-237 There is no such thing as a "British accent". In Britain, there are literally hundreds of dialects and accents which can vary wildly (compare West Country and Scouse for example). Although it's probably unintentional, when somebody across the pond refers to a "British accent" it simply reeks of ignorance. amirite?

by Anonymous 13 years ago

It doesn't matter what part of Britain it came from, it's still a British accent.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

ahaha, imagine that .."ooohh the cockney accents are sooo sexyy" xP

by Anonymous 13 years ago

Thank god someone has said it, Britain is not a country, Japan is, for example, so obviously it's OK to refer to an accent as Japanese, but Britain is made up of Wales, England, Scotland and Northen Ireland.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

Actually Great Britain is an island consisting of England, Wales and Scotland, not a country.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

She did say that in her comment, that it wasn't a country...

by Anonymous 13 years ago

She said Northern Ireland was in great Britain. Northern Ireland is in the island of Ireland.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

america has accents. WHAT NOW BIIIIIIITCH? :p

by Anonymous 13 years ago

Same thing applies to southern accents, New England accents, and any other type. It's just a broad term to sum up all accents from a particular country or area.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

I think the point is that Britain is made up of several countries. You can say "English accent" or "Welsh accent" even though there are many accents within England and Wales, because every country has a standard accent. The reason "British accent" doesn't work is because Britain is England, Scotland and Wales. It's like saying European accent, it makes no sense at all. Plus when people say British accent they only think English, which is kind of unfair to the Scots and the Welsh. That's all.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

I wouldn't disagree with you there at all. I would break it down further though that even in England, most Mancunians for example, would deeply resent being put in the same bracket as someone from a place like Berkshire (where most American sitcoms take their "British" accents). Furthermore, try telling a Republican Weegie that they have a British accent and see how long your kneecaps last!

by Anonymous 13 years ago

*snicker* Republican Weegie....

by Anonymous 13 years ago

Britain may not be a country, but the areas are still grouped together. It's not a continent, but they're still grouped. People say "American accents", even though America is a LOT larger than the general territory of Britain and we have a wide variety of accents. Sure, you can correct people if you want, but it's not exactly ignorant.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

i'm not really educated on this whole subject, but what i'm getting from it is that because 'british accent' refers to england, scotland, and wales, it's incorrect. .. so couldn't we just say english accent?

by Anonymous 13 years ago

Generalizations about American accents are cool though. Not like we have different dialects too. We ALL speak like the southern accent English people think we all have. Every. Single. One of us.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

And most people here don't even have "southern accents!" I agree, OP is being somewhat hypocritical.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

You reek of ignorance, you snob

by Anonymous 13 years ago

Once I could tell they were British, I continued reading it in my head in a *British Accent*.

by Anonymous 13 years ago

Apparently, people from outside this country think that an American accent is a Southern accent. This poster is making the exact same argument that I'd propose against that, albeit for another country. But wouldn't it annoy you if you were British and every American who thought they were British came up and talked to you in a Posh accent?

by Anonymous 13 years ago

Am i the only one who read that with a british accent?

by Anonymous 13 years ago

Why are there so many thumbs downs? This is true!

by Anonymous 13 years ago

Because it doesn't "reek of ignorance," people do it with every coutry, area, everything in the world. Like other people have said above, people call it an American accent and that apparently doesn't reek of ignorance. Even though America has many dialects as well and most of them sound nothing alike. Basically downvote for sounding like a snobbish twat who fails to realize that kind of "ignorance" is everywhere and isn't really "ignorance".

by Anonymous 12 years ago