Liverpool people are so friendly! I am American and lived in the UK for many years, and I can honestly say they are some of the nicest people anywhere.
@FionaEm Жыл бұрын
Aussie here. Scouse is my fave British accent. It's so lyrical 😊 And Ryan, if you can't tell the difference between a Scouse accent and an Aussie one, there's no hope 😂
@Rionnagan Жыл бұрын
*LOL* I think the same thing as someone who grew up in Australia. Had I not emigrated to Scotland, I would have moved to Newcastle-Upon-Tyne.
@FionaEm Жыл бұрын
@@Rionnagan I thought Novocastrians spoke with a Geordie accent, not a Scouse one?
@Rionnagan Жыл бұрын
@@FionaEm Yeah. Not sure how but I responded to the wrong comment. It was supposed to be under the comment about Geordie accents. Here's hopoing this reply is under the correct post.
@andyme3541 Жыл бұрын
That was something that came through how weird a single word sounds and then when you put it in a actual sentence the scouse Accent really comes alive. My Dad is a Scouser so always loved the accent, but it was weird hearing single words, and then you hear a whole sentence with the word in and.... yeah
@scott39917 ай бұрын
gday gdangah my holiday to australia was amazing. As a 10 year old i was thrilled and at least i can say ive seen an egg fried on a shovel and dimmies are tasty AF
@paulberry2884 Жыл бұрын
I moved from Liverpool to Newcastle when I was 13. Traumatic!
@anthonyreid1123 Жыл бұрын
I'm actually a scouser and it was fun watching this. You need to visit Liverpool, you ain't heard nothing yet 😂.
@benlee6158 Жыл бұрын
German here. I really like her vids on accents. Her channel was the first I watched to get some idea of British English. When I watched the Great British Bake Off, understanding a Scouse granny was really tough and I gave up... At least now you know how to pronounce the composer Bach correctly 😂
@jonathangoll2918 Жыл бұрын
It's a wonderful accent. And the extraordinary thing is, thirty miles up the road is Manchester, with a TOTALLY different accent!
@Bunyipp66 Жыл бұрын
The accent changes 10 miles from Liverpool in Prescott and even more a few miles further away to Wigan etc!
@johnallan4826 Жыл бұрын
Lol
@steveroberts728 Жыл бұрын
It’s a unique accent mainly because it’s heavily influenced by its maritime history with a myriad of sailors from around the world passing through the city and settling there, influencing its language. At one point the city had very large populations of Irish, Scots, Jewish, Welsh, Chinese and Afro-Caribbean. Many Europeans also passed through the city on their way to the US and inevitably some settled there. It tends to be spoken at a fast pace as well which adds to the difficulty of comprehension. The word “Scouser” comes from a popular Scandinavian stew called “Lob Scouse”.
@steveroberts7286 ай бұрын
@@Plizken It may well be, in its initial form, however, in Liverpool it’s called Lob Scouse.
@crefelder1 Жыл бұрын
It's like an English eating a Dutchman. 😂
@1336mg Жыл бұрын
True, many simulareties up-op and come-kom, the fricative g-sound
@Rionnagan Жыл бұрын
My favourite "English" (within England) accent is the Geordie accent, which you find in Newcastle-Upon-Tyne.The dialect is lyrical and charming.
@joannedelaney3866 Жыл бұрын
Geordie lass here ….Aw thanks pet. Have a canny weekend 😊
@joshg2603 Жыл бұрын
Are you half deaf?
@cheman579 Жыл бұрын
Nah my favourite is the West Yorkshire accent...mush
@JayVFX Жыл бұрын
Can't wait to see you discover the glaswegian accent. And we french do NOT sound like that! XD
@jenniferharrison8915 Жыл бұрын
No that's definitely Dutch! 😝
@dark6.6.6 Жыл бұрын
Same. I just wanted to suggest, but u already did. So we'll wait for it. Hey Ryan, don't disappoint us :D
@dark6.6.6 Жыл бұрын
I'm not a native speaker and i live pretty close to Glasgow. I was learning American English and pronunciation, so i definitely can say: Glaswegian accent is kinda fckd up
@SatieSatie Жыл бұрын
Scottish/Glaswegian is probably my favourite accent lol.
