Hello ABA friends!
You know, trying to finally choose an accent in English and stick to it is one of the most difficult things you can do. It’s probably something people are concerned about the most.
“How can I sound like a native British or American speaker?” This is a question a lot of people ask. When you sound native or pretty close to it, it’s just a case of tweaking or perfecting your vocabulary and grammar and a presto! You speak perfect English.
While it sounds easier than it is, we have some tips that that may help you along the way to make it easier for you to practise speaking more like a Brit!
Let’s check them out!
Firstly, when a person says “British accent” often we may get confused, as the British accent on it’s own doesn’t exist; remember that Britain consists of England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, all of which have distinct English speaking accents. Even within England itself, someone from Liverpool will sound very different from someone from London, for example.
In saying that, the typical standard British accent or rather something closer to the “Queen’s English,” is what we will look at and practice today!
The focus is mostly on pronunciation.
The-U’s
While in American English the “u” is often pronounced as oo, in British English it is pronounced more as ew with an emphasis on the last letter.
For example:
The word “tune” is pronounced as “tewn” in British English and “toon” in American English, or the word “duty” would be pronounced as “Dewty” unlike American English where it would sound more like “Doody.”
Try to practice a few:
Tune
Duty
Stupid
The -A’s
In standard British English the sound of the “A’s” changes substantially from that of American English with words like plant, can’t, bath, glass and path. The sound used is distinctly an “ah” sound like that of the word “car” or rather “cahr”. In American English the common “a” letter is pronounced more like the beginning of the word “apple”.
The R’s
In the standard British accent it is uncommon to pronounce the final “r” of most words, rather it is left open at the end. Some examples would be:
Chair-Ch-eh
Cover-Cov-ah
Father-Fa-tha
Rather-Ra-tha
And finally, the T’s
“T’s” are very under-pronounced in American English and often even take sound of the letter “d” like “wadder”-water. If you want to really impress a British English speaker it would be a good idea to always pronounce your “t’s” properly both at the beginning, middle and end of a word.
Try practise some of these with the open ending but a pronounced “T”.
Water
Waiter
Winter
Titanium
Here is an informative short video to give you some extra tips:
Well, my comment is the same…ABA is the best!!!
WOW! Thank you Olimpio!
Thank you!
By the way, the English accent from Australia sounds quite nice for me. Perhaps because I’m Spanish and I’ve a hard pronunciation.
Regards,
hello..i’m new here..my english is very bad and i really need your help..
Hello there!
Well you can read our blog, follow our social networks, and also try our course.
Roopleen said: “If you have a dream, don’t just sit there. Gather courage to believe that you can succeed and leave no stone unturned to make it a reality.”
Surely what Prof Ley is referring to in the video is accent not dialect. Dialect is different words for things that vary as a result of geographical location