It just occurred to me when Jimmy brought it up--Scouse, Geordie, and Cockney accents: it's not like they give you any idea where they're actually
from
or anything. If you don't know they refer to Liverpool, Newcastle, and that wee bit of London, you'd have no idea. Does the US have accent names like that?
Salma is enough to make on believe in miracles before you even get to her origin story.
LeN, that sound plenty reasonable, and perhaps a lot less meaner than I'd ahve been tempted to be.
Dear DirecTV. If I lose my job, I will no longer be able to pay your exorbitant monthly fees.
Therefore, please to stop running back to back episodes of The Wire late Sunday nights.
Ta, me.
Does the US have accent names like that?
How about Hoosier? Is that an accent?
Salma is enough to make on believe in miracles before you even get to her origin story.
The miraculous origin story of her boobs!
Banderas was impressing me. I knew he'd come to the US not speaking English at all, but I didn't realize he'd gotten his first movie role before he learned it!
If you don't know they refer to Liverpool, Newcastle, and that wee bit of London, you'd have no idea.
I've known what a Geordie accent sounds like for a while due to all the British television I watch, but it wasn't until just the other day that I put it together with Newcastle while watching an old Graham Norton episode with Diddy, Vince Vaughn, and Sarah Millican.
Hoosier accents vary significantly depending on what part of the state you're from, so I'm going to say, "no" on that one.
Hoosier accents vary significantly depending on what part of the state you're from, so I'm going to say, "no" on that one.
Walking, talking, proof of that one.
We don't even have that many regional (or whatever) nicknames that don't connect to the place name -- Hoosiers, what else? Not Massholes, obviously.
Cajun doesn't refer specifically to the region it's from.