"Assumes" in the given sentence is a verb.
In England, the Irish or Scottish accents sound distinctive and different from the English accents.
The term "English accent" typically refers to the accents specific to various regions in England, while "British accent" is a broader term encompassing accents from all regions within the United Kingdom, including Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland.
All English accents are British accents, but not all British accents are English accents. That's because England is one country in the nation of Great Britain. So if one was to speak in a 'scouse' or 'cockney' accent, this would be both English and British. But if you were from Wales, while your accent is a British one, it is not English.
Americans did not lose their English accents but rather developed their own unique accents over time. The American accent was influenced by various factors, including the regional dialects of English-speaking settlers from different parts of Britain, the influence of other immigrant communities, and the natural evolution of language. Additionally, the geographical separation from England and historical events further contributed to the divergence of accents between the two countries.
The American accent in the 1700s would have been closer to the accents of British colonists at that time, with influences from various regions of England. It would have sounded more similar to modern British accents than to contemporary American accents. Over time, the American accent evolved and diverged from its British roots.
In England, the Irish or Scottish accents sound distinctive and different from the English accents.
they have accents!
The British accents are spelled the same as American accents. The New England accents are spelled different than American accents.
There are many different accents in England: scouse in Liverpool, geordie in Newcastle, brummie in Birmingham and cockney in London. Other places with distinct accents include Cornwall and Yorkshire.
Lots of hunky ones with hot accents.
i think Italy i like their accents
YeS
Cornish, Devonshire, Somerset and Bristol.
They are NOT the same. There are various English accents but british is even more ambiguous as Britain refers to the whole of the british isles, so both Irish and scottish are british accents. English accents just refer to those originating in England, so Cockney (London) and Geordie (Newcastle) accents are English
My forefathers came from England and Ireland in the 18th century.
There are three ways to put it in a sentence, I suppose. 1) I have no idea what "antidisestablishmentarianism" means. 2) Antidisestablishmentarianism is a political position that originated in nineteenth-century Britain, where antidisestablishmentarians were opposed to proposals to remove the Church of England's status as the state church of England forwarded principally by both Payne and Tuffin. 3) The Church of England was stuck in a state of antidisestablishmentarianism in the nineteenth century.
America, England, India, Australia, and Russians have been voted the most recognizable world wide accents known to humans.