@jenniferharrison8915 Жыл бұрын
@@SatieSatie Mine too, for all time! ❤️🏴(🇦🇺)
@jjaus Жыл бұрын
Cilla was big mates with the Beatles. Search for her singing "You're my world".
@denisesf5 Жыл бұрын
My hubby's from Germany and they have a gazillion accents. In fact, towns can be a block apart and sometimes they wouldn't understand each other! But the do have a standard High German that everyone knows. My guy can do a lot of the accents and it's really entertaining and interesting how crazy different some are!❤
@alangknowles Жыл бұрын
I had a German colleague who spoke with a received pronunciation except a few words she learned working in Liverpool. Most odd to hear her order a 'butty' from the sandwich shop. (pronounced bu' 'y in the scouse way but with the rest of the sentence sounding like the Queen. )
@anglosaxon5874 Жыл бұрын
We used to use the word 'scran' in the Royal Navy for food too! lol Not just a scouse word.
@cheman579 Жыл бұрын
Yeah we still use it in West Yorkshire
@StrongBad-r5c5 ай бұрын
probably majority naval terms in Liverpool. Scouse came from Whaling from the Scandinavian dish Lobscouse.
@nolajoy7759 Жыл бұрын
Recommend listening to Cilla Black's "Liverpool Lullaby" sung with her accent.
@williambailey3447 ай бұрын
Your Liverpool accent was getting better each time there 😊
@WookieWarriorz Жыл бұрын
its always funny to see how close scouse slang and accents are to northern irish. Not suprising since so many moved over to liverpool during the troules.
@stevemccann41662 ай бұрын
And potato famine in the 1800s
@101steel4 Жыл бұрын
I love it when Americans do their "Australian" accent
@StormhavenGaming Жыл бұрын
I can't speak for Scousers but, when I was growing up in the South of England, "Bifter" did not mean cigarette exactly. More of a "herbal" cigarette. A Jazz Woodbine.
@Morgana0x Жыл бұрын
Liverpool is a port city and so you have people coming from all over the world all the time. Since it's across from Ireland and next to Wales, Liverpool is made up of a lot of Irish people and Welsh too, both of whom have added their own inflections and pronunciations to make up what is the Scouse dialect.
@grahamrogers3345 Жыл бұрын
Cilla Black was a fantastic singer who was a friend of the beatles and had the same manager
@BobAt10111 ай бұрын
As a Scouser yes, we do have our own version of english always have and always will and Scouse is also a stew , which us Scousers eat.
@enemde3025 Жыл бұрын
Scousers get the name from a stew called SCOUSE. KHAKI is a colour NOT a style of TROUSERS. Cigarettes in the UK start at about £13 a pack of 20. Fake Bake is a fake tan. " day do do, don't day, do " is a phrase used in a comedy sketch show about people from Liverpool.
@RandyMahnke Жыл бұрын
Khaki is a color as well as a style of pants. Both is correct
@enemde3025 Жыл бұрын
@@RandyMahnke Not in the UK. Pants are underwear 🩲
@RandyMahnke Жыл бұрын
@@enemde3025 khaki is a style of trousers in the uk as well. Dunning kruger seems to hit hard with you
@joannedelaney3866 Жыл бұрын
@@enemde3025 I’m from Newcastle Upon Tyne and I say pants for trousers, also , khaki’s are pants… or trousers as well as a colour.
@danielferguson3784 Жыл бұрын
Scouse is heavily influenced by Irish, because of migration across the Irish sea. Scots also has the och sound . It's not compulsory to speak in a local accent or dialect. Some of us were encouraged to speak English that any English speaker could understand!
