ChatterBank4 mins ago
Accents: Difficult to understand...?
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What's the most difficult regional accent to understand? (restricting the question to the UK & Ireland.)
Ok, the Norn Irish crowd all talk like "durdle durdle durdle dur sicheeashun" (always get the word 'situation' in there), we in the south all sound like Darby O'Gill, and the Brummies don't speak English, but where did the Geordies get that accent? They get my vote.
Ok, the Norn Irish crowd all talk like "durdle durdle durdle dur sicheeashun" (always get the word 'situation' in there), we in the south all sound like Darby O'Gill, and the Brummies don't speak English, but where did the Geordies get that accent? They get my vote.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Dundee comes tops. A woman complaining to a neighbour about boys kicking a ball against the side of her house was heard to say, 'Meh wa'z ah bah dabs'. (My wall's all ball dabs). Say it quickly!
The best-known Dundee saying is where someone in a baker's shop is asking for two bridies (pasties). 'Ah'll hey uh plen ane, an an ingin ane an ah'. (I'll have a plain one, and an onion one and all).
All totally unintelligible to the outsider.
The best-known Dundee saying is where someone in a baker's shop is asking for two bridies (pasties). 'Ah'll hey uh plen ane, an an ingin ane an ah'. (I'll have a plain one, and an onion one and all).
All totally unintelligible to the outsider.