Obviously lots of accents/dialects based on location like American southern, Australian or Jamaican. Anything like that is an acceptable answer. As well as non native english speaker’s spoken english sound, like a Latino/a person.
Ngl I love a good Appalachian accent
I really like the one Natalie Dormer has.
Barring that, Irish for sure. They don’t speak words so much as let them onto the wind to go play.
I really like when British people impersonate an American accent.
Scottish and Irish.
cockney; such wonderfully bizarre sounds.
I prefer peniselbow
Im sorry
Scottish, especially from the highlands. I melt when i hear it
Scottish is a good one, crazy how different it is from proper British. Such a small island.
Irish or Scottish.
Scottish. You can really get a good swear going.
Russian and Mexican
Russian sounds so intimidating. That probably just bias based on a lifetime of them being the bad guys in media.
Russian sounds so intimidating
That’s why I like it
“Favorite” as in “entertaining” is definitely the Boston accent because it makes you sound wicked smahht.
“Yo that fuckin kid ova theya, yeah that one, his name is fuckin sully ohr sum shit. Anyway, yeah, that kid, THAT FUCKIN KID, he fuckin suuuuuucks” Sully and the speaker are both 40 year old men.
Irish and Caribbean. The accents sound musical.
Irish accents really do sound musical.
I absolutely love hearing a woman speak with a French accent. Second best is an Australian accent.
i absolutely love indian accents genuinely i can’t help but smile listening to indians speak. their languages sound so poetic so hearing them speak english is like listening to a fae a little bit
It is actually nice when the person has better language proficiency in English. What people often make fun of on the Internet are many who either don’t know how to speak English or don’t know it well, and that’s pretty common and normal for that country of 1.5 billion. If you listen to any seasoned Indian journalist (especially a bit older), you’d hear that faint old English lilt (from the middle of the start of the last century). You will also find that in the way Pakistanis speak English. It’s very similar.
Colonisation has somewhat preserved elements aspects of English in our vocabulary in South Asia.
For example I almost never hear anyone on the anglosphere say “ta ta” but in Bangladesh it is a semi-regular part of our “goodbye speech”
Another such phrase is “Oil your own machine”, I never hear it in the anglosphere.
Interesting. Got any names I can search for to listen to this? Links to sound clips?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f7CW7S0zxv4 this is just an example as he is kinda famous. But you can find more. Here’s two seasoned journos talking https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4682YUnN_yQ and this https://www.youtube.com/shorts/TXokRjBVSaA (I don’t like this journo to be honest but it’s another example of very common Indian accent - hers is actually less sophisticated as the previous ones have had kinda more “private school” upbringing).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ha-LoNqOaEk few examples of subcontinent English
Wales!
LOL welsh
I miss Cajuns.
Are they gone?
No, but I am.
“Home is where you make it…”