@philipashley9723 Жыл бұрын
I'm from Birkenhead, a town, one mile across the river Mersey, from Liverpool. My Birkonian accent is not as strong as the Liverpool accent but, having lived in the US, for the past 40 years, I've had the most terrible trouble being uderstood. Mostly, at drive ups, I gave up ordering food 40 years ago, because I always got the wrong food, these days, I only order inside and, still, with difficulty. 😂 I can see that a scouser, would have much more trouble than me. Also, the word scouser comes from a food dish, made in the Liverpool/Birkenhead area, usually a type of cheap stew. I was born during the second world war, and scouse was a popular meal.
@MrCEBoltonBolton5 ай бұрын
A scouser born in Toxtoth!!U heard nothing yet!!!
@siriuspyramid7441 Жыл бұрын
From France 🇫🇷 I can tell British 🇬🇧 language is way more sofisticated than English from USA 🇺🇸 languages.
@marygiles2823 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for trying! You really do seem interested, unlike some other US/UK comparison channels, who try to fake it, but fail abysmally. The man on the left and the two gurning ladies.
@Dr_KAP Жыл бұрын
He also has a very popular US/AUS channel and a US/German channel too I think- and of course his twin brother has a popular US/UK channel.
@Izumrudik_t Жыл бұрын
I love your reactions !! You made my day 🤣🤣
@mikmook4781 Жыл бұрын
'Scouse' is just a word for a stew. Comes from a Scandinavian word for a stew that sailors used to eat (I think). It is a port city. It apparently used to be an offensive term for people from Liverpool but doesn't have that connotation these days. You can still get a bowl of scouse in some places. Proper scran that la (la = lad). I've lived up here most of my life now but don't have the accent alas. I had family from up here so I knew most of the words already but still had some things to learn. The first time someone said "Sorry for gegging in". You're doing what now? Are you feeling OK? Thought she might have meant gagging and that she was going to be sick or something. Can't believe they talked about the scouse 'k' without mentioning chicken. That always seems to come up. There's a series of videos about British accents by a channel called Babbel which I'd recommend.
@uebelgunne Жыл бұрын
As a German Aussi English is my favorite language. It´s so cute that they shorten most of they words. In addition, the pronunciation is very easy to understand.
@mattsmith8124 Жыл бұрын
It made me laugh when you said "what's the point in different ledders if you're just going to say them all the same" 😊
@Carol-FB Жыл бұрын
Lol so true pronouncing his ts as ds 🤣
@deaghlanfinn-kelly9296 Жыл бұрын
I did hear once that due to its location and the port of Liverpool, that the Scouse accent is close to the Irish one in many ways. They way she says though sounding as it did would get me teased as I would say it the same way. I was sent to a speech therapist as they wanted to teach me to speak as they could not understand what I was saying being from Drogheda, Bloody racists.
@scelestion Жыл бұрын
Ryan, it's always funny to me to see how baffled you are by things you would learn in linguistics classes. If you're ever looking into studying something new, I'd recommend linguistics to you. Even better when accompanied by learning a new language. I think you'd be blown away regularly.
@RandyMahnke Жыл бұрын
Starting with linguistics in your 30s is really hard.
@DidrickNamtvedt Жыл бұрын
@@RandyMahnke I was 28 when I first started studying linguistics, so while it's true that it is hard, it's definitely not impossible.
@scelestion Жыл бұрын
@@RandyMahnke So what? People should try not being so defeatist. As with anything in life, you'll never know how far you will get if you don't even try, and that goes for every age. Also, even just learning the simple beginners' stuff is already very illuminating.
@RandyMahnke Жыл бұрын
@@DidrickNamtvedt never said it was impossible
@RandyMahnke Жыл бұрын
@@scelestion I just clarified that learning anything that's related to language is really hard once you're out of adolescence. That's all, chill out
@jenniebeann Жыл бұрын
As someone who has lived in Yorkshire (northern England) my whole, I don't believe there is a standard British accent.
@danielwoodgate58973 ай бұрын
To our American cousins accross the pond, we have many different accents in Britain and Ireland. 😊. In England, there is the West Country (Pirate accent). Northerm England accents, such as Manchester called (Mancunians), Liverpool called (Scousers), Yorkshire, Newcastle called (Geordies), and more. In midlands, there is Birmingham called (Brummies) and of course you know cockneys from London. And there are many more accents.
