i find it crazy how they couldnt tell she was from London because I can tell from her accent instantly. I live like 2 hours from London and the accent is so different from mine
@tamasmarcuis445514 күн бұрын
To everyone else in the World you all sound the same. Go to any country they claim the people down the road have a different accent. In Lithuania there are multiple languages but we all pretend we speak the same language. Just with different grammar, words and pronunciation.
@finncullen14 күн бұрын
The second "i" in aluminum is easy to find... it's in the word "aluminium" in English spelling. The spelling is different which is why the pronunciation is different. The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) adopted aluminium as the standard international name for the element in 1990. In 1993, they recognized aluminum as an acceptable variant; the most recent 2005 edition of the IUPAC nomenclature of inorganic chemistry also acknowledges this spelling. IUPAC official publications use the -ium spelling as primary, and they list both where it is appropriate.
@catfrab16 күн бұрын
Aluminium is UK spelling, aluminum is US spelling. These are different words, so both are being pronounced correctly.
@philproffitt836315 күн бұрын
So, on the periodic table, do Americans have Lithum and Beryllum?
@tribaltalker160815 күн бұрын
@@philproffitt8363 No but we both have Tantalum and Titanium. The US spelling for Aluminium is an error of course, but understandable.
@berbold15 күн бұрын
@@tribaltalker1608 @philproffitt8363 The "US term" Aluminum was actually coined by a British scientists and it travelled to the US. Then Intl. standards changed it to Aluminium and the US were caught between two stools and eventually chose to stick with Aluminum. Not their mess..
@berbold15 күн бұрын
@@tribaltalker1608 Aluminum was coined by a British scientists and it travelled to the US. Then Intl. standards changed it to Aluminium and the US were caught between two stools and eventually chose to stick with Aluminum. Not your mess..
@stephenhumphreys914915 күн бұрын
@@tribaltalker1608 Not even an error really. Apparently, the word was originally proposed to be alumium by the (British) scientist who first pushed to isolate the material, aluminium was then suggested as a better spelling by several contemporaries. The original scientist then started using aluminum, but by then aluminium was more popular and both spelling were then used. I think it was only last century that the different spellings settled down by geographical location. Oddly, it seems that at one point aluminium was the main spelling in America, I think it was when the Webster dictionary really started to push different spellings (like missing the u in words like honour, or spelling centre as center) that aluminum started to take off. I think the Webster dictionary is a main culprit in many of the differences between the two English dialects!
@WAVingtokki19 күн бұрын
Good to see BossBerry on giggle. I watch her streams quite often and this is the first time I’ve ever seen her go outside of her bedroom. Great job Berry ❤
@sephlax14 күн бұрын
heard shannon say "it was very girl talk energy", i think "girl talk" is a cute name for the show!
@Ash-h9b20 күн бұрын
Is it only me but was the whole episode really awkward
@3v4_3v419 күн бұрын
It was definitely the subtle racism
@chishh255418 күн бұрын
yeah but still enjoyable. I like this setup
@RLC-London18 күн бұрын
Emily appeared to have a weirdly aggressive and controlling vibe, which I'm beginning to realise many of us Brits give off when we're just trying to show enthusiasm. Rianna came across as charming and generally pleasant. People like Emily (and myself) rely on friends like Rianna - to help us get out of our own way!
@yeay680117 күн бұрын
its the korean girl for me is kinda cringe but still watchable
@theflowersrfake16 күн бұрын
@@yeay6801 noo the korean girl seems so sweet
@mjmaule20 күн бұрын
Most of the British pronunciations you are showing, are loosely based on east London slang. We usually say Maths or Mathematics, as it's plural rather than singular. Fish and chips was on of the few foods that were not rationed in WW2, which may be why it became a National Dish?
@aidanjanemcintosh691919 күн бұрын
as an irish people that lived in both england and scotland before, it's really hard to pinpoint what british accent is, because there are too many, and each can be very different from another.
