I’m pretty sure there are better examples of an Anglesey accent.
Basically the further east you get the more scouse influence and the further west you get the more people are translating from Welsh to English in the head so it gets slower
One missed one which I think is the best is the meirionyddshire accent. Family’s from the area and can’t help but smile at them, they all sound like they’ve dealt with blocked noses for the past 800 years.
Yeah, na. That Denbighshire accent is nowhere near broad enough but glad to see it’s a clip of someone glassing a doorman. Don’t know why Duffy (?) is on there as a Gwynedd accent, she’s barely got one. Gruff is the purest Gwynedd accent going.
That’s not a good example of an Anglesey accent
The first bloke has a Deeside accent; there are ‘more-Welsh’ accents elsewhere in Flintshire. No way does the bloke who glassed the bouncer have a Denbighshire accent. The woman from Anglesey does not have an Anglesey accent.
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I’m pretty sure there are better examples of an Anglesey accent.
Basically the further east you get the more scouse influence and the further west you get the more people are translating from Welsh to English in the head so it gets slower
One missed one which I think is the best is the meirionyddshire accent. Family’s from the area and can’t help but smile at them, they all sound like they’ve dealt with blocked noses for the past 800 years.
Yeah, na. That Denbighshire accent is nowhere near broad enough but glad to see it’s a clip of someone glassing a doorman. Don’t know why Duffy (?) is on there as a Gwynedd accent, she’s barely got one. Gruff is the purest Gwynedd accent going.
That’s not a good example of an Anglesey accent
The first bloke has a Deeside accent; there are ‘more-Welsh’ accents elsewhere in Flintshire. No way does the bloke who glassed the bouncer have a Denbighshire accent. The woman from Anglesey does not have an Anglesey accent.
Try again.
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