2. Major accent types: British and American
We will compare RP (BBC English) with GA (American Network English). The difference in cultural norms across the two nations is also reflected in the status of the pronunciation models: RP is a social prestige accent spoken by a tiny minority of the population, estimated at 3-5% only, while the proportion of GA speakers in the U.S.A. is much higher, estimated at 33% of the population.
Generally speaking, the main defining feature of British-oriented accents is the absence of post-vocalic r which makes them all non-rhotic compared to North-America-oriented accents which are predominantly rhotic. However, within each country there are regionally marked accents: the Scottish, the Irish and some other provincial accents on the British Isles are rhotic; in the U.S.A. the Southern, the Eastern and Afro-American types of English accents are non-rhotic. These distinctive features become social markers. In the States they describe Bostonians as pronouncing the phrase with a long a but without r. The cah was pahked in Hahvahd уahd.
Most of the distinctions are found in the system of vowels which was affected by the preservation of /r/ in GA (as is known from history, in Southern British English it was vocalised).
Vowels
There are 20 vowels in the system of RP and 15-16 vowels in GA: because /r/ was not vocalised, GA lacks diphthongs ending in /ә/ , such as /iә/ or /juә/ in here or pure. In GA the corresponding sounds are pronounced as /ir/, /jur/. Actually, in GA all vowels occurring before r within a syllable are likely to become “r-coloured" (retroflexed) to some extent:
RP here [hiә], hair [heә], pure [pjuә]; GA here [hir], hair [her], pure [pjur];
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Содержание
- National Standards
- Regional Standards
- Local Accents
- 2. Major accent types: British and American
- American English lacks the short vowel /o/, it is replaced by a vowel /a:/ which is similar to rp vowel in father:
- The rp vowel /o/ can also be replaced by a long vowel /o:/:
- Consonants
- Word stress
- Intonation
- 3.British regional features
- American regional features
- 5. Social Variation: Social factors and social markers.
- 6. Language change in progress
- Processes almost complete
- Changes well-established,
- Recent innovations