@AiiroHyōma-WSF17 күн бұрын
Because, like moooore "British" things, fish and chips ARE ITALIAN 🗿🥂👌🏼
@alexanderwiles200317 күн бұрын
Yeah alot of these aren't quite right, I wish they just showed individual accents instead of alot of tik toks of non bits doing british and american accents
@Will83B17 күн бұрын
@@AiiroHyōma-WSF hahaha sure it is lad
@AiiroHyōma-WSF16 күн бұрын
@Will83B Roman Empire Is Better than your Commonwealth 🗿🥂👌🏼
@colz2220 күн бұрын
In Scotland we say tin foil lol
@8bitslug99919 күн бұрын
same here in London its just tin foil
@yootoobnz810915 күн бұрын
But it is 100% aluminium, zero percent tin?
@colz2215 күн бұрын
@@yootoobnz8109 I think they made it out of tin historically.
@PaganPunk14 күн бұрын
We do in Essex, ENGLAND. Too 😂
@johnmccandles219713 күн бұрын
Manchester, England, it's tin foil, I've never heard anyone here say aluminium.
@georgemcauley981916 күн бұрын
I'm from England. Americans pronounce their 't's as if they are 'd's. So when they say 'better', it sounds like 'bedder' to me. 99% of English and British people pronounce the letter 't' as it should be 90% of the time. Those that don't do so because of a regional inflection/speaking colloquially. The whole "bo'le of wa'er" thing is just an out of control internet lie/exaggeration.
@anonymes288413 күн бұрын
I mean, we use glottal stops in various UK accents so e.g. "wa'er" is _definitely_ an element of many people's speech. But sure, it's maybe "exaggerated" online, partly I suspect because that's how people from abroad _hear it_ (i.e. it stands out a mile to e.g. American ears in a way it doesn't to us because we're used to it). Similarly (but in reverse), the 'd'/'t' thing you mention stands out a mile to UK ears. Used to watch a US TV show which featured a character I _thought_ for several episodes was called (the relatively exotic/US specific) "Cady" but who was in fact just being called "Katie" in an American accent :).
@shanellemurrey93003 күн бұрын
@@anonymes2884 my accent is one of the ones that have glottal stops lol. I also noticed the d instead of t sounds in American accents as well, kind of funny that they like to joke about us not saying t’s with “bo’’tle o’ wa’ter” but they don’t say t’s either! 😂
@ScreamingTc12 күн бұрын
The common foods most people associate with British cuisine have their origins in the working class: Cornish pasties, Shepard pies, fisherman's pie, etc. They had their origins in being affordable, filling, and utterly comforting on a cold, wet day. Being working class dishes, they avoided complex flavorings in favour of ease of cooking, allowing people to get on with their jobs as they left it to cook. We also tend to flavour our foods post cooking with brown sauce, ketchup, salt and vinegar, etc, which leaves it down to the individual to flavour the food as they see fit.
@andyf429210 күн бұрын
the guy that herds sheep is a ' shep-herd'
@jeffrey8888819 күн бұрын
I'm Canadian. We spell words like the Brits but pronounce them like Americans
@R3ED3R17 күн бұрын
you guys are caught right in the middle aren't you XD
@JB9941-e8j17 күн бұрын
The worst of both worlds 😭
@SaidDoudou-lf6ty16 күн бұрын
This is easier.
@PhyllisGlassup2TheBrim14 күн бұрын
*and* you say......eh after everything lol....eh?
