even going mac speed
@@seedping yep not fast enough
Well, when you have a land that is trying to kill you, you can't stick around for too long.
I'm from South America, and I've now discovered that most of the accent we learn with, is the American.
The British accent could be a quite different sometimes, making it a bit hard for me to understand sometimes.
But I'd like to learn and understand the three accents with no problem π
@english with lucy should join this conversation too! Her accent is loveliest!
Another fun show! Thanks. One thing that I noticed traveling from America (home) to the UK is that many people would say I am going to hospital, or going to university, as opposed to going to THE hospital, or THE university. Or shortened to I'm going to uni. (with no "the" article used) It's just something that always catches me whenever I hear it.
Cristina is very pretty and she dresses very well β€
krplus.net/bidio/cbmwiaqpl5_WfWk
Those three are delightfully funny together!
This is fantastic .im really happy..i think all people are happy because if someone has failed to pronounce certain word in an American accent he/ she would pronounce it in either an English or an Australian accent , for sure.
So everybody be confident and happy for these beautiful girls gave you the secret of don,t be shy .you are correct , whatever !
Australia has about 4-5 accents. Cultivated, Broad, General and various ethnic accents.
The UK and US have a lot of accents too. Pretty cool that there are so many variations of English
there's about 40+ native accents in the uk
Less than the UK and the US.
@@halamadruuid2380 Well yes... those are older countries with more people so that makes sense.
Ethnic is not aussie
I really love these differences videos. Amazing β¨
And I love Christina, she is really sweet.
Was funny!! Thanks girls!! regards from Peru.
Verses battle with the ladies from diffrent countries,,i don belive it. well GOOD JOB!!
The Hello at the starting is like a melody lovely
I got an impression that differences in pronunciation between these countries somewhat characterize and define national character in each country to a certain degree, though so much variations exist even in each country.
Your conversation is really lovely. For italian like me is very fun to learn english in this way. Tanks more girls β€β€β€πππ
So awesome to hear all three side by side. Loved this!!
I really love these three girls and hope to see more series of them!
we need more of these pleaseeeeeeeee.......the trio is best....β€β€β€
I loooove these videos, I'm brazilian and I learned a lot!!!
ν₯λ―Έλ‘κ³ μ¬λ―Έμλ μμ¬μ 컨ν μΈ κ΅°μ κ°μ λλΌμμ μ§μλ§λ€ λ€λ₯Έ λ¨μ΄λ°μ, λ¬Έμ₯ μ°μ λ±λ λ€λ£¨μ΄ μ£Όμλ©΄ μ’κ² μ΅λλ€β
I like how Australians skip most of those nonsense silent sounds and say vowels clearly, when she said zebra, it was literally same like I would say it in my langauge (Czech). :-D
JΓ³, znΓ podobnΔ
Yup Europe approves
Music, pictures of women, touching and cuddling of men and women, etc., are not permissible without a legitimate Islamic marriage. May God guide you to Islam
@@kholodaljafari3850 Sure! ^^
Also there is so many more accents in the UK than just the north and south. Iβm guessing sheβs from the midlands originally. Or possibly somewhere around the Milton Keynes.
Also Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
@@hueypautonoman yeah im scottish and have a Glaswegian accent
I think in another video she says sheβs from Nottingham
And all your accents will be Americanized
@@user-my6he4qu7c Huh? UK English is taught in schools in most countries around the world. It has not been Americanised.
I'm Brazilian and I really enjoyed watching this video... I thought it was cool and fun!
Thanks for sharing π₯°π
Australia definitely has more than one accent I visited there a couple of years ago. Mainly in Alice Springs where my girlfriend lived and then down to Adelaide and all around Victoria Iβve always had a good ear for accents. And could tell differences
in USA the accent changes evert day of driving, AU, it changes every 3 days, the UK it changes every hour
I deal with us customers. And they have over 20 accents only in east.....
