Andrea McLean Does Her Trinidadian Accent | Loose Women
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 17 ต.ค. 2024
- Subscribe now for more! bit.ly/1VGTPwA
From series 20, broadcast on 05/11/2015
Floella Benjamin has made the headlines after she said that migrant children should use received pronunciation. Andrea explains that she lived in Trinidad and came back to Scotland with an accent.
Like, follow and subscribe to Loose Women!
Website: bit.ly/1EDGFp5
TH-cam: bit.ly/1C7hxMy
Facebook: on. 1KXmWdc
Twitter: bit.ly/1Bxfxts
www.itv.com
www.stv.tv
www.u.tv
Lool do they not know that Trinis speak only English lmao
This is Not true. There are more languages spoken on the Island
@@jessenigum16 yes there are different languages in trini but the majority or trinis only speak English ur talking about a small number on the island but ur still right either way
No love most of us speak English Creole with some who speak a variety of English (Trinidadian English)
I was thinking the same thing ridiculous
Some Trinis speak a Trinidadian creole
Not a black girls voice a Trini Accent.
Lol that was such an ignorant statement.
@@jordandavis3867absolutely
@@jordandavis3867 She's saying that to BRITISH people, she had a "black girl's voice" because they assume every Trini is Black
omg her accent🙌🙌🙌
Do they know that Trini is an English accent? Im sorry but its not their speaking skills, its your ability to understand other people around you.
We trinis speak better English than the Americans and our accent is considered quite exhilarating.
Yes they do, especially better than Southeaster US Accent.
And what is your definition of better English? American English is definitely easier to understand.
😂😂😂😂
I think the panel interchanged between " speaking the language " and having a specific accent so they confused the discourse. The issue of the Polish taxi is more of a linguistic challenge than an accent challenge
In the Caribbean, everybody is different. It's a multi-ethnic region on the island.
I did not understand a word they were saying, but they have the nerve to speak about a Trinidad accent and call it a black voice.
They have ' white accents'
Smh.
Ever heard cockney english
You know you’re get old these days when a young person speaks to you and you got them to repeat that again because now the English language has become so corrupted by jargons and slangs, and it appears that young people don’t like vowels as the text jargon minus any vowels are gradually becoming spoken “words”. When my younger nieces/nephews speak to me, I have to completely concentrate with what they’re talking about or I’ll lose the thread, (and can anyone explain why do I feel I need my glasses on these days when someone is speaking to me so that I can understand what they are saying? Ageing does some crazy stuff to your brain!) Anyway I was born and raised in East London to Mauritian parents, but strangely English wasn’t my first language until I started nursery, and I think a lot of first generation who were born to parents that came to the U.K. can understand what I mean. And naturally I understand and speak fluently my parents’ language but English is my dominant language, but strangely, even now strangers on hearing my voice would ask me if I’m French, which is particular as I don’t speak French. I’ve always thought that I sounded like someone from my area but apparently not. And there are snobs around as well who judges you solely from your accent without reading the book first, which is so wrong, and so insulting after they’ve gotten to know you and say things like you’re very insightful or wise, as if in those minutes they’ve spoken to you, you manage to grow a brain. I also hate fake accents people put on when they realise that the person that they’re speak with is from their natal countries, which make me want to bark in their faces, you’re still British, dude!
D West mooring accent 😂
White Trinidadians also speak like her, is not a race ting!