Regional accents of English

(Redirected fromBritish accent)

SpokenEnglishshows great variation across regions where it is the predominant language. TheUnited Kingdomhas a wide variety of accents, and no single "British accent" exists. This article provides an overview of the numerous identifiable variations inpronunciation.Such distinctions usually derive from thephoneticinventory of localdialects,as well as from broader differences in theStandard Englishof different primary-speaking populations.

Accentis the part of dialect concerning local pronunciation.Vocabularyandgrammarare described elsewhere; see thelist of dialects of the English language.Secondary English speakers tend to carry over theintonationandphoneticsof theirmother tonguein English speech. For more details on this, seenon-native pronunciations of English.

Primary English speakers show great variability in terms of regional accents. Examples such asPennsylvania Dutch Englishare easily identified by key characteristics, but others are more obscure or easily confused. Broad regions can possess subforms. For instance, towns located less than 10 miles (16 km) from the city ofManchester,such asBolton,Oldham,Rochdale,andSalfordeach have distinct accents, all of which are grouped together under the broaderLancashire accent.These sub-dialects are very similar to each other, but non-local listeners can identify firm differences. On the other side of the spectrum, Australia has aGeneral Australianaccent which remains almost unchanged over thousands of miles.

English accents can differ enough to create room for misunderstandings. For example, the pronunciation of "pearl" in some variants ofScottish Englishcan sound like the entirely unrelated word "petal" to an American. For a summary of the differences between accents, seeSound correspondences between English accents.

Overview

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Varieties of Standard English and their features[1]
Phonological
features
United
States
Canada Republic
of Ireland
United Kingdom South
Africa
Australia New
Zealand
Northern
Ireland
Scotland England Wales
/æ/rather than/ɑː/
incan't
Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
fatherbothermerger Yes Yes
consistent intervocalic
alveolar-flapping
Yes Yes Yes
unrounded[ɑ]
inpot
Yes Yes Yes
syllabic[ɝ]
inbird
Yes[verification needed] Yes Yes Yes
cot-caughtmerger Variable Yes Yes Yes
FOOTGOOSEmerger Yes Yes
trap-bathsplit Variable Variable[a] Variable Yes Partial[b] Yes
rhotic or non-rhotic Mostly rhotic Rhotic Rhotic Rhotic Rhotic Mostly non-rhotic Non-rhotic Non-rhotic Non-rhotic Mostly non-rhotic
monophthongal/aɪ,aʊ/,
close vowels for/æ,ɛ/
Yes Mostly[c] Yes
front[aː]
for/ɑːr/
Yes Variable Variable Yes Yes
Dialects and open vowels
word RP GA Can sound change
THOUGHT /ɔ/ /ɔ/ /ɑ/ cotcaughtmerger
CLOTH /ɒ/ lotclothsplit
LOT /ɑ/ fatherbothermerger
PALM /ɑː/
PLANT /æ/ /æ/ trapbathsplit
BATH
TRAP /æ/

English dialects differ greatly in their pronunciation of open vowels. InReceived Pronunciation,there are four open back vowels,ɑːɒɔː/,but in General American there are only three,ɑɔ/,and in most dialects of Canadian English only two,ɒ/.Which words have which vowel varies between dialects. Words likebathandclothhave the vowels/ɑːɒ/in Received Pronunciation, butɔ/in General American. The table above shows some of these dialectal differences.

Britain and Ireland

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Accents and dialects vary widely across Great Britain, Ireland and nearby smaller islands. The UK has the most local accents of any English-speaking country[citation needed].As such, a single "British accent" does not exist. Someone could be said to have an English, Scottish, Welsh, or Irish accent, although these all have many different subtypes.

England

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Southern England

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There are considerable variations within the accents of English across England, one of the most obvious being thetrap–bath splitof the southern half of the country.

Two main sets of accents are spoken in theWest Country,namelyCornishandWest Country,spoken primarily in the counties ofDevon,Somerset,Gloucestershire,Bristol,Dorset(not as common in Dorset), andWiltshire(again, less common in eastern Wiltshire). A range of variations can be heard within different parts of the West Country: TheBristolian dialectis distinctive from the accent heard inGloucestershire(especially south ofCheltenham), for example.

TheCornishaccent has an east–west variation, with the east of the county having influences from West Country English and the west of the county having direct influences from theCornish language.

There is great variation within GreaterLondon,with various accents such asCockney,Estuary English,Multicultural London English,andReceived Pronunciationbeing found all throughout the region and theHome Counties.