@Tony-c7z9t14 күн бұрын
Oh you poor discombobulated Canadian
@davidboydarnott4174 күн бұрын
Southern Accent is adorable Shannon! Not dumb. If you know what you're talking about people will listen all day! ❤✌️ Bossberry, and anyone who can be conversational in another language, is doing fantastic.👏👏👏👏 My advice to you guys is "don't be hyper analitical or critical" of another's speech , the aim is to be understood and so long as they have got across the message just be happy, we don't want to detract from the fun of working with International Friends. Don't be afraid to ask someone with an unfamiliar accent "I'm having difficulty understanding you😂😂would you mind speaking a little slower please😀" Fun fact, When at College I had a Career Advisor, Mrs.Morrison who had 2 Sons who were English Language teachers in South Korea.😂😂
@TheSweetTeaBoy19 күн бұрын
Heh, it looks to me like British and American English are still a lot different as always beyond their accents and dialects too. But still, there are definitely a whole lot of things that seem similar and different between the two languages for sure though ❤
@PaganPunk14 күн бұрын
There is no such thing as British when it comes to this!! English is the English language, The Scottish, Welsh and Irish have their own Language!! ❤
@nathanspeed968319 күн бұрын
I have a soft spot for Emily’s accent!❤
@tommullinerart14 күн бұрын
Humfrey Davy discovered "alum" in 1808. He first called it "alumium". He later changed the name to "aluminum" in 1812. The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) adopted the name "aluminium" to match the "-ium" ending of other elements (calcium, sodium, magnesium etc) The American Chemical Society renamed aluminium to aluminum in 1925. So, there isn't really a right or wrong spelling with this. Just the same as color, flavor, honor etc
@GJ-ly1mv16 күн бұрын
Giggle, I've got some more ideas for the name of your talk show. Two are from me and the other ten come from a very different source. The first two are below with one based on Shannon's idea: 1. Giggle Girl Talk 2. Wine and Cheese Girl Talk The other 10 that I have for you come from ChatGPT. Here they are below: 1. Global Girl Talk 2. Across Cultures and Conversations 3. Chatter Across Borders 4. Gals Around the Globe 5. Giggle and Global Vibe 6. Culture and Curiosity 7. Girls in Focus 8. Girl Talk World 9. Minds and Memes 10. Banter Across Borders I hope these ideas help you in deciding on a name for the show. Good luck!
@Tony-c7z9t14 күн бұрын
Ow about 'Time wasting chatline'
@Alias_Reign17 күн бұрын
Most British people (even posh people) use the glottal ‘t’ in some form, the guests here were intentionally trying to sound more posh than they do naturally. I come from a decently wealthy family and most members of my family use glottal t’s and say some form of Bo’le of water, although it isn’t as pronounced as strongly as it is in the meme (by most people).
@pipercharms737417 күн бұрын
I assure you, no, we don't always use the glottal 't'. I am from the south and have a PR accent, I use BOTH very regularly, sometimes I will pronounce my t's, sometimes I don't but when I do pronounce my t's its not intentional at all, it just feels what is natural at the time I'm speaking. I say bottle and I say bo'le both sound natural to me, same for other words.
@Alias_Reign17 күн бұрын
@ please point out where I said all or always.
@pipercharms737417 күн бұрын
@@Alias_Reign you said most Brits, I assure you, that is untrue
@Alias_Reign17 күн бұрын
@ you believe that most brits don’t use the glottal ‘t’ at all? That is an absurd claim to me but there is no real way to prove it either way.
@pipercharms737417 күн бұрын
@@Alias_Reign no, I believe most brits use both, and its odd to say "this person is doing it on purpose" as someone who switches between both, I assure you when we pronounce our t's, we aren't trying to sound more posh, it just sounds natural at the time. And it annoys me when people imply that we're faking or pretending with certain part of our accents, just because you don't do it, does not mean that it's pretend or faked.
@Teresalein977 күн бұрын
love how they are just roasting each other 🥰
@KaiJuxor8 күн бұрын
tika masala originates from Glasgow if I remember correctly so it makes sense that it's considered British dish
@davidboydarnott4174 күн бұрын
Americans are the most open and friendly people ever, I could tell an American absolutely anything and I think he/she would be fine with it and give me an honest opinion/advice , so I think an American Accent is good to learn to be social. English people have to learn to be more polite and return compliments and ask how their Host is doing. I'm British but I'm not English 😂😂 and I can see how the Outside World views you.