@bblake5116 Жыл бұрын
We use different parts of our mouth to speak from with our accents. Australians use the back of the mouth, we lift up the back of our tongue. Millie Bobby Brown the actress is really good at explaining this and doing accents
@kamakaze-f4g5 ай бұрын
Am a scouse in me 40,s,never heard fake bake in me life man
@junebillings9450 Жыл бұрын
You do wonderful Dick van Dyke Ryan lol. The art is in listening really. If you spend maybe an hour in the company of someone with a different accent you do (embarrassingly) start to copy it.
@farmterminator4777 Жыл бұрын
You need to do a yorkshire accent. I think you’ll find it amusing to.
@herrbonk3635 Жыл бұрын
When watching videos like this, I often wonder why many Scandinavians put so much emphasis on "correct" English pronunciation (usually meaning RP, Oxford, or American). Because there is often an english accent where our way of saing a certain word is "right". In this case "come" and "up". The scouse version sound almost exactly like casual Swedish "kom" and "upp".
@1336mg Жыл бұрын
As in Dutch. So is the fricative g-sound
@prof.emanuelpaivaАй бұрын
I'm confused as well 😂
@JimAtHome Жыл бұрын
I live in and Im from Liverpool but I don't know anybody that pronounces though like dough
@kalter_wind Жыл бұрын
Some of these Scousian peculiarities might well suit a native German speaker whose tongue never got around to correctly pronounce 'th', for example.
@grandtheftsuki14 ай бұрын
You're not wrong, I teach guys from Eastern European countries and quite a few of them say scouse sounds germanic to them, one of our trainers has a heavy scouse accent and the Czech guys thought he was German or Danish 😂😂
@BrianKeenan-x5o26 күн бұрын
You have to try the Jimmy Carr classic Chicken and chips and a can of coke. Try Fazakerley or Kirkby and remember the k is silent in Scouse
@andybaker2456 Жыл бұрын
It always makes me laugh when Americans say "khaki pants". To my Londoner ear it sounds like "cacky pants", which means "sh*tty underwear"! 😄
@mickypescatore9656 Жыл бұрын
Hi, Ryan! For me as a german "fake bake" (with a Liverpool-accent) sounds like dutch, and "come here" sounds german! 😀 ....and "th" sounds like a german trying to speak english who is not able to pronounce the english "th" with his tongue an his teeth. In this case the german would say "d" or "s". Mostly "s".... Maybe TOTALLY wrong, but my OWN imagination about all this is that in the early days - maybe middle age - many people have had bad teeth/ or to few teeth or something like that - espacially the poor, right? So I think, that parents passed this mispronunciation on to their children and so on. Who knows, maybe also a well-respected person, so that people began to speak like him! Sometimes this still happens even today, because of a famous pop star or actor or even youtuber or whatever. But today there are much more influences than in former days. And everything gets faster...🤓. Can someone agree with that???😶
@whenlifegivesyoulimes6433 Жыл бұрын
Liverpool is a port city, the accent came from many different origins all being thrown into one melting pot, one of the main influences being Norway and the sailors stew lobscouse aka ‘Lapskaus’ is supposedly were the name scouse originated from. So the accent is deprived from many other languages and accents.
@jackcarter5101 Жыл бұрын
They didn't mention that in Scouse, the 'er' sound is pronounced 'air'. For example, 'German' rhymes with 'airman'.
@michael_177 Жыл бұрын
True, such as work being like 'werk', phonetically
@jackcarter5101 Жыл бұрын
@@michael_177 More like 'wairchhh'!
@what-uc Жыл бұрын
Isn't it the other way round? 'air' is pronounced like 'er' 😀
@sharonmartin4036 Жыл бұрын
@@what-uc Absolutely! I'm washing me 'er tonight, do you 'ave som shampoo to spur?
@sharonmartin4036 Жыл бұрын
Yup, and words that genuinely should be pronounced like 'air' are pronounced like "ur' or 'er'.
@charliehannah28186 ай бұрын
My missus hates it when I come back from Liverpool (my home city) as she can't understand a word I say.
