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Why do we have so many accents - even when we’re speaking the same language? What's happening in our brains and mouths to make us sound so different from each other? This week’s question from listener Amanda takes CrowdScience to Glasgow in Scotland: home to one of the most studied - and distinctive - accents of English.
Along the way we visit a voice coach to try and learn a Texan accent, use ultrasound to see what different sounds look like inside our mouths and find out how a brand new dialect was formed when many accents collided in New Zealand.
Do you have a question we can turn into a programme? Email us at [email protected]
Presenter: Nastaran Tavakoli-Far
New Zealand Mobile Unit recordings courtesy of Ngā Taonga Sound & Vision
(Image: A mouth screaming white letters. Credit: Thinkstock)
By BBC World Service4.7
436436 ratings
Why do we have so many accents - even when we’re speaking the same language? What's happening in our brains and mouths to make us sound so different from each other? This week’s question from listener Amanda takes CrowdScience to Glasgow in Scotland: home to one of the most studied - and distinctive - accents of English.
Along the way we visit a voice coach to try and learn a Texan accent, use ultrasound to see what different sounds look like inside our mouths and find out how a brand new dialect was formed when many accents collided in New Zealand.
Do you have a question we can turn into a programme? Email us at [email protected]
Presenter: Nastaran Tavakoli-Far
New Zealand Mobile Unit recordings courtesy of Ngā Taonga Sound & Vision
(Image: A mouth screaming white letters. Credit: Thinkstock)

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