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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
Qimley has a question for us this week about accents. She wants to know how to identify an American accent from a British one.
It's important to say there isn't an easy answer to this. In Britain there are so many accents and some are similar to American English and some aren’t. Similarly1, North America is huge and there are a lot of different accents so there isn’t just one way to speak American English.
We spoke2 to Dana Hunter from Canada, who has lived in the UK for 10 years, so she knows a lot about the differences between the two Englishes. She pointed3 out a few of the general differences to try and help you.
First of all, vocabulary used in American English and British English differs with certain words. For example, North Americans say apartment and British people say flat. North Americans say garbage and British people say rubbish. There are many examples of this different vocabulary that you can look up on the internet.
There are also some words that are spelt the same but pronounced differently in North American English. Tomato and herb are good examples of this.
There are some general differences in the pronunciation of certain sounds, as Dana mentioned. In North American English, the letter R is much more pronounced than in most British accents. In a word like car, the British pronunciation sounds more like caa.
When North Americans say words with t and u – in words like Tube (the subway in London), tuba, and tuna it sounds like too – toob, tooba, toona. The British pronunciation sounds like ch – choob, chooba, choona.
Certain 'a' sounds are pronounced differently too. The word water sounds very different in North American to British English. You can hear all of these words in the audio4 programme accompanying this page.
If you want to learn British English as opposed to North American English, our Learning5 English expert Nuala O'Sullivan advised you to look for British-based resources to learn English – British websites like bbcchina.com.cn, TV programmes, films, audio programmes like our BBC Learning English ones.
Her most important advice, however, was to not worry about which accent you speak or learn English with. Aim to understand a variety of Englishes, and just be yourself and use your own accent to speak in.
Native English speakers don't care which English accent you learn or speak in – if you can communicate with them then accent really doesn’t matter.
Glossary 词汇
accents 口音
identify 识别、辨别
huge 巨大的
general 广泛的、通常的
vocabulary 词汇
differs 与…有区别
flat 公寓
rubbish 垃圾
look up 查询
herb 香药草
tuba (乐器)大号
accompanying 伴随的
advised 忠告、建议(动词过去时)
British-based resources 英国本地的资源
websites 网站(复数)
aim 目的
really doesn't matter 实在没有关系
1 similarly | |
adv.类似地,相似地 | |
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2 spoke | |
n.(车轮的)辐条;轮辐;破坏某人的计划;阻挠某人的行动 v.讲,谈(speak的过去式);说;演说;从某种观点来说 | |
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3 pointed | |
adj.尖的,直截了当的 | |
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4 audio | |
n./adj.音频(响)(的);声音(的),听觉(的) | |
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5 learning | |
n.学问,学识,学习;动词learn的现在分词 | |
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