TomHow wrote:
Dialects and accents vary massively within the UK, a relatively small country.
E.g. Liverpool and Manchester are a 30-minute drive away from each other but their accents are totally different. Likewise Edinburgh and Glasgow. Each of these local dialects also have a few words that would not be understood by people from other parts of the UK. Where I'm from (Devon) we call tourists "grockles", and right next door in Cornwall, they call them "emmits" (literally Cornish for "ant").
interesting. us americans (or all new worlders for that matter) tend to underestimate the regional variation in languages that have occupied a region for centuies or millenia, like most long inhabited places in the old world, compare that to the new world where our majority languages (english, spanish and some french) were introduced relatively recently, american english is pretty much uniform compared to british english, those examples you described, intriguing!! i'm in southern california, i can communicate with someone from rural Missouri rather easily yet the same may not be the case in the old world.
it's pretty cool how tribal and nomad languages/tongues have so many different registers, channels and sounds and writing systems that confound eurocentic minds.
also, sometimes people tend to regard big cities (like the capital) as where the "pure", "standard" form of a language is based but the reality is that since these are basically melting pots and centers of changing culture, the language there is MORE susceptible to rapid change and lots of slang and colloquialisms and such. just something i noticed.
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