@R3ED3R17 күн бұрын
I had no idea there was a place called Leigh near Manchester lol, the only Leigh i know is Leigh on sea which is about 10 miles from where i live
@PaganPunk14 күн бұрын
😂😂 I live in Leigh-on-Sea and 1 of my best mates lives in Leigh...which comes under Wigan in Manchester ❤
@R3ED3R14 күн бұрын
@PaganPunk oh nice I'm on Canvey Island
@peterang691217 күн бұрын
12:30.. sounds so familier what she said.... ( Michael McIntyre explains how Americans feel the need to simplify English words to the extreme, The Jonathan Ross Show, kzbin.info/www/bejne/a6i2qGZ_jLd9l5I )
@windowbreezes19 күн бұрын
"It sounds like a Mobile car.". ... . Girl, That's what a mobile phone is.
@steviedee982619 күн бұрын
Not sure I'd want a car that's immobile, either. Isn't that the point of a car?
@IIIOOOUS19 күн бұрын
The origin of the Hamburger is not very clear. Some say it was an American called Hamburger Charlie who invented it, others say it is from the German city Hamburg. I think the pure German version was only with meat and bread.
@dozer1119 күн бұрын
Can definitely confirm your last sentence. The original hamburger from Germany looks nothing like an American Burger. I think they even talked about it on a podcast called “Is A Hotdog A Sandwich?”
@tomhalla42618 күн бұрын
From what I have seen, the German original was pounded beef, not ground beef.
@TheHarrip16 күн бұрын
Politics and finance in the UK is in the south but in America its in the north so the poles are switched, UK north is like UAS south culturally 😊
@anonymes288413 күн бұрын
Ish. There's quite a lot of farming in the southern UK too and the midlands and north were (historically at least) the _industrial_ centres so the parallel with the US isn't exact. (and of course post devolution it more or less resets at the Scottish border, where the southern _and_ northern parts are mostly relatively sparsely populated countryside and the politics and finance are concentrated in the middle, in the "central belt")
@ElsBels2519 күн бұрын
In UK traditional dishes there are spices and herbs, just not hot and not MANY different ones compared to other cuisines. Eg. clove nutmeg rosemary bay leaf tarragon sage parsley black pepper and in desserts cinnamon, cardamon, cloves etc... Also mint sauce apple sauce cranberry sauce tartare sauce horseradish with meat / fish
@emi6250718 күн бұрын
I was just going to comment this, that it is absolutely not just salt and pepper there are herbs too.
@danpsyker612213 күн бұрын
I wish they did spell Aluminium. Because they'd also learn they both spell it different.
@michellemould542813 күн бұрын
Up in the North East in UK we call aluminum... tin foil and for mobile we say mob lol
@anonymes288413 күн бұрын
No, you call _aluminium_ [foil] "tin foil" :). (their confusion over that was just lack of knowledge - the yanks call it "aluminum" and we call it "aluminium" i.e. we pronounce it differently because the _words_ are different so their "debate" was a lot like saying "In the UK they pronounce 'trunk' as 'boot'" :)
@michellemould542813 күн бұрын
@anonymes2884 yeah I know but we don't even say aluminum we just say ... tin foil in my town never in my days have i called it by that always been tin foil 😆
@lacywoooo2 күн бұрын
I'm from Lincolnshire way in England and we say "Tin foil" and "Going to the shops" Also a lot of people from where I live in the UK don't pronounce their T's sadly lol. I do like to sound out my T's but when I'm around my friends sometimes I lose them 😂 They say things like buher for butter and when they say bath they pronounce it as Barth or bAff.
@sac56089 күн бұрын
its funny how the British girls insulted them right under there noses with there passive aggressiveness and sarcasm lol. they must of had about 40 digs against you. I would of felt really uncomfortable
@Teresalein977 күн бұрын
exactly what I was thinking lol
@FaithlessDeviant14 күн бұрын
aluminum is only spelled this way in north america I believe the rest of the world spell it aluminium like the british.
@Allenc8737 күн бұрын
Im English and say H like ha sound at the front not aich. My accent is half an hour north of london
@davidboydarnott4174 күн бұрын
ALUMINIUM is the correct spelling. Americans have always ignored the second "i". It's called Kitchen Foil on the box in Britain. Can you remember English Language is centuries older please? 😂😂
@ush_da16 күн бұрын
Is it just me or was there real tension and passive aggressiveness between Emily and Shannon?
