borg69unimatrix
Resistance
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Listen to MitchyMo talk for 10 seconds, and you'll KNOW why.
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Britain is the home of the language; it will always be difficult for any other country to have speakers with the same finesse and depth of knowledge of what the language can do.
I strongly disagree with this statement. The problem with it is that it presupposes that there's only one proper way to speak English. That isn't true. Even within the UK, there's hundreds of dialects.
Noam Chomsky is considered one of the greatest linguist in the world, and he's American:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noam_Chomsky
Ther's nowt rong wi' eur gran' Yorksha accent.![]()
It's true *there is not one single way of* speaking proper EnglishI strongly disagree with this statement. The problem with it is that it presupposes that there's only one proper way to speak English. That isn't true. Even within the UK, there's hundreds of dialects.
Noam Chomsky is considered one of the greatest linguist in the world, and he's American:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noam_Chomsky
Many British accents sound gay, might be why I like them.
Canadian English does it for me. Not sure why!
Because for 350 years, from Plymouth Rock to the 1960s, the U.S was ruled and controlled by an English aristocracy that lived in New England. So, Americans naturally associate the English accent with the upper class. Americans of Asian, Jewish and Asian Indian descent who get into Harvard and other Ivy League universities still try to speak with a "Boston Brahmin" accent to mark themselves as elite. The Boston Brahmins....
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mfR4DLXYpCw
Is that the one that's spoken around Liverpool?
I don't understand one single word they say.
The Liverpool accent is usually referred to as Scouse, the people as Scousers. As for understanding it, you're not alone there, in fact sometimes we have trouble understanding each other!![]()
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