English Language & Usage Asked on January 24, 2021
As an American, a large part of my impoverished experience of British accents comes from ancient BBC comedy imports on PBS. I’d very much like to identify the regional accents the following actors are using:
the farmer Maurice Moulterd in Are you being Served? Again! (aka Grace and Favour) (the second series where they’re running a country inn).
Alice Tinker and Owen Newitt in The Vicar of Dibley
Onslow from Keeping Up Appearances
All four have distinct ways of speaking (not necessarily the same, but then that’s the problem, I can’t tell).
Which accent does each of these four use?
Apart from Onslow, which is close to the actor's native Liverpool accent, the others are 'generic countryside' — pretty much the same as if an American actor was asked to do 'southern' or 'redneck'
The standard country bumpkin accent is normally west county/sommerset - or at least you just have to pronounce it zummerset and say oo-arrgh a lot.
Interesting aside the english actor who played Darth Vader (David Prowse) is from that area and has a strong west country accent - not quite in keeping with the dark lord of the sith. Even more aside, Arnold Schwarzenegger, who is Austrian, wasn't chosen to dub his own films into German - because to a German the Austrian accent is the standard country bumpkin.
Correct answer by mgb on January 24, 2021
I'm not convinced about this. Accents do vary, and actors often take immense trouble: John Gielgud once said his proudest moment was being accused of speaking with one village's accent when the character was supposed to come from a village ten miles away. Yes, Somerset -or 'Mummerzet'- is the easiest for an amateur, but others are easily distinguishable. 'The Vicar of Dibley' is recognizably set in a southern county, but not very far west: I'd plump for Oxfordshire myself but without certainty. Onslow is certainly Merseyside. (Hampshire people, of course, speak the purest English imaginable, and have no accent at all:) )
My point (insofar as there is one) is that accents are instantly recognizable to the locals, and your spoken English will identify you as coming from (or having learnt the language from) a certain region/class. Certainly most Americans can't tell the difference between English accents; but then I know English people who fondly imagine they can do "an American accent" that wavers from California to Canada, with a few word choices from the Deep South.
Answered by Tim Lymington on January 24, 2021
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