Half welsh, half london.
Printable View
Half welsh, half london.
For me, I used to have a Northern Irish one, but its now a more Irish/English/American, you can't really tell where I am from anymore (I know a few good Americans and talk to them alot and thats how my accent started changing, which I kinda like my new accent.
Pennsylvanian accent. its a combo of New England and Southern accents.
Californian with a good bit of Valley Girl mixed in.
Like a person from Colorado, mixed with a slight mexican accent.
Living in South Carolina, I do have a bit of a Southern twang to my voice.
London, wHOOt.
But I think Liverpudlian/Merseyside accents are so awesome.
I used to have a really cool Brooklyn accent when I was younger (my homeroom teacher in the fourth grade was from Brooklyn), but over the years it mellowed down and now it's a generic American accent. You guys call it a Midwestern accent, right?
My accent was generally beat out of me (years of speech therapy help) but occasionally i slip up and take out the r in a word. Such as Eska, or Caa.
Basically n/a
I've been told I have a London accent, but there's quite a lot in London. At least, I think.
I like to think I have a rather refined accent, as I pronounce all my letters and don't talk like a commoner. That being said, after a night out I sound like a right ol' lout. Hmm...
Perhaps I'm trying to have an accent I don't really have subconsciously. I'll ask my Psychology teacher tomorrow!
Boston accent =]
Canadian?
So basically plain.
With a slight British lilt.
I don't know the reason for the last one.
It just shows up.
Down home on the farm Louisiana with a twist of city accent
Typically just a boring, generic mid-western accent, but for some odd reason -- I'm assuming it's due to the multitude of British/Canadian shows and films I watch -- I have developed a mix between that of British and Canadian accents on certain words.