Other accents are those of

In February 2019, theNew York Timespublished a quiz that maps the geographical differences between British and Irish dialects.[2]

Northern England

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The accents ofNorthern Englandhave a range of regional variations.

Cumbriahas regional variants in Western Cumbria (Workington), Southern Cumbria (Barrow-in-Furness), andCarlisle.

Modern Northumbrianhas local variants in Northern Northumberland (Berwick-upon-Tweed), Eastern Northumberland (Ashington) andNewcastle,Sunderland,and mid- and southernCounty Durham.A specialist dialect calledPitmaticis within this group, found across the region. It includes terms specific to coal mining.

Yorkshireis distinctive, having regional variants aroundLeeds,Bradford,Hull,Middlesbrough,Sheffield,andYork.Although many Yorkshire accents sound similar, accents in areas around Hull and Middlesbrough are markedly different. Due to this, the Middlesbrough accent is sometimes grouped, with modern Northumbrian accents being a midway between the two regions.

The Hull accent's rhythm is more like that of northern Lincolnshire than that of the rural East Riding, perhaps due to migration from Lincolnshire to the city during its industrial growth. One feature that it shares with the surrounding rural area is that an /aɪ/ sound in the middle of a word often becomes an /ɑː/, for example, "five" may sound like "fahve", and "time" like "tahme".

Historic Lancashire,with regional variants inBolton,Burnley,Blackburn,Manchester,Preston,Blackpool,Liverpool,andWigan.Many of the Lancashire accents may sound similar to outsiders, with the exception of Manchester and Wigan, where an older dialect has been maintained.[3]

TheLiverpoolaccent, known asScouse,is an exception to the Lancashire regional variant of English. It has spread to some of the surrounding towns. Before the 1840s, Liverpool's accent was similar to others in Lancashire, though with some distinct features due to the city's proximity toWales.The city's population of around 60,000 was swelled in the 1840s by the arrival of around 300,000 Irish refugees escaping theGreat Famine,as Liverpool was England'smain Atlantic portand a popular departure point for people leaving for a new life in theUnited States.While many of the Irish refugees moved away, a vast number remained in Liverpool and permanently influenced the local accent.[4]

Scotland

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The regional accents ofScottish Englishgenerally draw on thephoneme inventoryof the dialects ofModern Scots,a language spoken by around 30% of the Scottish population[5][6]with characteristic vowel realisations due to theScottish vowel length rule. Highland Englishaccents are more strongly influenced byScottish Gaelicthan other forms of Scottish English.

Wales

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The accents of English inWalesare strongly influenced by the phonology of theWelsh language,which more than 20% of the population of Wales speak as their first orsecond language.TheNorth Walesaccent is distinct fromSouth Wales.North East Wales is influenced byScouseandCheshireaccents. South East Wales accents are influenced byWest Countryaccents. TheWenglishof theSouth Wales Valleysshows a deep cross-fertilisation between the two.[clarification needed][Which two?]

TheCardiff dialectand accent is quite distinctive from that of theSouth Wales Valleys,primarily:

  • Rounding of the second element of/ɪə/to[jøː][7][8]
    • here/hɪə/pronounced[hjøː]or[jøː]in broader accents
  • A closer pronunciation of/ʌ/as inloveandother[8]
  • /ɑː/is widely realised as[],giving a pronunciation ofCardiff/ˈkɑːdɪf/as[ˈkaːdɪf]

Isle of Man

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Manx Englishhas its own distinctive accent, influenced to some extent by the Lancashire dialect and to a lesser extent by some variant of Irish English.

Ireland

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Irelandhas several main groups of accents, including (1) the accents of Ulster, with a strong influence from Scotland as well as the underlying Gaelic linguistic stratum, which in that province approaches the Gaelic of Scotland, (2) those of Dublin and surrounding areas on the east coast where English has been spoken since the earliest period of colonisation from Britain, and (3) the various accents of west, midlands, and south.

