I've a gut feeling that Nunez will do well under Slot. Don't know why, just a guy feeling.
Stop feeling guys
I've a gut feeling that Nunez will do well under Slot. Don't know why, just a guy feeling.
If it works for him...Stop feeling guys
Are you basing that on the school he went to?Which? Danns?
St Helens or out that way.
I'm sorry but there's no such thing as a Merseyside accent. I can't believe you even think that.People in Tranmere are like myself they don't have a Scouse accent they have a Merseyside accent.I'm from Edgehill originally and my Scouse accent has changed to a Merseyside accent.Even north and south Liverpool have different accents.
Then you'd be wrong. Rainhill High School has a partnership with LFC Academy. Danns went there. Trent and Jones also went there while living in West Derby and Toxteth respectively, as did Sterling, Ibe and Ojo, to name a few.Yeah.
Then you'd be wrong. Rainhill High School has a partnership with LFC Academy. Danns went there. Trent and Jones also went there while living in West Derby and Toxteth respectively, as did Sterling, Ibe and Ojo, to name a few.
You shouldn't presume that people live in the same area that they go to school.Just read it, didn't stalk him.

Michael Owen went to school in Wales, though I don't know whether he was still living in Chester.You shouldn't presume that people live in the same area that they go to school.
Anyway you've learned something today![]()
He was born in his local maternity hospital, Countess of Chester but the family lived in Hawarden, North Wales. He's never lived in Chester as far as I know and presumably he went to the local primary school which would have been in Wales, albeit on the very border, (hence the accent, Flint being another example of soft scouse accent).Michael Owen went to school in Wales, though I don't know whether he was still living in Chester.
I'd say Scouse is more influenced by Welsh than vice-versa. Originally people in the Liverpool region would have spoken with a Lancashire accent but the rise of the city's importance as a port saw an influx of Irish, Welsh, foreign sailors (a lot of Scandinavians amongst them - the word scouse derives from a Scandinavian one) etc, and this led to the development of the accent as a combination of those influences.He was born in his local maternity hospital, Countess of Chester but the family lived in Hawarden, North Wales. He's never lived in Chester as far as I know and presumably he went to the local primary school which would have been in Wales, albeit on the very border, (hence the accent, Flint being another example of soft scouse accent).
I'm sorry but there's no such thing as a Merseyside accent. I can't believe you even think that.
St Helens is in Merseyside. Are you telling me they have the same accent as people from Formby? Of course they don't. The range of accents across Merseyside is huge. Even within an area, people born and bred there can have differing accents. One of my sons has a very soft scouse accent, in fact some of his friends from other parts of the country didn't know he was from Liverpool. My other son has a very pronounced scouse accent.
With regard to Birkenhead and Tranmere, my experience is that they have pretty much a scouse accent. I've got 6 cousins born and raised there who have scouse accents. The accent dilutes the further out you go so that you then have the Chester 'Michael Owen accent' which isn't scouse at all but you can tell it's close.
They were probably what you're all calling "soft scouse" because they would all have been wools. To young-me they sounded scouse though! There's definitely (or was definitely) a boundary line somewhere in mid Cheshire where the accent sharply drops off though.Lot of truth in this.I'd say Scouse is more influenced by Welsh than vice-versa. Originally people in the Liverpool region would have spoken with a Lancashire accent but the rise of the city's importance as a port saw an influx of Irish, Welsh, foreign sailors (a lot of Scandinavians amongst them - the word scouse derives from a Scandinavian one) etc, and this led to the development of the accent as a combination of those influences.
I'm not hugely familiar with Flintshire, but further down where I live there are accents which quite clearly have influenced the Scouse one.
Sometimes people unfamiliar with say, a Caernarfon accent, will think it sounds Scouse, but it's not - it's their local accent.
There's more of a reciprocal exchange of influences now, with the influx of people from the North West of England, but that's a relatively recent thing, and those Welsh accents that sound Scouse to an untrained ear have existed here for much longer.
Ah, what a shameNo-one round here sounds remotely scouse.

We seriously need a transfer judging by this thread...![]()
.................DaveOCKOP saying LFC 'expected to enter the market for a CB before window closes'.........