Accents that are particular to England,
Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales are each different and with practice you
can begin to talk with one that sounds genuine. Along with the accents are
mannerisms that you will need to assume to affect the part. The following
directions may describe Queen's English or "Received Pronunciation"
(RP) spoken in south England and Wales, rarely ever used in the modern-day
United Kingdom, but the foreigners' stereotypical view of how the British
speak. This study of RP is concerned largely with pronunciation, while study of
the standard language is also concerned with matters such as correct grammar,
more formal vocabulary and style.
Start with the Rs. Understand that in most
British accents speakers don't roll their Rs (except for those from Scotland,
Northumbria, Northern Ireland, and parts of Lancashire), but not all British
accents are the same. For example, a Scottish accent varies greatly from an
English accent. After a vowel, don't pronounce the R, but draw out the vowel
and maybe add an "uh" (Here is "heeuh"). In words like
"hurry", don't blend the R with the vowel. Say "huh-ree".
·
In American English, words
ending with "rl" or "rel" can be pronounced using either
one or two syllables, completely interchangeably. This is not the case in
British English. "-rl" words like "girl", "hurl",
etc, are pronounced as one syllable with silent R, while "squirrel"
is "squih-rul", and "referral" is "re-fer-rul".
·
Some words are easier to say in
a British accent. For example, mirror, which sounds like "mih-ra". Do
not say "mirror" like "mere"; British people almost never
do that. When saying some words that end in a W it is often pronounced with an
"r" at the end. For example, the word "saw" can be
pronounced as "saw-r", used in a sentence it is "I sawr
it!"
Part
2 of 6: U's
Pronounce U in stupid and in duty with the
ew or "you" sound. Avoid the oo as in an American accent; thus it is
pronounced stewpid or commonly schewpid, not stoopid, etc. duty would be
pronounced dewty or more often jooty. In the standard English accent, the A
(for example, in father) is pronounced at the back of the mouth with an open
throat—it sounds like "arh". This is the case in pretty much all
British accents, but it's exaggerated in RP. In southern England and in RP,
words such as "bath", "path", "glass",
"grass" also use this vowel (barth, parth, glarss, grarss, etc.).
However, in other parts of Britain "bath", "path", etc.
sound like "ah".
Part
3 of 6: Heavy consonants
Enunciate on heavy consonant words.
Pronounce that T in "duty" as T: not as the American D as doody so
that duty is pronounced dewty or a softer jooty. Pronounce the suffix -ing with
a strong G. This way it sounds like -ing rather than -een. But sometimes it is
shortened to in as in lookin.
·
The words human being are
pronounced hewman being or yooman been in certain areas, though it could be
pronounced hewman bee-in.
Part
4 of 6: T's
Sometimes drop the Ts. With some accents,
including cockney accents, Ts aren't pronounced in words where Americans use D
to replace it. However, there is usually a short pause or "hiccup" in
its place. So "battle" might be pronounced ba-ill but it would be a
rare occasion to find someone saying "Ba-ill" catching the air behind
the back of the tongue at the end of the first syllable before expelling it on
pronunciation of the second syllable. This is known as the glottal stop.
Americans use glottal stops, too, for words like "mittens" and
"mountain". It's just that British use them more often.
·
People with Estuary English,
RP, Scottish, Irish and Welsh accents do consider it lazy and rude to drop the
Ts, and this feature doesn't exist, but in almost all accents it's accepted to
do it in the middle of words in casual contexts and almost universal to put a
glottal stop at the end of a word.
Part
5 of 6: Pronunciation
Observe that some words are pronounced as
written. The word "herb" should be pronounced with an H sound. The
word "been" is pronounced "bean", rather than
"bin" or "ben". For RP, "Again" and
"renaissance" are pronounced like "a gain" and "run
nay sänce", with the "ai" as in "pain", not
"said." The words ending in "body" are pronounced as
written, like "any body", not "any buddy." But use a
British short O sound.
Observe that H is not always pronounced.
The "H" is pronounced in the word "herb," in contrast to
American erb. However, in many British accents, the H at the beginning of a
word is often omitted, such as in many Northern accents and the Cockney accent.
Say "bean," not "bin"
for the word been. In an American accent, this is often pronounced bin. In an
English accent, been is a common pronunciation, but "bin" is more
often heard in casual speech where the word isn't particularly stressed.
Notice that two or more vowels together may
prompt an extra syllable. For example, the word "road" would usually
be pronounced rohd, but in Wales and with some people in Northern Ireland it
might be pronounced ro.ord. Some speakers may even say "reh-uud."
Part
6 of 6: Listening and copying
Listen to the "music" of the
language. All accents and dialects have their own musicality. Pay attention to
the tones and emphasis of British speakers. Sir Johnathan Ive is a good
example, listen to his accent at Apple revealings. Do sentences generally end
on a higher note, the same, or lower? How much variation is there in tone
throughout a typical sentence? There is a huge variation between regions with
tonality. British speech, especially RP, usually varies much less within a
sentence than American English, and the general tendency is to go down slightly
towards the end of a phrase. However, Liverpool and north-east England are
notable exceptions!
·
For example, instead of saying,
"is he going to the STORE?" Say, "is he GOING to the
store?" Have the question descending in tone as opposed to ascending in
tone (going up in tone is more common in American or Australian English).
Get a British person to say well known
sentences: "How now brown cow" and "The rain in Spain stays
mainly on the plain" and pay close attention. Rounded mouth vowels in
words such as "about" in London, are usually flattened in Northern
Ireland.
Immerse yourself in the British culture;
this means surround yourself with individuals that speak, live, walk and talk
British English. It's the surest way to learn a British accent quickly. Soon,
you'll find yourself naturally able to speak with the variations above.
Anything with a British speaker will work—try listening to the BBC (which
provides free radio and television newscasts on the web) songs with British
singers, or movies with British characters.
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