Ulster

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TheUlsteraccent has two main sub accents, namelyMid Ulster EnglishandUlster Scots.The language is spoken throughout the nine counties of Ulster and in some northern areas of bordering counties such asLouthandLeitrim.It bears many similarities to Scottish English through influence from theUlster varietiesofScots. Some characteristics of the Ulster accent include:

  • As in Scotland, the vowels/ʊ/and/u/are merged, so thatlookandLukeare homophonous. The vowel is ahigh central rounded vowel,[ʉ].
  • The diphthong/aʊ/is pronounced approximately[əʉ],but wide variation exists, especially betweensocial classesinBelfast.
  • In Belfast,/eɪ/is a monophthong in open syllables (e.g.day[dɛː]) but an ingliding diphthong in closed syllables (e.g.daze[deəz]). But the monophthong remains when inflectional endings are added, thusdazecontrasts withdays[dɛːz].
  • Thealveolar stops/t,d/becomedentalbefore/r,ər/,e.g.treeandspider.
  • /t/often undergoesflappingto[ɾ]before anunstressedsyllable, e.g.eighty[ˈeəɾi]

Connacht, Leinster, and Munster

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The accent of these threeprovincesfluctuates greatly from the flat tone of the midlands counties of Laois, Kildare, and Offaly to the perceivedsing-songof Cork and Kerry to the soft accents of Mayo and Galway.

Historically, the Dublin City and county area, parts of Wicklow and Louth, came under heavy exclusive influence from the first English settlements, known asThe Pale.It remained until Independence from Britain as the biggest concentration of English influence on the whole island.

Some Cork accents have a unique lyrical intonation. Every sentence typically ends in the trademark elongated tail-off on the last word. In Cork, heavier emphasis yet is put on the "brrr" sound to the letter "R." This is usually the dialect in northern parts of Cork City.

Similar to the Cork accent but without the same intonation, Kerry puts even heavier emphasis on the "brrr" sound to the letter "R.", for example, the word "forty". Throughout the south, this word is pronounced whereby the "r" exhibits the typified Irish "brrr". In Kerry, especially in rural areas, the roll on the "r" is enforced with vibrations from the tongue, not unlike Scottish here.

"Are you?" becomes a cojoined "A-rrou?" single tongue flutter, especially in rural areas. This extra emphasis on "R" is also seen in varying measures through parts of West Limerick and West Cork in closer proximity to Kerry.

Another feature in the Kerry accent is the "S" before the consonant. True to its Gaelic origins in a manner similar to parts of Connacht, "s" maintains the "shh" sound as in "shop" or "sheep". The word "start" becomes "shtart", and "stop" becomes "shtop".

Irish Travellers

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Irish Travellershave a very distinct accent closely related to a ruralHiberno-English,particularly the English of south-eastern Ireland. Many Irish Travellers who were born in parts of Dublin or Britain have the accent in spite of it being strikingly different from the local accents in those regions. They have their own language,Shelta,which strongly links in with their dialect/accent of English.

North America

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North American Englishis a collective term for the dialects of the United States and Canada. It does not include the varieties ofCaribbean Englishspoken in the West Indies.

  • Rhoticity: Most North American English accents differ from Received Pronunciation and some other British dialects by beingrhotic.The rhotic consonant/r/is pronounced before consonants and at the end of syllables, and ther-colored vowel[ɚ]is used as a syllable nucleus. For example, while the words "hard" and "singer" would be pronounced[hɑːd]and[ˈsɪŋə]inReceived Pronunciation,they would be pronounced[hɑɹd]and[ˈsɪŋɚ]inGeneral American.Exceptions are certain traditional accents found ineastern New England,New York City,and theSouthern United States,plusAfrican-American English.
  • Mergers before/r/:R-coloring has led to somevowel mergers before historic/r/that do not happen in most other native dialects. In many North American accents, "Mary", "merry", and "marry" sound the same (Marymarrymerrymerger), but they have the vowels/ɛə/,/æ/,/ɛ/,respectively, in RP. Similarly, "nearer" rhymes with "mirror" (mirrornearermerger), though the two have different vowels in RP:/iː/and/ɪ/.Other mergers before/r/occur in various North American dialects.
  • Mergers of the low back vowels: Other North American mergers that are absent in Received Pronunciation are the merger of the vowels of"caught" and "cot"([kɔːt]and[kɒt]in RP) in many accents, and the merger of "father" (RP[ˈfɑːðə]) and "bother" (RP[ˈbɒðə]) in almost all.
  • Flata:Most North American accents lack the so-calledtrap–bath splitfound in Southern England: Words like "ask", "answer", "grass", "bath", "staff", and "dance" are pronounced with the short-a/æ/of "trap", not with the broad "A"/ɑ/of "father" heard in Southern England as well as in most of the Southern Hemisphere. In North America, the vowel of "father" has merged with that of "lot" and "bother" (see above). Related to thetrap–bath split,North American dialects have a feature known as/æ/ tensing.This results in /æ/ in some environments, particularly nasals to be raised and even diphthongized, typically transcribed as[eə].Thus, "answer" is typically pronounced as[eənsɚ]rather than[ænsɚ].
  • Flapping of/t/and/d/:In North American English,/t/and/d/both become thealveolar flap[ɾ]after a stressed syllable and between vowels or syllabic consonants, making the words "latter" and "ladder" homophones, either as[ˈlædɚ]or[ˈlæɾɚ].

