“One of the most fundamental ways we have of establishing our identity, is through our use of
language.” This ‘use’ may include: specific lexical choices, grammatical constructions in speech and
variations in phonology.
David Crystal
a leading linguistic expert; he suggests that Cockney rhyming slang is not dying out at all but that the
nation’s current obsession with celebrity culture has been responsible for more dialects
RP indicates social and educational background and obscure the location of the speaker's birth
Buchanan (1766)
published an essay making explicit links between language and
class
Paul Kerswil
'the reducion of rural employment and construction of new towns lead to dialect levelling; the fading out of RP'
1831 - 34% living in
cities
1931 -
80%
1991 -
90%
Dialect levelling:form of standardisation where local variations of speech lose their distinctive regional features to a more mainstream dialect
South-East - gradually everybody sounds the same
only non-changing language is Latin
people in Reading or London council estate have a strong local accent because they mix with strong local
networks
Reasons for it:
Industrialisation - move from rural
Scattering through travel
Education
only teach Standard
English
Media brings us new
accents
ICT - widespread communication
Leslie Milroy
Increased geographical mobility leads to disruption of close-knit networks that have historically maintained highly systematic sets of socially structures linguistic norms
Martha's Vineyard by Labov (1963)
A small group of fishermen began to exaggerate a tendency already existing in their speech. They did
this seemingly subconsciously, in order to establish themselves as an independent social group with
superior status to the despised summer visitors. A number of other islanders regarded this group as
one which epitomised old virtues and desirable values, and subconsciously imitated the way its
members talked. For these people, the new pronunciation was an innovation. As more and more
people came to speak in the same way, the innovation gradually became the norm for those living on
the island.
Regional Dialects
Accent: dinstinctive pronunciation which marks a person's regional
identity
Dialect: variety of a language, marked by a particular grammar and lexis and used by speakers with a
common regional and social background. Include more than just the sound
RP: an accent which carries a high social status
Overt prestige: posh/RP
Covert prestige: associated with street cred
Standard English: prestige variety
of English
Yod-dropping - 'toon' not 'tune
Diphthongs - two vowels one syllable
Monophthongs - a vowel with a single
sound
Th-fronting - 'free' not 'three'
Rising inflection - declarative sentences uttered with an increased pitch
Surviving forms of regional dialects
multiple
negation
use of aint
use of never as a negative
marker
use of demonstrative them
SCOUSE
orginated from
Scandinavians
working
class
negative
stereotypes
Shelagh Coleman security check - 'lock up the silver'
'my' = 'me' -
Irish
't' is
stressed
filler
'y'know'
multiple
negation
plural
marking
Beatles - charming
GWENTIAN
cwtch
chopsy - argmentative
lilting - change of stresses
tapped 'r' in
'brilliant'
yod-dropping - 'toosday'
GEORDIE
cheap
funny - Ant/Dec
'sexiest in Britain' - Guardian
yod-dropping 'toon'
/au/ dipthong - aboot
non-rhotic unlike Bristolian
Why do we have different accents in the
UK?
The main reason in the UK is that over the centuries, different peoples settled in the islands that
now form part of the UK - Celts, Romans, Norse, Anglo-Saxons, Normans etc.
When the English language we know today was still evolving, as a result of the merging of
Anglo-Saxon and Norman French, an event happened known as the 'vowel shift'.
'a' went from 'cat' to 'bar'
Accomodation Theory - convergence, divergence
Cockney Rhyming Slang - collection of phrases used by gang members to encrypt messages in London
Idiomatic phrases - 'part of the
furniture'
Cockney Article : U.K.’s Poetry of the Proletariat Goes Pop.’
Mike Coles - The Bible In
Cockney
19th
Century
Hybrid dialects - MLE, Bradford Asian
English
Queen's speech differences
1957-2010
epitome of RP
lessening
lengthening of vowel sounds > speaks
faster
'heppy' > 'has' normal
lowers pitch of voice; no rising
inflection
WHY?
after Diana's
death
hierarchy change, age change
article : 'speak the Queen's English if you want to sound intelligent and be
trusted'
1470 - William Caxton developed printing
press
which dialect to produce books
in?
led to the creation of Standard
English
developed by OxBridge universities,
15th century
AKA - public school pronunciation, general british, BBC english, oxford
english
only 5% of population
corps, BBC, civil service
Received
Pronunciation
clipped consonants; elongated vowels
Maypole, Olde English
British Broadcasting Corporation -
1922
announced RP as standard; announcers of the elite
1942 - introduces non RP
Wilfred Pickles
accuracy?
Six o'clock news - poem by Tom Leonard
ironically mocking the credibility of Scottish accent reading news
1982 - no longer assumed to
speak RP
RP
Peter Trudgill estimated in 1974 that 3% of people in Britain were RP
first edition of the English Pronouncing
Dictionary (1917), Jones named the accent
"Public School Pronunciation",
1927 - Wyld 'received standard' received = approved
Estuary English
result of influences from RP and
Cockney
REPRESENTS THE BREAKDOWN OF STRINGENT CLASS BARRIERS
Matched guise
approach
a sociolinguistic experimental technique used to determine the true feelings of an individual or
community towards a specific language, dialect, or accent.
Dixon - 2002
hypothesis : 'a Brummie accented suspect would elicit stronger attributions of guilt than a standard-accented speaker'
Statistical analysis showed the Brummie suspect was rated lower in Superiority than the RP
suspect.