@AdeHida Жыл бұрын
I know Scouse because of the Beatles. That is the most famous accent the world!
@TomiThemself10 ай бұрын
This is just one of many more British accents - so believe me, it's hella colourful!
@bblake5116 Жыл бұрын
Us Australians use the word bevvy
@Rose-cj7wi Жыл бұрын
I always say our slang is similar to Aussie slang, we both shorten everything
@bblake5116 Жыл бұрын
@@Rose-cj7wi what other words do you think we both use? My family is from Worcestershire, I’m the only one born in oz, so I get a lot of the slang for different counties.
@Rose-cj7wi Жыл бұрын
@@bblake5116 pretty much all the shortened versions of words, but most of the time it’s just knowing what Aussie slang means because it makes sense to me
@bblake5116 Жыл бұрын
@@Rose-cj7wi we could talk with no one knowing what we are saying 😆
@Rose-cj7wi Жыл бұрын
@@bblake5116 most people can’t understand scousers anyway😂
@Jamie_D Жыл бұрын
I'd never heard about them saying cob on until a different American reacted the other week, and i assumed it was a play on hard on as well when i heard it first,lol
@akeel_1701 Жыл бұрын
Have you done Glasgow yet?
@ewaa37911 Жыл бұрын
Hi there! I’m an ESL speaker, I was lucky enough to have an opportunity to spend 5 days in Liverpool in ‘98. Still a marvellous memory, it is a lovely place! I have to admit though that our local host was needed as a translator, as I didn’t catch a word of what the waitress said:) And the same thing happened again and again, at a certain point we were involved in a short discussion with a local aristocrat (I learnt that later, when we met I just thought: poor guy, sg is really wrong with him), I have no facts, but up to this day I think he was talking about Ukrainian prostitutes. In a nutshell, as an ESL person there you can tear apart your language certificate papers, have them blown by the wind, while yourself roaring a satanic laughter:) But a gourgeous place still❤️
@phoenixfeathers4128 Жыл бұрын
I love that
@roxy931887 ай бұрын
It still isn’t definitive though coz my dad is from Liverpool and he says Luke for look and Buke for book. Accents have changed over time too, the younger Liverpudlians say things very differently to how my Dads generation would’ve said it.
@korcako Жыл бұрын
I’m crying here 😂😂😂😂. I’ve moved to Liverpool 15 years ago from non-English speaking country and I wish I have seen this video back then. My first few months I could always hear people saying ,,fork,, and ,,forking,, and ,, all rice mate,, 😂😂😂 and I was so confused. But I love it here they are mega friendly 😉
@carlhartwell7978 Жыл бұрын
Lol, you must have wondered why there was always so much rice! 🤣👍
@Ana_crusis8 ай бұрын
Bevvy, keks, scran are used in other places. They aren't specific to Liverpool
@jemakeupartistry11 ай бұрын
I'm a scouser, and I'm dying at this 😂😂😂
@annicaesplund6613 Жыл бұрын
All countries have different "dialects" in ever county, some times even in every village.
@HorrorGirlNat Жыл бұрын
Never heard the word bifters in my life my Uncle would usually call them ciggies. 😂
@mariew81128 ай бұрын
cilla black lived facing me on the famous scotland road .scotty road
@tamibenz6626 Жыл бұрын
Lol!! I wish they would have done the D sound?? Have a great day!!
@OspreyChick Жыл бұрын
There is no standard British English. There is Received Pronunciation, which is basically Southern English and it’s classified as “British English” ignoring all of the other 3 countries that make up the UK and the rest of England. It’s like claiming the Texan accent as the standard American accent.
@Asa...S Жыл бұрын
7:23 You actually said "up" ("upp") in Swedish right there!
