Some of you may have heard of this famous accent before. Especially because
of the well-known film My Fair Lady,
starring Audrey Hepburn. When we talk about a Cockney accent we talk about an
accent which is associated to the South East of England, concretely to a
particular part of London, to East London.
As it originated there, it shares many characteristics with other
dialects in the region such as Estuary English and RP. Its more important
features are:
Non –rhoticity
Glottal stopping, better becomes /be?ə/
L-vocalisation:
The phoneme l in final-word position usually becomes a vowel sound. Milk
becomes /miok/
Th-Fronting, that is, the pronunciation of <th>
as /f/ or /v/. Thing becomes “fing”.
H- dropping, that is, the non-pronunciation of the
sound /h/. Horrible becomes /ɒrɪbəw/.
Vowel raising. 3. /æ/ replaced with /e/
Any word producing the front open /æ/ vowel would be
pronounced with mid-open /e/ instead: ran becomes /ren/
General American English is the closest to a standard accent in the United
States. It is considered by many speakers to be free from regional
features. It is the accent spoken by
most actors, newscasters, etc. Some of its most characteristic features are:
Phonology
Rhoticity. /r/ is pronounced in coda positions as
in teacher /ti:tʃər/
L-
velarisation. “Dark L” is used for all
context in which /l/ occurs. There is
no distinction between “clear L” and “dark L” as in RP.
Intervocalic
/t/ flapping. /t/ become [r] in
intervocalic positions.
/j/
dropping in words like new /nu:/
and duke /du:k/
In
many contexts, where RP has /ɑː/,GA uses /æ/ as in plant /plænt/
Vocabulary
RP
GA
cinema
movies
underground
subway
petrol station
gas station
lift
elevator
chips
French fries
motor way
free way
rubbish
garbage
Spelling
Use
of <z> instead of <s> in words like organize,
satirize, organization, etc.
–er ending
instead of –re in words like center,
meter, theater.
Words
ending in –our (and their derivates
and inflected forms) in RP usually
ends in –or in GA. Eg: favor, color,
Activities
Decide
whether the sentences below would be samplers of General American or Received
Pronunciation. Justify your answers.
oBenedict
Cumberbatch is my favourite actor.
oThe
Natural History Museum is in the city center.
oI
went to the movies last night and it was great.
oTom told me to get off the underground at Charing
Cross.
oCan
we take the elevator, please? I am really tired.
oBy
the time he arrived from Paris, everything was already organized.
Watch the following video and try to find phonetic features from both General
American and RP.
Scottish
Standard English (SSE) is the variety of English spoken in Scotland. Note
that in Scotland other languages are also spoken: Gaelic and Scots. Traditionally, these two languages were the
main languages there, however, after the Act
of Union in 1707 (which led to the creation of the United Kingdom), English
became the language of the Scottish Church, administration and upper classes. SSE
resulted from the language contact between Standard English and Scots. That’s
why we are going to find many features from Scots in SSE. Nowadays, boundaries
between Scots and SSE are really blurred.
Some of its features are:
Rhoticity: /r/ is pronounced in the syllable coda. /r/
may be an alveolar approximant as in RP [ɹ] or an alveolar tap [ɾ]
There is a distinction between /w/ and /ʍ/so that witch and which
are pronounced differently.
Use of the phoneme /x/ for <–ch>
in a small number of Scottish words. Eg: loch.
Use of Scots /u/ instead of
/ʊ/. This vowel may be pronounced [ʉ] or even [ʏ].
Thus pull and pool are homophones.
Non-initial /t/ is often realised as a glottal stop /ʔ/.
Vowel length: The Scottish Vowel Length Rule(
”Aitken’s Law”)
Use of double
modals. Eg: They might could be working in the shop.
Negation:
use of the suffix -nae
. Eg. She isnae leaving for She
is not leaving.
Vocabulary:
wee = small; bonnie=pretty,
bairn=child, haggis, kilt, kirk=church, etc.
Scotticisms:
She learnt him some manners = She taught him some manners; Pure dead brilliant= exceptional,
fantastic.
ACTIVITIES
Do some research on Aitken's law and summarise its more important aspects.
Write down at least five Scottish words not mentioned above.
Watch the following video and try to identify at least three features described above.
When you go to your
English class and listen to your teacher or to an audio record from the book,
this accent is probably what you hear.Received
Pronunciation (RP)is the
closest to a standard accent in the UK and it is the accent which enjoys the
highest prestige in England. Although it is said to be influenced by the
English spoken in London, it is regionless i.e. not associated with any
locality. Traditionally,RPhas been associated to the middle and
upper classes and until the 1970s BBC announcers were required to be RP
speakers. That is why RP is also known asBBC
English.
Some of its more
important features are:
- Non rhoticity (Theris not pronounced unless it is
followed by a vowel or it is at the beginning of a word) Eg: paper/ˈpeɪpə/bird /bɜːd/
- No h-dropping. That is,his pronounced in words like horseorhead.
- No j-dropping. /j/ is
pronounced in words like tune /tjuːn/or
stupid/ˈstjuːpid/
- FOOT/STRUT split. Words
that contained the short /u/ in Middle English are pronounced with
the phoneme /ʊ/ meanwhile others are pronounced with
/ʌ/
- RPhas not undergone significant vowel
shifts. That’s why its vowels tend to be more conservative if we compare
them with other varieties of English.
All these features may
sound familiar you since this is the variety that you are used to.
Exercises:
1. Do some research on
RP and try to identify features not mentioned above.
2. Watch the following
video and try to identify at least 3 of the features described above. Give examples.
If you have any doubt, any question or you want to know the answers of these exercises please contact me.
Hughes, A., Trudgill,
P., & Watt, D. (2013).English
accents and dialects: an introduction to social and regional varieties of
English in the British Isles. Routledge.