@itslyssah15 сағат бұрын
I agree
@troipang51086 күн бұрын
Pavement and Road are not the same thing. They're called Pavements because you use Paved slabs of concrete for pedestrians side way, whilst you pour or lay asphalt or tarmac, which is what's used for roads.
@roguegamer71127 күн бұрын
as a brit it took me a solid 5 mins to figure out what the thumbnail was trying to say lmao WE DONT ALL SPEAK LIKE THAT
@Loly888912 күн бұрын
I love that you guys having coffee from the brand that kim taehyung is an ambassador for .
@davidboydarnott4174 күн бұрын
Shannon! The Southern Accent is like singing and your new accent is like playing Bass. It's a lot lower. No one's gonna mistake you for Trans though, it's not that low, just flatter. 😘😘
@jameshague936517 күн бұрын
Aluminium has two I’s but I think it spelt different in the US.
@pipercharms737417 күн бұрын
I feel like they should have had someone from the north vs someone from the south, instead of two English girls from the south. Their day to day lives would be different, village vs HUGE city, but since this is about accents, their accents will be the same or so similar it's hard to spot the differences.
@coatman92945 күн бұрын
the reason why there's no i in the US spelling of Aluminium, and also the u in Humour and Colour, all boils down the adverts in newspapers, since in the US they were charged per letter it was cheaper the remove certain letters yet still keep the pronunciation of the words this ended up becoming standard in the spelling of these words.
@Diu-m2q15 күн бұрын
The two british girl are pretty nice but honestly I liked the one from saudi arabia way more (from previous episodes) and if the next episodes would be without these two I wouldn’t be mad 😄
@OnlyOneTubing15 күн бұрын
good to see Emily on a different channel.
@daijay908418 күн бұрын
You must fink I'm schewpid. Is 100% southern English. Your two English ladies use received English that's why they sound similar. Emily said she comes from Dorset but definitely doesn't have a Dorset accent.
@erelpc18 күн бұрын
most people in south england say 'think'. fink is heard in pockets of east london and occasionally in other parts of south east england.
@Alias_Reign17 күн бұрын
@@erelpc fink, dis, dat, etc tend to come into English though immigration from areas of the world that struggle to pronounce the “th”. A lot of languages don’t have a th sound.
@anonymes288413 күн бұрын
@@Alias_Reign Nah, that's just "th-fronting". James Acaster does it for instance and he's from that hotbed of "immigration" Kettering, aka the "melting pot of the midlands" [/s]. In fact it's just a _mostly_ southern English thing (arguably also _mostly_ working class) and has been for centuries (first noted in the 1700s). And yeah, Emily is from Dorset but uses Received Pronunciation (RP) which is essentially "regionless" being basically the accent of a class rather than an area - to lots of people not from the UK it's _the_ "British accent" but it's actually only used by about 3% of the population. Rianna has a pretty standard London accent though, she's _not_ using RP (she _may_ be consciously staying closer to "Standard British English" because of the context but her accent is just ordinary middle-class London).
@NOxSPLOOSHxPLANE16 күн бұрын
The bottle of water thing was perfect lol Because most uk people can't stand people that say that lol And if they can't stand it , why do you think americans would 😅 There are so many different dialects And accent in the uk and a lot of them are not pleasant 😅 Again where the uk people can't stand some of them or understand em
@nathanspeed968319 күн бұрын
When I hear people pronouncing Mobile as Mobil, I think of the oil or petrol ⛽️ brand.
@rin_rin1542 күн бұрын
Omg I knew I recognized the black girl from somewhere! When I saw her face I knew who she was immideatley lol I watch her videos
@ValyrianGenos16 күн бұрын
I think Americans spell Aluminium different so there actually isn't another I.
