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What is the slang British accent called?

What is the slang British accent called?

Cockney
Cockney, dialect of the English language traditionally spoken by working-class Londoners. Cockney is also often used to refer to anyone from London—in particular, from its East End.

What is a London Estuary accent?

Estuary English is an English accent associated with the area along the River Thames and its estuary, including London. Wells proposed a definition of Estuary English as “Standard English spoken with the accent of the southeast of England”.

What is a Cheshire accent called?

The Cheshire dialect is a Northern English dialect spoken in the county of Cheshire in North West England.

What are some British swear words?

The UK’s communications regulator, Ofcom, interviewed more than 200 people across the UK on how offensive they find a vast array of rude and offensive words and insults….Mild:

  • Arse.
  • Bloody.
  • Bugger.
  • Cow.
  • Crap.
  • Damn.
  • Ginger.
  • Git.

What is posh British accent?

There is one notable absentee from this list – colloquially termed ‘posh’. Technically this accent is known as ‘Upper Received Pronunciation’ and is widely associated with the English aristocracy and educational institutions such as Eton and Oxford.

What kind of accent does Kate Moss have?

Originally from Croydon, London, Kate Moss has an Estuary English accent. Below are some of the pronunciation features observable in her accent: /t/ in the middle of words said as a glottal stop. -ing word endings become -ink endings, for example ‘somethink’

What is the hottest English accent?

Turns out, the gruff yet lilting Scottish accent took out the top spot for women (hello, Outlander’s Sam Heughan), with 86% of the 1,250 women surveyed listing it as ‘the sexiest accent’.

What accent does Chester have?

The closer I got to Chester, the more scouse the accent became. The further away, the more northern. Bizarrely Stoke on Trent in Staffordshire has a slight Scouse twang to it! The people from Cheshire I’ve come across just sound typically ‘northern’.

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Ruth Doyle