The United States does not have a concrete "standard" accent in the same way that Britain hasReceived Pronunciation.A form of speech known to linguists as General American is perceived by many Americans to be "accent-less", meaning a person who speaks in such a manner does not appear to befromanywhere in particular. The region of the United States that most resembles this is the central Midwest, specifically eastern Nebraska, including Omaha and Lincoln; southern and central Iowa, including Des Moines; and parts of Missouri, Indiana, Ohio, and western Illinois, including Peoria and the Quad Cities but not the Chicago area.[original research?]

Canada

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Three major dialect areas can be found in Canada: Western/Central Canada, the Maritimes, andNewfoundland.

The phonology ofWest/Central Canadian English,also calledGeneral Canadian,is broadly similar to that of the Western US, except for the following features:

  • The diphthongs/aɪ/and/aʊ/are raised to approximately[ʌɪ]and[ʌʊ][9]before voiceless consonants. For example, the vowel sound of "out"[ʌʊt]is different from that of "loud"[laʊd].This feature is known asCanadian raising.The/ʌʊ/is even more raised in Atlantic Canada, closer to/ɛʊ/.
  • The short "a" of "bat" is more open than almost everywhere else in North America[æ̞~a].The other front lax vowels/ɛ/and/ɪ/,too, can be lowered and/or retracted. This phenomenon has been labelled theCanadian Shift.

The pronunciation of certain words shows a British influence. For instance, "shone" is/ʃɒn/,"been" is often/biːn/,"lieutenant" is/lɛfˈtɛnənt/,"process" can be/ˈproʊsɛs/,etc.

Words like "drama", "pajamas" / "pyjamas", and "pasta" tend to have/æ/rather than/ɑ/~/ɒ/.Words like "sorrow", "Florida", and "orange" have/ɔr/rather than/ɑr/;therefore, "sorry" rhymes with "story" rather than with "starry".

United States

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West Indies and Bermuda

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For discussion, see:

Oceania

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Australia

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Australian English is relatively homogeneous when compared toBritishandAmericanEnglish. There is some regional variation between thestates,particularly in regard toSouth Australia,Victoria,Queensland,Northern TerritoryandWestern Australia.

Three main varieties of Australian English are spoken according to linguists:Broad Australian,General AustralianandCultivated Australian.[10]They are part of a continuum, reflecting variations in accent. They can, but do not always, reflect thesocial class,education, and urban or rural background of the speaker.[11]

  • Australian Aboriginal Englishrefers to the various varieties of the English language used by Indigenous Australians. These varieties, which developed differently in different parts of Australia, vary along a continuum, from forms close to General Australian to more nonstandard forms. There are distinctive features of accent, grammar, words, and meanings, as well as language use.
  • The furthest extent of the Aboriginal dialect isAustralian Kriol language,which is notmutually intelligiblewith General Australian English.
  • On theTorres Strait Islands,a distinctive dialect known asTorres Strait Englishis spoken.
  • In Australian English, pronunciations vary regionally according to the type of vowel that occurs before the sounds/nd/,/ns/,/nt/,/n/,and/mp/.In words like "chance", "plant", "branch", "sample", and "demand", the vast majority of Australians use the short /æ/ vowel from the word "cat". InSouth Australian English,there is a high proportion of people who use the broad /aː/ vowel from the word "cart" in these words.
  • Centringdiphthongs,which are the vowels that occur in words like "ear", "beard", "air", and "sheer". InWestern Australian English,there is a tendency for centring diphthongs to be pronounced as full diphthongs. Those in the eastern states will tend to pronounce "fear" and "sheer" without any jaw movement, while the westerners would pronounce them like "fia" and "shia", respectively, which slightly resemblesSouth African Englishbut in a dialect different fromNew Zealand English.[12]

New Zealand

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The New Zealand accent is most similar to Australian accents, particularly those of Victoria, Tasmania, New South Wales, and South Australia, but is distinguished from these accents by the presence of three "clipped" vowels, slightly resemblingSouth African English.Phonetically, these are centralised or raised versions of the short "i", "e", and "a" vowels, which in New Zealand are close to[ɨ],[ɪ],and[ɛ],respectively, rather than[ɪ],[ɛ],and[æ].New Zealand pronunciations are often popularly represented outside New Zealand by writing "fish and chips" as "fush and chups", "yes" as "yiss", and "sixty-six" as "suxty-sux".

