Scottish English

Scottish people can't say "purple burglar alarm"

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Windswept Robert, a scotsman, attempts to say "purple burglar alarm" with his accent.

Posted by Noelle Fandel on April 22, 2024

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Scottish English

Tory MP fails to understand Glaswegian accent of SNP's David Linden

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In a UK parliamentry session, British-NZ Tory MP Paul Beresford fails to understand the Scottish/Glaswegian accent of MP David Linden. Linden repeats his question twice with no success, before the Commons deputy speaker Lindsay Hoyle suggests 'the answer might be helped if you can reply in writing'

Posted by Simon on November 8, 2023

Tags:
British English;
Scottish English;
Accent;
Dialect

What Accents do the England Players Have?

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this video looks at the different accents of the players of the English national team, examines the features and links them to geographic, socioeconomical, and cultural/race/ethnicity factors, and also intra-speaker variation

Scottish English: TRAIN

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a Scottish comedian discusses the "proper" pronunciation fo the word train

Posted by Kara Becker on November 17, 2021

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Scottish English

Purple Burglar Alarm

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A comedian's alevolar trill makes for a great Scottish tongue-twister.

Posted by Kara Becker on November 17, 2021

Tags:
Scottish English

Glaswegian Accent

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A Polish man and a Scottish man with a Glaswegian accent talk about sports and being friends.

Posted by Liliana Santos-Vallejo on November 9, 2017

Tags:
Scottish English;
Variation;
Phonetics

Scottish Accents

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The dialect coach Carol Ann Crawford for the show Outlander demonstrates a series of Scottish accents and gives a brief description on each.

Posted by Liliana Santos-Vallejo on November 8, 2017

Tags:
Scottish English;
Variation;
Phonetics

Accent Tour of the UK

We talked in class about how one person producing two versions of one vowel was helpful when asking people to evaluate or respond to speech, because it eliminates other factors such as age and gender, and controls for the vowel itself. I thought this was a really good example of that: this man is really good at putting on a lot of the accents of the UK, and the fact that it is just one person makes it really easy to hear the differences in his speech.

Posted by Miriam Gölz on October 4, 2014

Tags:
British English;
Received Pronunciation;
Scottish English;
Variation