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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a deep accent" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a strong or pronounced accent that is noticeable when someone speaks.
Example: "She spoke with a deep accent that revealed her Southern roots."
Alternatives: "a strong accent" or "a heavy accent".
Exact(2)
"That was tough; he was a 6-foot-5 Southerner with a deep accent sitting behind his desk," said Mr. Sealey, who is about 5 feet 8. "He told me, 'Weeeell, son, there's not much we can do for you".' Mr. Sealey was still not eligible for federal loans or grants.
Williams, soon after, traipsed into the hospital room, wearing a doctor's coat and with a deep accent, demanded "turn over".
Similar(58)
"A deep German accent.
"But of course I don't believe that," the boy muttered in a deep Bavarian accent.
He had a deep Kerry accent: you could hear the turf in it".
She smiles and says, in a deep Armenian accent: "Who knows?
In a deep Southern accent, he said that Tipper says hello and that they had just celebrated their thirtieth wedding anniversary.
I was wearing an A3 cardboard hat and employing a deep southern accent, so dropped all that to deal with her.
Another time, I watched as Ali stopped to shake hands with an elderly white man who had a deep Southern accent.
Jennifer Nettles, Sugarland's singer, is solid country, with a Deep South accent and the cutting tone and tense, bluesy inflections of singers like Loretta Lynn and Kitty Wells.
The caller was clearly an elderly black woman — she spoke with a deep Creole accent and referred to me once or twice as "baby," but otherwise she didn't identify herself.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com