Rolfe
Adult human female
In Scotland it will nevertheless be perceived as English. I imagine in Americal or Canada it would likewise be perceived as English (or possibly "British", though there's really no such thing as a British accent).
Likewise Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, South Africa....
I used to find it extremely difficult to distinguish between different regional accents in England. They genuinely all sounded the same to me - just "an English accent". The first time I went to England for longer than a day trip was in 1975 when I was 21. I went to Exeter for a month. The people in the vet practice where I was doing my EMS were genuinely disbelieving that I couldn't tell the difference between the local Devon accent and the "London" accent of the senior partner.
I can see why, I guess, although at the time they all sounded like "posh BBC" to me. Having lived in England for 25 years I got a bit better at it though I still can't really tell Yorkshire from Lancashire. Which was a hanging offence in front of my late Aunt Hilda who was fron Manchester, but I just kept that quiet when she was around.
Many people from outside say they can immediately tell that not all Scots accents are the same. Harlan Ellison came to Glasgow and said "I can't make the Scots out, you all sound different." But then I remember being at a school camp in the 1960s where one girl was English. She had been sent to the camp by her parents to get her out of the way while they moved house from England to Scotland. There was also a group of girls from Dundee at the camp. Those of us from the west of Scotland found the Dundee girls quite hard going as their brand of Scots was almost impenetrable to us. Near the end of the week the English girl remarked that she was just beginning to realise that "Mairead Matthews' crowd" (the Dundee contingent) spoke differently from the west of Scotland girls. I was stunned, and tried to explain to her that all week we had found it far easier to understand what she said in her English accent than the Dundee accent. (It never even occurred to me then that she herself would have a regional English accent that other English people would be aware of, but no doubt she had.)
I fully accept that there are wide variations in American accents, but I can barely distinguish them. I can barely tell American from Canadian. I can't tell Australian from New Zealand, and indeed struggle to tell South African from either of these. I can just about tell Northern Ireland from the Republic of Ireland, but that's something I've worked on for self-defence. I've been known to confuse Welsh and Stornoway accents.
On the other hand I can tell Lanarkshire from Ayrshire.
We're all better at distinguishing fine local differences in our own areas than at telling even broad national differences we're bot exposed to frequently. But anyone who thinks they don't have an accent isn't really thinking about it. Everyone's accent will be perceived as "other" to someone speaking the same language.
Likewise Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, South Africa....
I used to find it extremely difficult to distinguish between different regional accents in England. They genuinely all sounded the same to me - just "an English accent". The first time I went to England for longer than a day trip was in 1975 when I was 21. I went to Exeter for a month. The people in the vet practice where I was doing my EMS were genuinely disbelieving that I couldn't tell the difference between the local Devon accent and the "London" accent of the senior partner.
I can see why, I guess, although at the time they all sounded like "posh BBC" to me. Having lived in England for 25 years I got a bit better at it though I still can't really tell Yorkshire from Lancashire. Which was a hanging offence in front of my late Aunt Hilda who was fron Manchester, but I just kept that quiet when she was around.
Many people from outside say they can immediately tell that not all Scots accents are the same. Harlan Ellison came to Glasgow and said "I can't make the Scots out, you all sound different." But then I remember being at a school camp in the 1960s where one girl was English. She had been sent to the camp by her parents to get her out of the way while they moved house from England to Scotland. There was also a group of girls from Dundee at the camp. Those of us from the west of Scotland found the Dundee girls quite hard going as their brand of Scots was almost impenetrable to us. Near the end of the week the English girl remarked that she was just beginning to realise that "Mairead Matthews' crowd" (the Dundee contingent) spoke differently from the west of Scotland girls. I was stunned, and tried to explain to her that all week we had found it far easier to understand what she said in her English accent than the Dundee accent. (It never even occurred to me then that she herself would have a regional English accent that other English people would be aware of, but no doubt she had.)
I fully accept that there are wide variations in American accents, but I can barely distinguish them. I can barely tell American from Canadian. I can't tell Australian from New Zealand, and indeed struggle to tell South African from either of these. I can just about tell Northern Ireland from the Republic of Ireland, but that's something I've worked on for self-defence. I've been known to confuse Welsh and Stornoway accents.
On the other hand I can tell Lanarkshire from Ayrshire.
We're all better at distinguishing fine local differences in our own areas than at telling even broad national differences we're bot exposed to frequently. But anyone who thinks they don't have an accent isn't really thinking about it. Everyone's accent will be perceived as "other" to someone speaking the same language.
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