@davidboydarnott4174 күн бұрын
I think "when in Rome...speak as the Romans do" , if I were in America I would say Aluminum instead of Aluminium, and Clip instead of Magazine, Hood instead of Bonnet and Trunk instead of Boot , simply to get along better. In Scotland there's a lot of guys with big Ego's that love their own accent and talk endlessly and needlessly and they can't speak a word of Gaelic and they still think they're Scottish. They should learn their own language before wanting Independence. We've a word for them, it's Chakkit. Do you know when you watch low budget comedy and it makes you cringe? Those making you cringe are Chakkit. 🤣😂😂
@thatwastakenagain19 күн бұрын
wait side walk and pavement have the same syllables tho and what if you said footpath thats the same thing u just jointed two words
@CallMeFVLL18 күн бұрын
mo-bile is usually active in motion. Mo-bill is able to be moved
@RLC-London18 күн бұрын
It ends with an 'e' so the 'i' remains soft (eg. file, smile, kite). Americans seem to follow the way the city in Alabama is pronounced locally.
@CallMeFVLL18 күн бұрын
@@RLC-London I'm sure in some places, but here in Florida that's how we pronounce it based on the context. I've never, in my entire life heard some one of any race or social status say mo-BILE homes.
@RLC-London18 күн бұрын
@@CallMeFVLL Interesting, but you get my point... You wouldn't say a person who looks happy is wearing a "smil" or suggest someone creates a dating "profil" - the 'e' at the end changes the sound (as opposed to 'mobility' which we pronounce the same way). I think spoken language these days is more about culture than rules of right/wrong... 🤓
@CallMeFVLL18 күн бұрын
@@RLC-London I think we're stuck in a live & live(lyve), caramel & caramel(Karmle) situation lol. English is a language of languages...typically based on proximity so neither of us are right or wrong. Good talk though!!!😁
@RLC-London11 күн бұрын
@@CallMeFVLL So sorry, I totally missed this message (feel like I've let my side of of the pond down)... Likewise, good chat and happy new year! 😎
@IIIOOOUS19 күн бұрын
For me as a German the black girl was the hardest to understand. That was probably not so much her accent but her mumbling, though.
@RLC-London18 күн бұрын
Most British people (regardless of accent) sound like we're mumbling when in the company of annoyingly enthusiastic Americans
@Teresalein977 күн бұрын
Reallyy? Oh I understood them all equally since they were always talking over each other 😅
@paulwilson265115 күн бұрын
There's no such thing as a British accent.
@anonymes288413 күн бұрын
Sure but that's true of everywhere else too (there's no such thing as "an American accent" either and yet we all know what it means and can mostly distinguish that broad category from other broad categories like "British accent").
@PhyllisGlassup2TheBrim14 күн бұрын
The second 'i' in aluminium is right there. Aluminum is how Americans say and pronounce it. Americans don't speak English, they speak American. Plus how do you pronounce the word bile? How do you pronounce mo? Now mo-bile?
@LIA-529 күн бұрын
10:18 I tend to even make it aluminimum.
@andyf429210 күн бұрын
in uk,,, you can tell where someone is from to within a few miles
@jazzingpanda319017 күн бұрын
Good god they’re attractive
@darkmatter671412 күн бұрын
Let me help you here. Mobile: If you pronounce a word that ends in “ile” as “moble”, then shouldn’t you also be pronouncing futile as “futle” and senile as “senle”? Aluminum: The metal was first created in Germany. It’s a German word. That’s how they spell it and say it. So Aluminum is wrong - in fact the US version is as a result of a misspelling.
@ronhope397012 күн бұрын
Mobil has NO 'E' on the end of it. a bit like the river Nile is not pronounced Nill where I live.
@Cellardoor.17 күн бұрын
did she say diverser?
@imawonderful611819 күн бұрын
I can't help but noticed that's Compose Cofee which V's the ambassador right? 😅
@ElsBels2519 күн бұрын
it is spelled aluminium with TWO I´s
@EdenGlade17 күн бұрын
Boh-all of waur-ah, depends where you come from, the dropped T is seen as 'poor and uneducated' so most British now speak with a more 'generic' typical British accent, because they learn to be ashamed of their real accent, and local pronounciations.
