When this gentlemen opened his mouth and started to speak, my jaw dropped and eyes bugged out as I could hardly understand a word he said.
I'm familiar with regional accents in the USA and not just north and south, but things like differences between eastern and western Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland etc. Each State has a difference, but the differences are slight and no where near the complexity that apparently goes on in the UK.
Research brought me here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_English
which in itself is daunting to understand, and I really question one section as follows:
"Although some of the stronger regional accents may sometimes be difficult for some anglophones from outside Britain to understand, almost all "British English" accents are mutually intelligible amongst the British themselves, with only occasional difficulty between very diverse accents...."
I don't believe that and can't see how possible that your British ears can tune into all those very strong and distinct differences and come out of a conversation understanding what you heard.
So, I come to the source and ask those who have lived it to explain if true or not, and as easy for you as the quote describes. Pete