Scottish English influence is most evident in the southern regions of New Zealand, notably inDunedin.Another difference between New Zealand and Australian English is the length of the vowel in words such as "dog" and "job", which are longer than in Australian English, which shares the short and staccato pronunciation shared with British English. There is a tendency in New Zealand English, found in some but not all Australian English, to add aschwabetween some grouped consonants in words, such that — for example — "shown" and "thrown" may be pronounced "showun" and "throwun".

Geographical variations appear slight and are mainly confined to individual special local words. One group of speakers holds a recognised place as "talking differently": The regions ofOtagoand especiallySouthland,both in the south of the South Island, harbour a "Celtic fringe" of people speaking with what is known as the "Southland burr" in which "R" is pronounced with a soft burr, particularly in words that rhyme with "nurse".[13]The area formed a traditional repository of immigration from Scotland.

Some sections of the main urban areas of Auckland and Wellington show a stronger influence of Māori and Pacific island (e.g., Samoan) pronunciations and speech patterns than most of the country.

The trilled "r" is used by some Māori, who may pronounce "t" and "k" sounds without aspiration, striking other English speakers as similar to "d" and "g". This is also encountered in South African English, especially amongAfrikaansspeakers.

Norfolk Island and Pitcairn

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The English spoken in the isolated Pacific islands of Norfolk and Pitcairn shows evidence of the islands' long isolation from the world. In the case of Pitcairn, the local creole,Pitkern,shows strong evidence of its rural English 19th-century origins, with an accent that has traces of both the English southwest andGeordie.The Norfolk Island equivalent,Norfuk,was greatly influenced in its development by Pitkern.

The accents heard in the islands when English is used are similarly influenced but in a much milder way. In the case of Norfolk Island, Australian English is the primary influence, producing an accent that is like a softened version of an Australian accent. The Pitcairn accent is for the most part largely indistinguishable from the New Zealand accent.

Africa and the Atlantic

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South Atlantic

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Falkland Islands

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TheFalkland Islandshave a large non-native-born population, mainly from Britain but also fromSaint Helena.In rural areas, the Falkland accent tends to be stronger. The accent has resemblances to both Australia-NZ English and that ofNorfolkin England and contains a number of Spanish loanwords.

Saint Helena

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"Saints", as Saint Helenan islanders are called, have a variety of different influences on their accent. To outsiders, the accent has resemblances to the accents of South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand.

"Saint" is not just a different pronunciation of English; it also has its own distinct words. So "bite" means "spicy, as in full of chillies"; "us" is used instead of "we" ( "us has been shopping" ); and "done" is used to generate a past tense, hence "I done gorn fishing" ( "I have been fishing" ).[14]

Television is a reasonably recent arrival there and is only just beginning to have an effect. American terms are becoming more common, e.g. "chips" for crisps.[14]

Southern Africa

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South Africa

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South Africahas 11 official languages, one of which is English. Accents vary significantly between ethnic and language groups. Home-language English speakers, Black, White, Indian, andColoured,in South Africa have an accent that generally resembles BritishReceived Pronunciation,modified with varying degrees of Germanic inflection due to Afrikaans.[15]

The Coloured community is generally bilingual. English accents are strongly influenced by one's primary mother tongue, Afrikaans, or English. A range of accents can be seen, with the majority of Coloureds showing a strong Afrikaans inflection. Similarly,Afrikanersand Cape Coloureds, both descendants of mainly Dutch settlers, tend to pronounce English phonemes with a strong Afrikaans inflection. The English accents of both related groups are significantly different and easily distinguishable, primarily because of prevalentcode-switchingamong the majority of Coloured English speakers, particularly in theWestern Capeof South Africa. The range of accents found among English-speaking Coloureds, from the distinctive "Cape Flats or Coloured English"[16]to the standard "colloquial" South African English accent, are of special interest. Geography and education levels play major roles therein.

