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FordĂtĂĄsi problĂ©ma jelentĂ©se
And you sound like *both*?
That's something.
One step above "chav" in the hierarchy, I believe.
They make some other weird sounds too, like if they say "Gate ate" to you it means "Get out"
That's all I got.
Did I pass the citizenship test?
Think Siegfried in BBC's "All Creatures Great and Small".
I wish I had that accent.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=51PyZeidmxM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I9BcIsCqX6s
The stereotype is of course, Cockney, because it's way way harder there and more of a really hard and gruff glottal stop deep in the throat.
It's complicated a little by class as well because people from more privileged backgrounds and educations tend to speak with a few more features of RP in their speech. Which as we all know has a bit of a hard and clear T in it. As a result of which you can hear a middle-class well-educated Yorkshireman's T sounds from about a hundred miles away. Massive levels of over-enunciation. It's an amusing thing to experience. Just got to watch out for all the sheep it summons.
The Lambeth Walk is something of a Cockney Anthem, and according to Wiki, the late Queen Elizabeth was a fan, joining in with the "Oi!" chorus during performances.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6fgKn3SbCYQ
It's all in good fun. But we have inner city hood slang, on top of Mainer, Boston (incl. N. Boston, S. Boston, Boston Brahmin, and more), NJ/NYC, Minnesooota, straight up Boomhauer hillbilly, the always-unintelligible Cajun, and a thousand more accents the TV News people must all have heavily trained out of them before they can even get a job.