@anonymes288413 күн бұрын
I'd say this actually happens _less_ "now" than it did - growing up my mum would encourage us to "speak properly", by which she mostly meant enunciate 't's etc. I.e. speak something closer to "Standard British English" (i'm from the west of Scotland). Nowadays though even BBC presenters have regional accents, use glottal 't's etc.
@Rawedreamer14 күн бұрын
Rihanna seems to have put up the barriers, with regard to Emily. A class thing, must be, typical in UK
@AndyMcGhee-qf8sf14 күн бұрын
What, like being ignorant of how anything goes down west of Long Island - you Yanks are infamous for staying home/clutching on momma’s apron strings while Brits, Aussies, Kiwis and Germans oft backpack the world at 18 -seems, er, ‘typical’ of Americans who evidently need to man/woman up/strap a pair on and GET OUT MORE ? 😮
@almendratlilkouatl19 күн бұрын
was Rianna interested in being there in the first place?
@chishh255418 күн бұрын
of course she was. Was there a particular moment she seemed not to?
@bill93050518 күн бұрын
Two familiar world friends faces I see!
@lover-ml5rn20 күн бұрын
Do Nepal 🇳🇵 and try Nepalese food
@erelpc18 күн бұрын
Why does that quote say 'maffmatics', when brits actually say mathematics?
@JackTreanor9 күн бұрын
Micheal McIntyre coming after her for stealing his joke, also British includes welsh northern irish and scottish people, I'd say H not aitch, im from glasgow
@SolitarySoulGamer7 күн бұрын
I just call it tin foil instead of aluminium foil
@SaidDoudou-lf6ty16 күн бұрын
I am still learning English but I am confused about the accent
@Marwolaeth0117 күн бұрын
And yet we can pronounce the "H" in "Herbs" correctly.
@perryedwards474619 күн бұрын
they have no accents... you should have got a cockney girl and a Geordie girl
@Poweroftouch17 күн бұрын
Everyone has a accent
@godrules359614 күн бұрын
Dumbest thing I've read and those are by far the most irritating accents
@anonymes288413 күн бұрын
Genuinely can't understand how some people claim either they themselves or others have "no accent". _Obviously_ everyone does !? Claiming otherwise is ridiculous.
@FedericoDLP15 күн бұрын
The sound recording doesn't exactly help understand the pronunciation.
@lRomez16 күн бұрын
These videos are so over done now. You're trying to make fun of English people speaking the English language. Lets start making fun of the Japanese accent next...
@dagga0714 күн бұрын
The girl from Leigh cant be originally from the UK if she pronounces it as Lie it should be Lee or she is really really posh
@RevStickleback13 күн бұрын
Leigh in Dorset, not Lancashire.
@andyf429210 күн бұрын
tin is a different metal
@darrenboyle951819 күн бұрын
It's tin foil
@RLC-London18 күн бұрын
haha - thought exact same thing! Not sure it's accurate though, just like how we say 'tin can', so it's probably more cultural than descriptive
@catfrab16 күн бұрын
But foil is not made from tin, it's made from aluminium. Describing it as tin foil is incorrect and ignorant. Tin cans are correctly called tin cans as they used to be made of steel coated in tin. Nowadays, they are typically processed differently but do often still use a tinning process so the name persists as an accurate description.
@bigcatzgamin70537 күн бұрын
YOU DONT SAY HAITCH?!
@andyf429210 күн бұрын
there is English, and there are mistakes
@andyf429210 күн бұрын
aluminum sounds like the kids version of a metal, like those blunt kids scissors they get
@drew23247 күн бұрын
The redhead has obviously seen Michael McIntyre talking about eye glasses etc. just wasted twenty mins on this.
@MardyArcher5 күн бұрын
Aluminium...... Mobile (tile)...... lmao 😂 Disproven those two in seconds lmao😂 different spelling, means different pronunciations
@davidboydarnott4174 күн бұрын
You're trying to do a Cockney Accent. Both your guests aren't Cockney. Only the Eastend of London is Cockney. Shannon was best! 👏👏👏👏👏
@jasminekeifer994215 күн бұрын
I live near leigh where Emily claims to be from and she's not pronouncing it right. It's pronounced Lee not Lie. Not sure why she can't pronounce her own village name and also she does not have the accent of someone from leigh.
