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U wot m8, u avin’ a giggle?
British people are real?
No we’re all crisis actors paid for by the German government to scare countries to stay in the EU.
Hmmm seems ethically wrong but a social net good? ;)
I love this response.
No, I don’t think we are
/accent
Yer full of bollocks. Of course we are.
Br***** people. Don’t be so crude please.
Oh I’m so sorry :x
I know it’s a joke but if you’re Scottish and you work with southern English cunts, this is true
I’m British. We don’t have the accent American’s think we do. We’re far more scummy and swear far more. Proudly working class, and proudly unpretentious.
You assume we know what pretentious means…
That’s very pretentious of you to say, I think. I don’t know for sure, though, because I am also Murican.
It’s that thing with the bear riding the car, right?
Look, America has it’s damn problems— we sure as hell do. But I need to talk about Britain for a sec. I’m not trying to bash you guys; but I have a hot take that’s been boiling in the back of my head for years, and I’ve had very few opportunities to talk about it.
That “proudly unpretentious” bit is absolutely true— to a literal fault. I find that British people have such an obsession with “not being pretentious” that it goes full circle and does become pretentious. The opposite of hopes, dreams, effort, and passion is… cynicism. And man, is British culture obsessed with cynicism.
Like, I know you Brits had a super shitty history that made you all iconically cynical and all… but that cynicism is more bad than good. Your culture has an obsession with misery, death, and the destruction of aforementioned hopes and dreams. It’s all over your media, including your comedy. Everything from asylums, to plagues, to the personification of death, to a strange comedic form of the glorification of “common sense” over education. For that last part and other reasons, cynicism also seems to be a huge source of British anti-intellectualism, too. A lot of your jokes are about how clever you are that you subscribe to “common sense” instead of some idealistic thought— and usually said idealistic thought is harmless or even good.
In Britain’s “anti-pretentious” culture, sometimes they go too far in other ways, too. It’s for example why British cartoons are so happily-sloppy and nonsensical. They just don’t want to take cartoons (or much of anything) seriously, and don’t want to use them to display hope and strength and intelligence and beauty. In much of the rest of the developed world, cartooning is a medium that is sometimes (or often) used for “fine art”— your Avatar: TLA’s, your Batman: TAS’s, and your Steven Universe’s. But British people don’t see cartoons as a medium for inspiration— to them, it’s just all silly, cheap, over-stylized, brainless play stuff.
I’m reminded of Superman vs. The Elite, where— ironically— Superman had to deal with an anti-hero British guy named Manchester Black, who was a very powerful telekinetic. Manchester was a cynic who said the world was full of cancer that needed to be forcefully cut out— damn the rights or safety of anyone else. Manchester told Superman, “You’re living in a dream world!” And Superman said, “Yes. Dreams save us. Dreams lift us up and transform us into something better.” And that sort of philosophy is why I don’t subscribe to cynicism, and never have.
With that said, I’m not trying to bash British people or anything. It’s just that I’m the opposite of cynical, so British cynicism has always kinda rubbed me the wrong way, is all.
The unfortunate part is that their home accent is Welsh.
So do they speak American at home?
Doesn’t everyone?
I’ve yet to see a movie where this isn’t true.
yes, and people in Portugal speak Brazilian
Ummm I think you’ll find both speak Spanish
You’ve obviously never been to New Mexico
Is that where the speak heisenburgian?
What? No, they speak New Mexican
We could be doing the accent in our free-time
I understood that reference.
Nice, innit
It could be worse, imagine having to do a New Jersey accent all the time.
As a non English speaker, I find this hilarious
Dear @FierroGamer, I must inform you that your message is in English. This means you can type English, although I don’t know if you can speak the language or not.
I must inform you that speaking and writing are different verbs
I completely agree! I’ve studied Spanish for decades and I still have trouble understanding any native speaker unless they are speaking slowly.
Non-native speaker, perhaps?
Why did this let me instantly do a British accent?
Cause it’s easier
Is there a reason why New Zealanders, despite being Commonwealth and British derived, sound more like Americans than the Australians who are next door?
The “british” accent as we think of it has evolved greatly since the colonial era. I’m not a linguist but I’d suggest the similarities you hear between Kiwi and American accents are things that were ubiquitous at one time then other English speakers lost them along way.
Thank you for that. It was really insightful.
You think Kiwis sound American? What are you smoking?
Because American English and New Zealand (and Australia) all derived from British English, obviously, but have drifted less than the accents in Britain. US, NZ, and AUS all drifted differently but the three may still be closer to the British English from the time their colonies were established.
https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20180207-how-americans-preserved-british-english
At home practicing various ways to say “fair enough” and “at the end of the day”
Fur’nuf. T’enduf day.
Fairy nuff
Ah’ end uthu day
As an American, whenever I try to do an English accent it ends up as Australian. That one is much easier. Even the affectations feel easier to do.
I suspect that’s cause you’re going for a Cockney accent.
The truth is at home they all sound South African.
Jou ma se poes, man
Tolking South Ofrican? It’s not a wolk in the pork, Mork.
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