BlackAfricansgenerally speak English as a second language. One's accent is strongly influenced by one's mother tongue, particularly Bantu languages. Urbanmiddle-classBlack Africans have developed an English accent, with similar inflection as first-language English speakers. Within this ethnic group, variations exist: MostNguni(Xhosa, Zulu, Swazi, and Ndebele) speakers have a distinct accent, with the pronunciation of words like "the" and "that" as would "devil" and "dust", respectively, and words like "rice" as "lice".

This may be a result of the inadequacy of "r" in the languages.Sotho(Tswana, Northern Sotho, and Southern Sotho) speakers have a similar accent, with slight variations. Tsonga and Venda speakers have very similar accents with far less intonation than Ngunis and Sothos. Some Black speakers have no distinction between the "i" in "determine" and the one in "decline", pronouncing it similarly to the one in "mine".

Black, Indian, and Coloured students educated in former Model C schools or at formerly White tertiary institutions will generally adopt a similar accent to their White English-home-language speaking classmates.[17]Code-switching and the "Cape Flats" accent are becoming popular among White learners in public schools within Cape Town.[citation needed]

South African accents vary between major cities, particularly Cape Town, Durban, and Johannesburg, and provinces (regions).[18]Accent variation is observed within respective cities—for instance, Johannesburg, where the northern suburbs (Parkview, Parkwood, Parktown North, Saxonwold, etc.) tend to be less strongly influenced by Afrikaans. These suburbs are more affluent and populated by individuals with tertiary education and higher incomes.

The accents of native English speakers from the southern suburbs (Rosettenville, Turffontein, etc.) tend to be more strongly influenced by Afrikaans. These suburbs are populated by tradesmen and factory workers, with lower incomes. The extent of Afrikaans influence is explained by the fact that Afrikaans urbanisation would historically have been from failed marginal farms or failing economies in rural towns, into the southern and western suburbs of Johannesburg.

The western suburbs of Johannesburg (Newlands, Triomf, which has now reverted to its old nameSophiatown,Westdene, etc.) are predominantly Afrikaans-speaking. In a similar fashion, people from predominantly or traditionally Jewish areas in the Johannesburg area (such as Sandton, Linksfield, and Victory Park) may have accents influenced by Yiddish or Hebrew ancestry.

South African English accents, across the spectrum, arenon-rhotic.

Examples of South African accents(obtained fromhttp://accent.gmu.edu)

Additional samples of South African accents and dialects can be found athttp://web.ku.edu/~idea/africa/southafrica/southafrica.htmArchived16 April 2012 at theWayback Machine.

Regardless of regional and ethnic differences (in accents), South African English accents are sometimes confused with Australian (or New Zealand) English by British and American English speakers.[19][20]

Zimbabwe

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InZimbabwe,formerlyRhodesia,native English speakers, mainly the White and Coloured minority, have a similar speech pattern to that of South Africa. Those with high degrees of Germanic inflection pronounce "Zimbabwe" aszim-bah-bwi,as opposed to the African pronunciationzeem-bah-bweh.

Zimbabwean accents vastly vary, with some Black Africans sounding British while others will have a much stronger accent influenced by their mother tongues. Usually, this distinction is brought about by where speakers grew up and the school attended. For example, most people who grew up in and around Harare have a British-sounding accent, while those in the rural areas have a more "pidgin-english" sort of accent.

Example of a Zimbabwean English accent(obtained fromhttp://accent.gmu.edu)

Namibia

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NamibianEnglish tends to be strongly influenced bySouth African English.Most Namibians who grew up in and around the capital city, Windhoek, have developed an English accent. Those in rural areas have an accent strongly influenced by their mother tongue, particularlyBantu languages.

Nigeria

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Nigerian Englishvaries by constituent units. The accents are influenced by the various mother tongues of the Nigerian constituent units.

Asia

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India and South Asia

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A number of distinct dialects of English are spoken in South Asia. There are many languages spoken in South Asia likeNepali,Hindi,Punjabi,Rajasthani,Sindhi,Balochi,Pashto,Assamese,Bengali,Bhojpuri,Gujarati,Kannada,Kashmiri,Marathi,Odia,Maithili,Malayalam,Sinhala,Tamil,Telugu,Tulu,Urduand many more, creating a variety of accents of English. Accents originating in this part of the world tend to display several distinctive features, including:

  • syllable-timing,in which a roughly equal time is allocated to each syllable, akin to the English of Singapore and Malaysia. Elsewhere, English speech timing is based predominantly on stress.
  • "sing-song" pitch, somewhat reminiscent of those ofWelsh English
  • retroflexion of "t" and "d"