@arara2139 Жыл бұрын
Damn, for a non native speaker it's kinda hard to imitate the accent 😂 but I tried
@charliebitme562 ай бұрын
the manager at the place i work gets called the baker because he's always got a cob on
@jeanettewoodrow1731 Жыл бұрын
she has a very broad liverpool accent, mostly found in the north of liverpool
@markianclark9645 Жыл бұрын
Very strong in her isn't it..that was my thought too..my Scouser friend lives in Speke close to John Lennon airport and his accent isn't as broad..still difficult enough for me as a London Cockney though..my mate sounds closer to Jamie Carragher ex Liverpool footballer
@sandrahughes8645 Жыл бұрын
I don’t speak like that and I’m from north Liverpool… lots of variables across the city.I love the Liverpool accent, though and many different accents across our fair isles x
@flo6956 Жыл бұрын
If you meet a scouser ask them to say 'furry fairy '
@disappointedenglishman98 Жыл бұрын
A good video of Cilla Black's accent is at kzbin.info/www/bejne/oKWnc6ZujqyDitE She was famous for saying "fair hair" as "fur ur".
@clivegilbertson6542 Жыл бұрын
G'day Mate! You should really check out the Geordie accent from the Northeast...Cheers!
@Rionnagan Жыл бұрын
Love the Geordie accent myself.
@prof.emanuelpaivaАй бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@danielwoodgate58973 ай бұрын
Geordie accent in North East England is great 😊
@cheryltotheg28808 ай бұрын
I think when she said Google Cilla black she meant listen to her accent 😂
@Jay_Kay666 Жыл бұрын
So my spoken english is not broken. It's just a rare accent from a little village of eyyweedowytrach that almost nobody speaks.
@misfit2022 Жыл бұрын
Don’t worry I can barely understand a word scousers say. I worked with one Brookside nice geezer but took a lot of effort to decipher him but if you want an accent where every word is unintelligible. We had a geezer from Glasgow and whenever he came upstairs we would say alright and he would say a line and we would all go yeah yeah not having understood a single word. I worked with him for years and the only word I remember correctly was his Christian name.
@tamielizabethallaway2413 Жыл бұрын
*RYAN* We have over 40 accents, if you drive half an hour down the road the accent starts changing. The Scottish and Irish accents are when I start to think i need a translator on standby...and I'm British through and through! 🤣 It all stems from our original separate tribes / invaders / settlers etc from hundreds if not thousands on years ago. English itself is a Germanic language, but we also have a lot of french woven into it. The way she was teaching is pretty much how we are taught English, lots of emphasis on correct pronunciation of letter sounds or letter combos. They messed around with curriculum since I was at school, and not for the better in my opinion, but children are taught phonetically, how it should SOUND not necessarily how it looks like it should sound. It's probably why we say that Yanks have butchered our language. I get why you would find English and Australian English as similar sounding, a lot of us Southerners in England have Australian twangs in our pronunciation, i even hear it in myself particularly if I say the word no. Daft but true. 😁 They also speak at a similar speed to us, and have the same way of expressing themselves. They have a ton of slang words that we don't use but do know, so their sentence may have completely different words in it, but the way they've used those words is very similar to us. They also have a far more relaxed attitude to swearing, same as we do. We both swear a LOT! It's a silly concept to me, to consider some words as bad...the context in which they're used should be what matters in communication. A good example of that is the N word....ending gga amongst black people, acceptable Vs ending in gger from a white person to a black person, let's hope you know how to fight! The word itself is not the issue, it's the context in which it's used that matters to us and Australians typically, whereas Americans often get caught up on individual words being "wrong" and miss the overall meaning. If I ever have to explain my meaning to someone, 95%+ of the time, it's an American taking offence to something that wasn't even intended to be offensive. I've never once been misinterpreted by an Australian. Watch them all come for me now I've said that! 😂 I went out with a scouser for two years, it took six months before my Mum understood a word he said! 🤣 I could mimic the musical tone of their accent, but their T sounds and K sounds are EXTREMELY difficult to do. It's a bit like how easily the French can roll their R's without thinking about it, and I just cannot do it! Thinking about it, I've noticed that everyone BUT America it seems, is very acquainted with other English speaking countries' slang or alternative words. I'm sure there are some Australian terms I'm not familiar with, but like i said, they structure their sentences very similarly to us, so it's often fairly easy to guess what it means by the context in which it's used. Most of the UK I'd say, knows a TON of Americanisms and word usage, but you don't tend to know our versions in return. One that gets me is "do you want a soda?" and I know that means a can of fizzy drink....but like, is that as specific as the question gets? Are tea, coffee, juice or water not to be offered to guests and reserved for members of the household only? That's not a deep question, I'm being curious, sarcastic and humourous all at once, so don't take me as ridiculing your way of speaking. I understand what the question means, but we just wouldn't say that here, as there's a variety of fizzy drinks available, and the question doesn't tell us what options you currently have in your fridge. We would say "do you want a drink" and the person would reply with, tea or coffee or just some water please, at which point we may say, "well if you'd prefer a cold drink I do have fresh apple juice, coke or lemon squash instead of plain water?" so we're just more detailed and specific with our words.