Really liked this one! It was so funny to see how they were trying to imitate each otherβs accentsπ
That was very funnyππHope you'll post more videos soon...
as someone whos trying to improve english talk this is so useful, i feel a little less nervous when i need to talk somebody also I can learn different form of saying something and fully understand! thanks girls very funny to watch!
pd: in all the video they mocking the australian girl lmaoo crying
I'm not a native speaker and for me everything is the same, but i hear american variant more often i try to pronounce words with the american accents.
nah i hate the American R sound so much so I prefer to speak with a British accent
I'm from USA but honestly I feel like UK accent sounds cool πΊπ²β€π¬π§
Hello
Got much fun of this conversation
Great. Thank you π
Good luck
You are beautifulπ
I'm from Malaysia and in Malaysia we usually mix the accent between the UK and US (it depends actually but this is what happens in my surroundings). The video is fascinating and I had a lot of fun watching this!
yes agree because high school in here pays more attention to british accent on exam but students are also open to US accents
Nonetheless this ladies are ultimately fascinating and gorgeous too I love them
I'm not from Malaysia, but my accent is also like that. English is my third language and I watch many English content makers from both the USA and the UK, so it's all mixed up.
Thereβs more than one accent in Australia. South Australians tend to be a bit more British sounding and have a posh sounding twinge to their accent.
Queenslanders are more bogan with a stronger accent. And then thereβs the middle ground accent from like vic and nsw.
But Iβll admit the difference would be much more subtle to people who arenβt used to the accent.
What's a bogan
@@stn7172 almost equal to βratchetβ or βghettoβin Australian lol
coming from nsw i find more on the coast we tend to have a bit of an accent more similar to various English accents depending on upbringing but as you head further inland it gets alot broader, though my dad also migrated from England so maybe i've just grown up self conscious the way others and myself pounce words so i could be bias
What about my west Australian or Tasmanian!?
@@stn7172 "bogan"= "bumpkin"
I do love all what you have shared, ladies.
So wonderful by each english of country's
muy divertido y muy educativo , muchas gracias!
Chirstina got my attention..as always..she's so gorgeous!!
It's really fun to watching this π
in Javanese. we have more accents than english accents.. but a very strong accent in java is called medhok. namely the pronunciation of words that are very clear and bold in certain letters such as B, T, G, etc..
Greetings from Java, Indonesia.
Nice content! I like that
A warm hello,
I would like to share the South Indian pronunciation of the many words belonging to the English language.
To begin, immense stress is applied to the letter 'r', when it's ought to be.
Words:
0:47 (Water) - Woteh/Water
1:31 (Dog) - Dog
1:53 (Zebra) - Zebra
2:31 (Apartment) - ApΔαΉmeαΉαΉ/ApΔrαΉmeαΉαΉ
3:07 (Castle) - KΔsal/KyΔsal
3:25 (Banana) - BanΔna
4:17 (Missile) - Mis'sail
5:01 (Modern) - MoαΈren/MoαΈern
5:56 (Little) - LiαΉαΉal
6:11 (Interview) - IαΉαΉarvyΕ«/IαΉαΉehvyΕ«
6:29 (Parking) - PΔrkiαΉ g/PΔkiαΉ g
------------------
Sentences:
6:57 (Water, butter, Harry Potter) - Woteh, baαΉαΉah, hyΔri poαΉeh/Woter, baαΉαΉar, hyΔri poαΉer
7:51 (There are four bottles of water) - DΔr Δr phΕ baαΉΔls of woteh/DΔr Δr phΕr baαΉΔls Δph woter [The rural dialect: DΔr Δr phΕr baαΉΔls Δp vΔαΉar]
8:32 (It's a pity that I can't go to party) - IαΉs a piαΉi dyaαΉ ai kΔnαΉ gΕ αΉu pΔrαΉi/pΔαΉi
8:56 (Can I ask where the hospital is?) - KyΔn ai Δsk vΔh da hospiαΉal Δ«s?/KyΔn ai Δsk vΔr da hΔspiαΉal Δ«s?