Philippines

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Philippine English employs a rhotic accent that originated from the time it was first introduced by Americans during the colonization period in an attempt to replace Spanish as the dominant political language. As there are no /f/ or /v/ sounds in most native languages in the Philippines, [p] is used as an alternative to /f/ as [b] is to /v/. The words "fifty" and "five" are often pronounced as "pipty" and "pibe" by many Filipinos. Similarly, /θ/ is often changed to [t] and /ð/ to [d].[21]

"Three" becomes /tri/ while "that" becomes /dat/. This feature is consistent with many other Malayo-Polynesian languages. /z/ is often devoiced to [s], whereas [ʒ] is often devoiced to [ʃ] or affricated to [dʒ], so words like "zoo", "measure", and "beige" may be pronounced [su], [ˈmɛʃoɾ], and [beɪdʒ].[22]

Apart from the frequent inability to pronounce certain fricatives (e.g., [f], [v], [θ], [ð], [z], [ʒ]), in reality, there is no single Philippine English accent. This is because native languages influence spoken English in different ways throughout the archipelago. For instance, those fromVisayasusually interchange the sounds /e/ and /i/ as well as /o/ and /u/ because the distinction between those phonemes is not very pronounced in Visayan languages.

People from the northern Philippines may pronounce /r/ as a strong trill instead of a tap, which is more commonly used in the rest of the Philippines, as the trill is a feature of theIlocano language.Ilocano people generally pronounce the schwa sound /ə/ better than other Filipinos because they use a similar sound in their native language that is missing from many other Philippine languages.

Hong Kong

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The accent of English spoken inHong Kongfollows mainly British, with rather strong influence fromCantoneseon thepronunciationsof a few consonants and vowels, sentence grammar, and structure.

Malaysia

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Malay is thelingua francaofMalaysia,a federation of former British colonies and similar dependencies. English is a foreign language with no official status, but it is commonly learnt as a second or third language.

The Malaysian accent appears to be a melding of British, Chinese, Tamil, and Malay influences.

Many Malaysians adopt different accents and usages depending on the situation. For example, an office worker may speak with less colloquialism and with a more British accent on the job than with friends or while out shopping.

  • Syllable-timing,where speech is timed according to syllable, akin to the English of the Indian Subcontinent. Elsewhere, speech is usually timed to stress.
  • A quick, staccato style, with "puncturing" syllables and well-defined, drawn-out tones
  • Non-rhoticity,like most varieties ofEnglish language in England.Hence, "caught" and "court" are homophonous as/kɔːt/(in actuality,[kɔːʔ]or[koːʔ]), "can't" rhymes with "aren't", etc.
  • The "ay" and "ow" sounds in "raid" and "road" (/eɪ/and/oʊ/,respectively) are pronounced asmonophthongs,i.e. with no "glide":[red]and[rod].
  • /θ/is pronounced as [t] and/ð/as [d]; hence, "thin" is[tɪn]and "then" is[dɛn].
  • Depending on how colloquial the situation is: manydiscourse particles,or words inserted at the end of sentences that indicate the role of the sentence in discourse and the mood it conveys, like "lah", "leh", "mah", "hor", etc.

Singapore

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Singapore is effectively a multilingual nation. TheSingapore governmentrecognises fourofficial languages:English,Malay,Mandarin Chinese,andTamil.

Students in primary and secondary schools learning English as the language of instruction also learn a second language called their "Mother Tongue" by the Ministry of Education, where they are taught Mandarin Chinese, Malay, or Tamil. A main point to note is while "Mother Tongue" generally refers to the first language (L1) overseas, in Singapore, it is used by the Ministry of Education to denote the traditional language of one'sethnic group,which sometimes can be their second language (L2).

There are two main types of English spoken in Singapore:Standard Singapore EnglishandSinglish.Singlish is more widely spoken than Standard English. It has a very distinctivetoneand sentence structure, which are both strongly influenced by Malay and the manyvarieties of Chinesespoken in the city.

A 2005 census showed that around 30% of Singaporeans speak English as their main language at home.[23]

There are many foreigners working in Singapore. 36% of the population in Singapore are foreigners, and foreigners make up 50% of the service sector.[24]Therefore, it is very common to encounter service staff who are not fluent in English. Most of these staff speak Mandarin Chinese. Those who do not speak Mandarin Chinese tend to speak either broken English or Singlish, which they have learnt from the locals.