@seancurran8108 Жыл бұрын
Liverpool accent is weird in respect of is geography and the striking differences to english in even close areas Most of the surrounding county of Lancashire does not have it. I've always liked it though.
@anthonymolloy9953 Жыл бұрын
Bifters punches gegon never heard of it
@zloychechen5150 Жыл бұрын
You should watch some John Bishop - scouser comedian, very thick accent.
@jeffreyprice773 Жыл бұрын
She ment Lob on.
@mynameblu Жыл бұрын
This guy has some old pewdiepie influence in the way he talks and acts
@ronjareubel32 Жыл бұрын
the pronuncian of a lot of liverpoll-words reminds me on 'dutch' and some on 'danish'
@karasu2163 Жыл бұрын
first omg!!!!!!
@joanmyers51485 ай бұрын
I’m a scouser but some of the words here I have never heard , I’m 87 years old🤔
@charlesgarvey13256 ай бұрын
Some of these words and phrases are never heard in Liverpool. I'm just going up the apples and pears for a peepo.
@billyo54 Жыл бұрын
If a Scouse is shouting at you better put up your umbrella 🌂😂
@what-uc Жыл бұрын
Or 'Y' berra poorroop yeroombrella' 😀
@gytan2221 Жыл бұрын
Brolly
@SignificanceEnergyHealing8 ай бұрын
The double oos is like 'ui' buik liverpuil luik
@johnveerkamp1501 Жыл бұрын
IT'S CLOSE TOO DUTCH.
@shanus1014 ай бұрын
The Liverpudlian accent isn't my favourite and is the bottom of my list, saying that a night out in Liverpool is just the best! I work with a few scousers with one of them saying I sound like a farmer, whatever a farmers accent sound like!
@StrongBad-r5c5 ай бұрын
geggin in on a video video
@divinedefiance7069 Жыл бұрын
Nuttin wrong with Cilla Black! She's a lorra laughs 😁 pls check out the Dublin accent 🤗
@Frazsier-lx1gr Жыл бұрын
You should watch her video about the Birmingham and Black Country accent. That accent is one of my favs (but all of them are great *g*). Featured in "Peaky Blinders". :)) Also a good channel for the Brummie accent as it's also called is Smashing English. The lady on that channel is from Birmingham herself and uses the TV show for teaching that accent.
@everton1995 Жыл бұрын
If your not a scouser its not easy to mimic tge accent.... The girl on the left tried it at the end and it was awful... The scouse girl was fun and she was enjoying it as you could tell by her genuine laughs.
@davidsouth9979 Жыл бұрын
Can’t see why you question it? It is what is, leave it out. Which is cockney for stop it.
@herrbonk3635 Жыл бұрын
Rebecka looks very much like "Al Bundy's daugher" :)
@allialias Жыл бұрын
Is this why ppl use the term "slack jaw"? Makes one wonder what local plant was generationally ingested to numb out their mouth muscles.
@jimmiweiland Жыл бұрын
Cigarettes are $ 6,15 for a pack of 19 in Sweden today. Crazy.
@NGT4LIFE Жыл бұрын
That's cheap. It's about £13 in England for 20 cigarettes. And about £20 for 30 grams of rolling tobacco.