in

British people really speak like this

Click here to buy Josh's bestselling autobiography!

Check out our latest JOLLY merch at

Hit join and become a Jollybean member to join us in our members-only livestreams:

Special thanks to our Jollybean VIPs for supporting us in making this video!

Nora yousef
Bettie Meier
G. J Chua
Kyle Williams
Claim2Game (a.k.a isaiah gollan 20)
Vicky Bham
James Reyes
Colin Kato
David Whitener
Li Winslow
Reilly Willoughby
12rose3
Jim Harrington
AJ Villanueva
Julian Leung
Yun Lim
Victor koh
Diana Woon
63angel
Nurse Laykan
heather owen
CitrusQuill
Gloria Kwon
lira12tan
Andi526

What do you think?

Written by daily reporters

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings

91 Comments

    • @@islandsicedtea Americans put more emphasis on the I. And sounds more like EYE.
      A lot of it comes down to how we talk naturally too. Americans say words starting weak, and build up. ( frIDAy )
      Whereas it’s the opposite for English, ( FRidaY ).
      Also the English have a very weak T, they do say their T’s most of the time, but it’s really hard for us to pick up on it.
      Especially if they have a thicker accent. But most of us think the English only have 1 accent. Lol.

    • @@islandsicedtea Only in certain parts of the south – namely the West Country and Norfolk (the ones who talk like pirates and farmers).

      Up north it’s more like “fraah-deeeh” or “frydih” depending on what flavour of North and how old you are.

    • I was talking to a Canadian friend, ex friend rather, I tried to tell him Canadians got an accent and their pronunciation of “about” in particular really exposes their accent differences, and he blocked me promptly, it wasn’t even a rude conversation, i even broke down how folks in different US states are distinguishable easily.

    • They were saying it like it was written, so yeah they would. These boys clearly pronounce a t in saturday. The way it was written was more dialect than they speak.

    • ​@@Slay_No_More Because you WERE rude. Canadians don’t like to tolerate rudeness coming from ignorance. Nobody in canada actually says aboot its a myth created by americans and you had the audacity to not ASK him but TELL him how they say a word. I work in a job where i call literally every area in canada and ive never heard anyone say aboot.

    • They all seem sweet (as sweet as teenager boys can be, anyway) and friendly.

      AND YES, we need school uniforms in the USA. The fact that you can just roll up to school with pants down around your knees and your bits hanging out of your tank top is just gross. Dress like that on your own time.

    • @@gutsfinkywhat is taught here is completely different to that of the gender and race fixated US…

      I mean even just bringing that that up probably seems like hate speech to some American teenagers

      The vast majority of people live in the real world here when it’s quite the opposite in the US and that is where the main problem lies imo

  1. As a mainland European (French) I learnt British English and then went on to live in the UK for 4 years. They have the accent I have always loved (and had to learn to understand). Nowadays I wish there were more British content on YouTube but because America is where the money, the spare time and the extravaganza are, the few times I get anything British-related is like : “such celeb’s impression of a British accent”, or “this has to be the most British thing ever” !

    YT please, the BRITS are my beloved neighbours and the originators of English.
    Remember it sometimes.

    • its a germanic language, would you tell norwegians theyre just a copy of german? not only that but its the least germanic out of all the germanic laguages, it has heavy celtic, greek latin and french influences to just name a few. Also its the language YOURE speaking. So i recommend stfu.@@yanniakajohn3858

    • invented, but then lost the plot. American English is how the English used to speak during the time of Shakespeare. As English settlers came to America, they brought their accent with them. Meanwhile, English people in England began drifting away from their original accent. Whereas America has largely kept the same accent.

    • @gregabott5583I have no idea where you’re getting your info that Americans pronounce T like D. Those are two entirely different sounds. Irish people were not common in America until much later in its history.

Police rescue sloth on the road

Michael Olise to Bayern Munich? 🤔 | The latest on transfers in the Premier League