Antarctica

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Phonetic change in the English spoken at abaseinAntarcticahas been registered.[25]This has been referred to as the start of a new accent calledAntarctic English.[26]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^Yes in Southern England, No in Northern England and most of the Midlands.
  2. ^Yes before fricatives: /-f/, /-s/, /-θ/; Variable before nasals: /-mpəl/, /-nd/, /-nt/, /-ntʃ/, /-ns/.
  3. ^Many youngerAustralian Englishspeakers have more open pronunciations.

References

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  1. ^Trudgill, Peter;Hannah, Jean (2002).International English: A Guide to the Varieties of Standard English(4th ed.). London: Arnold. pp. 4–6.
  2. ^Katz, Josh (15 February 2019)."The British-Irish Dialect Quiz".The New York Times.ISSN0362-4331.Retrieved20 February2019.
  3. ^Andersson, Jasmine (24 February 2020)."Speyk Wiganese: How the town of Wigan preserved its language through mining, pies and Facebook weather forecasts".inews.co.uk.
  4. ^Paul Coslett,The origins of Scouse,BBC Liverpool, 11 January 2005.Retrieved 13 August 2018
  5. ^Mairi Robinson, ed. (1985).The Concise Scots Dictionary.Aberdeen University Press. p. xxxi.
  6. ^"Phonetic characteristics of dialect districts".Dsl.ac.uk.Dictionary of the Scots Language.Retrieved8 October2015.
  7. ^Coupland, Nikolas; Thomas, Alan Richard (1990).Google Books | The phonetics of Cardiff English.Multilingual Matters.ISBN9781853590313.Retrieved8 June2012.
  8. ^ab"Accents and dialects of the UK: Cardiff".Bl.uk. 15 December 1935. Archived fromthe originalon 5 August 2011.Retrieved8 June2012.
  9. ^Wells, p. 494
  10. ^Robert Mannell (14 August 2009)."Robert Mannell," Impressionistic Studies of Australian English Phonetics "".Ling.mq.edu.au.Retrieved8 June2012.
  11. ^"The Macquarie Globe::".International.mq.edu.au. 23 August 2007. Archived fromthe originalon 27 September 2009.Retrieved8 June2012.
  12. ^"regional accents — Australian Voices".Clas.mq.edu.au.Retrieved8 June2012.
  13. ^Ballance, Alison (22 May 2019)."The Southland accent - a rolling change".Radio New Zealand.Archivedfrom the original on 16 February 2024.
  14. ^ab"Speak Saint".Saint Helena Island Info.Archivedfrom the original on 4 January 2024.
  15. ^Census 2011: Census in brief(PDF).Pretoria: Statistics South Africa. 2012.ISBN9780621413885.Archived(PDF)from the original on 13 May 2015.
  16. ^"nemisa_29".Archived fromthe originalon 28 March 2022.Retrieved29 September2009.[dead link]
  17. ^"Varsity Newspaper Online".Varsitynewspaper.co.za. Archived fromthe originalon 13 March 2012.Retrieved8 June2012.
  18. ^Schneider,E.W. Post-colonial English: Varieties around the world,Cambridge Press.(2007)
  19. ^Hopwood, D.South African English pronunciation,McGrath Pub. Co (1970)
  20. ^"Dialects of English".Webspace.ship.edu.Retrieved8 June2012.
  21. ^Tayao, Ma. Lourdes (2008). "A lectal description of the phonological features of Philippine English". In Bautista, Ma. Lourdes; Bolton, Kingsley (eds.).Philippine English: Linguistic and Literary.Hong Kong University Press. pp. 157–174.
  22. ^Tayao, Ma. Lourdes (2008). "A lectal description of the phonological features of Philippine English". In Bautista, Ma. Lourdes; Bolton, Kingsley (eds.).Philippine English: Linguistic and Literary.Hong Kong University Press. pp. 157–174.
  23. ^"Education and Language"(PDF).Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 13 November 2010.Retrieved8 June2012.
  24. ^"Population Trends 2009"(PDF).Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 21 March 2012.Retrieved8 June2012.
  25. ^Phonetic change in an Antarctic winterArchived2022-05-18 at theWayback Machine.
  26. ^Bard, Susanne (11 December 2019)."Linguists hear an accent begin".Scientific American.

Bibliography

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  • Wells, J C (1982).Accents of English 3: Beyond the British Isles.Cambridge University Press.ISBN0-521-28541-0.
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