Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Scottish, then English. Then maybe Brazilian Portuguese.
+1
Scottish
Then Northern English but Lancashire, Mancunian, Liverpudlian slightly > Brummie or Geordie. Essex, Estuary is lowest on that list, then Welsh. (It's still higher than any following accent though, which would start to include Irish, New Zealand, Australian. Unfortunately Elon ruined South African)
Very specific
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always liked my wife's grandmother's accent - she grew up in London and came over to the US after WW2. Never lost it.
I grew up in Pittsburgh, and there are some great Pittsburgh accents out there. God Bless my Uncle because he is one of those guys you can pick out of a crowd and now where he is from.
Where can we hear some of the great Pittsburg accents?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find Boston accents on men so hot.
+1
Anonymous wrote:I find Boston accents on men so hot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Irish. End of list.
Which? My south Dublin husband sounds nothing like someone from Cork or Belfast!
My college roommate’s parents were from Ireland and I couldn’t understand a word they said. I didn’t realize they all didn’t speak like Bono.