Mine is generally Home Counties/Southern England semi-posh although I do pick up accents very quickly when immersed in them.
I am British, a southerner, and that was my original accent. But I lived in New Zealand and Australia for a time. When I went back to Britain people always thought I was a New Zealander. Although much of that accent wore off after a while, some remains. I have lived in Italy for the last 15 years and as I have to speak in Italian much of the time sometimes Italian words and phrases come easier to me than the English ones. So I am a bit of a mixture really I guess. I don't know what I sound like in Italian, terrible I imagine ! I make myself understood well enough, but people always know straight away that I am Inglese.
A fairly nondescript british accent, friends I have in the North East of England where I live describe it as a posh southern accent but in the south they instantly pick up on the northern words that slip into my vocabulary and call me a posh northerner.
I guess you'd call it mid-Atlantic. Americans I meet can tell pretty quickly I'm from the UK but family and friends back there think I speak with an American accent (or their idea of one).
Accents I enjoy listening to are Highland Scottish which has a lovely, light, musical lilt to it, and the Caribbean islands.
A rapid East Coast Canadian bordering on Newfoundlander, if I'm not being careful. A neutral North American when I am.
Born and raised in South Carolina so I have what is broadly considered a southern accent.
You can hear it in an audio I recorded of one of my poems and posted here.
The voice of a Southern Gentleman.
My accent is USA southern
Mid-Atlantic, I guess. Americans can quickly tell I'm from the UK but friends and family think I speak with an American accent. I can do a decent Scottish accent having lived their as a kid.
Born in the south, raised in the south, currently live in the south, so of course I speak with a Southern accent and tend to express certain letters with my southern Twanggggg When I want to express certain topics
I'm told that when I'm careless I slip into a North Central accent. I didn't used to care but since Sarah Palin came along (and thankfully disappeared), I've tried to move away from it.
for earth the wonder of,
of all life not above,
heed love, need love;
seed love—
love love.
Somerset with a hint of Bristol
Southern USA, but they are quite distinctive depending on what part of the south you are from. Mine is Georgia.
I have a slight SoCal drawl mixed with valley girl (up talk), Angelino and Chicano affects too.
fairly neutral with some lingering kentucky. i'm from southern kentucky, and though i also went to college in kentucky, the student body was diverse enough that a lot of my southern kentucky accent dissolved. i've lived back in my hometown for several years now, but professional life and amateur theater have kept the worst of the old ways at bay.
My accent is a bit of a mess. It is mostly a mix of general southern, Miamian and Latin accents with sprinklings of midwestern here and there
Uk here. Commonly known as Scouse, Liverpulian. Quiet mild, compared to some.
UK here. I'd describe mine as mild Scouse, Liverpudlian, for those outside the UK.