@LucyFurPillage15 күн бұрын
She's probably from Leigh in Surrey, near Gatwick airport. It's pronounced the same as "lie". The 'posher' people from that area sound like her.
@RevStickleback13 күн бұрын
@@LucyFurPillage She said Leigh, near Sherbourne, in Dorset.
@l_m_m_12 күн бұрын
Adele has a song called the river leigh. Best reference that
@RevStickleback12 күн бұрын
@@l_m_m_ That's the River Lea.
@LucyFurPillage12 күн бұрын
@@l_m_m_ River Lea. It's a tributary of the Thames that runs through NE London
@peterchapman37407 күн бұрын
We say tin foil
@bigmaz8820 күн бұрын
😄👍
@maximushaughton240416 күн бұрын
The aluminium or aluminum thing. Aluminum was correct, then science changed the name to aluminium, but the US never got the memo. So technically both are correct.
@Aethid11 күн бұрын
No, the discoverer was very inconsistent on how it should be spelled, changing his mind multiple times over the years, and only settled on "aluminum" *after* the global scientific community had already gone with "aluminium". The US spelling was formalised after the international spelling, not the other way round.
@Teresalein977 күн бұрын
exactly in Germany we also say aluminium
@andyf429210 күн бұрын
no 'd ' in city
@ChucksDream16 күн бұрын
Weirdly the white English girl has the strangest ‘english accent’ almost sounds like she has foreign parents or wasn’t born here? Also the black English girl also sounds like she might not be born here? Both are not the 100% native sounding accents
@anonymes288413 күн бұрын
Nah, both sound 100% native to me. Emily uses Received Pronunciation so what she _doesn't_ have to my ear (as someone that lived one county over for 10 years) is a _Dorset_ accent (basically, she just sounds "posh"). Rianna has a _very_ standard London accent though IMO, heard it a million times. (both may have little "accent oddities" though because they've lived abroad for years)
@ChucksDream12 күн бұрын
@ i get the living abroad thing as that has quite possibly changed their accent a bit. But it just feels a bad choice of candidates for this sort of challenge. The white girl has the strangest accent, and like you say doesn’t even sound Dorset like. The black girl doesn’t just have a standard London urban accent either, there is a foreign twang to her voice definitely. Its slight but id bet money she possibly came yo the UK when she was a young girl.
@marcelcolle18 күн бұрын
It‘s Like i don‘t Like Like you use Like Like it‘s Like necessary
@tamasmarcuis445514 күн бұрын
I think this is the use of "British" to mean English. Personally getting annoyed with the word and have stopped even using it.
@anonymes288413 күн бұрын
From the outside though people see "British" rather than English, Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish (plus all the regional variances within those) and while it's so broad as to be meaningless, it's not technically _wrong_ because both women _are_ British, just as I am (from the west of Scotland) even though as an _identity_ it's a more nuanced issue.
@Mutatedcorpse15 күн бұрын
im british and tbh i prefer the woman with the orange hair's accent. I'm not much of a fan of london accents because they sound a bit too roadman-ish? if that makes sense.
@godrules359610 күн бұрын
How?
@sknl401520 күн бұрын
3 view here.
@TheTurbulence31219 күн бұрын
dude the Brits be losing their sheeeeeit in comment section 😂😂😂 🎉 truth hurts.
@godrules359614 күн бұрын
American truth* lol😂😂
@AndyMcGhee-qf8sf14 күн бұрын
What truth hurts ? Of how KZbin constantly highlights the ignorance/.stupidity of Americans who, in rarely travelling when young/staying home clutching momma’s apron strings even as Brits, Kiwis, Aussies, so oft backpack the world at 18 - are left so dumbfounded that others do things differently to the US that it has spawned an entire industry of KZbin reaction videos highlighting the safe rather sheltered world Americans hide themselves away/dare I say cower in ? NEEDS TO GET OUT MORE. Hate to tell you this, ‘dude’….. Yet the jokes on YOU.