------------------
With all my heart, I believe that you enjoyed reading my comment by attempting to mimic the South Indian dialect of the English language.
Thank you.
Oh it is british accent where letter r is missingππ
Indian accent is mid as fck
There is more than 2 accents in the UK. π The way we pronounce words e.g Castle, path, bath depends on what region you live in.
In each region there are many counties and there are different accents in each county.
For example Brummy accent (Birmingham) vs Derbyshire accent sound completely different but they are both in the same region.
Scouser accent (Liverpool) vs West Country accent (Gloucestershire) sound completely different and they are in different regions π
Woo hoo learned all the accents lol π π π€£
Australian is the sexiest and most interesting accent, I can hear it over and over and over again... its really a mix of the two, my cousins live in Melbourne and its always fun to hear them speakπ π the us is the most comfy and easy going, british is also amusing and automatically adds a luxury β€β€β€ all the three girls/accents were amaaaaazing
When my Chinese wife first began watching TV here in the US she found incomprehensible shows where the people spoke with a British accent. She has little problem with understanding them now, but we have become used to watching British TV shows with the subtitles on.
My wife is a second-generation American. She also has trouble with thick British accents, especially if they are not standard or "RP" accents. Half of the dialogue in the Harry Potter movies went right past her. She could understand Hermione -- but Ron Weasley was often unintelligible to her (and sometimes to me, too).
British accent sounds very well and properly, itβs even warm
Aren't there a multitude of accents?
@@AllRequired of course, i was on the British girl accent
@@javierluissantosrubio6603 He meant a multitude of accents within Britain, are you forgetting that there are 3 countries in Britain?
They're so cute, I loved the video!
Wow the language is very good
I am glad to hear it β€
I CANT tell whats the difference of three accents. They are the same for me. When I was a child, I learned English textbook from UK, maybe that's why I think UK English sounds most comfortable and easiest to understand. When I came to Australia, my local classmates spoke English really fast and some of teachers have different accents. You know, Australia is a country of immigration. At the beginning, it is really difficult for me to understand and communicate with them. I remember my homestay family (they came from Spain) said "soccer" in a very strange accent, they explained "football" to me, I just understand. When group discussion, my local friend spoke so so fast. When I was still thinking about what he meant at the beginning, he had already said a few words in a row, and then I listened carefully to what he was saying, but I forgot what he said at the beginning. In short, he said a lot and I didn't understand anything. Especially, when my two local classmates discussing with each other, I feel like Iβm superfluous, I feel so sorry for dragging down them because I can't intervene at all.
Cool! I always enjoy this comparison videos! π
Being a South East Asian I enjoyed the vedio very much β€
Now I came to know that I'm using all the accents
America is big, so it's not surprising that there are many accents. We also have distinct dialects like AAVE, various forms of Creole, etc. And we even have territories like Puerto Rico where the primary language is Spanish, so the accent is very different the girl in the video.
There are more dialects in UK than the rest English speaker countries all together same for Spain and Spanish speakers countries and France and french speakers countries
@@javierluissantosrubio6603 yeah the country of origin always has more
Lots of dialects. Still wrong.
English is English not American
@@dcmastermindfirst9418 English is Germanic, so stop using English, and use German, your logic here. Besides, German makes way more sense, way more phonetically consistent and way cooler sounding.
@@dcmastermindfirst9418 Bro, LOL, Lmao, Zee-bra, Idearrrrrrrr, Daown Sauth.
Thank you.
I really love this show because I want to know difference accents to notice how they pronounce clearly. It's easy for me to train pupils. I watch this video, which make me fun and know. Thanks.
I am an Arab and I want to learn English. Should I learn British or American?
Christina β€οΈβ€οΈβ€οΈβ€οΈ
Always gorgeous β€οΈ