A+D Theorists Flashcards
Thomas Pear (1931)
Found that people had different perceptions of a speaker according to the accent they heard them talk with.
Howard Giles (1975)
- RP speakers were rated higher for: intelligence, self-confidence, ambition, determination, etc…
- However, they were rated lower for friendliness, warmth, talkativeness, good-natured and sense of humour.
Dixon, Mahoney and Cocks (2002)
- Used the ‘matched-guise’ technique to study the correlation between accent and perceptions of guilt.
- Listeners rated individuals with a Birmingham accent as more likely to be guilty than if they used a ‘standard-accent’.
Neuliep and Speten-Hansen (2013)
How a non-native speaker is perceived can depend on the ethnocentricity of the person in which they are talking to.
Choy and Dodd (1976)
Teachers make judgement on students ability and personality based on the way they speak.
Lambert (1960)
Age, social class and regional membership were found to be important determinants of evaluation.
Survey done by University of Manchester on ‘bread roll’
- ‘Bread roll’ used by 36% nationally.
- ‘Bap’ 18% nationally, specifically Scotland and Ireland.
- ‘Teacake’ - Yorkshire
Peter Trudgill - Isogloss boundaries
- In the past, you couldn’t really move around. Therefore people developed different accents and used different lexical choices.
- People developed a strong sense of identity.
- These isogloss boundaries have no weakened due to transport, the media, etc…
Daniel Jones
- 1960, RP was the most prestigious way of speaking.
- Published a handbook on this way of speaking, he thought you needed it to be successful.
- He later said it’s up to the individual to decide whether to speak in a way which comes naturally, or whether they should alter it.
- Personal choice.
Nicholas Copeland
- Code-switching.
- When we move from public to private discourse the context is key.
- May speak in your accent at home, but when you go to work you may alter it to be more ‘standard’.
Lesley Milroy - links to Nicholas Copeland’s code-switching
- When we have a closed network, one solid group, more conformity to the non-standard forms.
- However, in a professional position, for example teachers, you may speak in a more standard, RP accent.
Idioms in the North West and Yorkshire:
- ‘He’s got a right cob on’ - North West, he’s in a bad mood.
- ‘Were you born in a barn?’ - Yorkshire, shut the door.
Cockney accent
- Glottal stopping, for example ‘better’ is pronounced ‘be’uh’.
- L vocalisation, L at the end of word often becomes a vowel sound, e.g. ‘pale’ ‘pall’.
- F fronting, ‘think’ to ‘fink’, also a feature of Caribbean English.
Dr Alex Beaton - University of Manchester
- 100 participants.
- 1/3 of people feel that they have to modify their accent because of stereotypes and stigma on whether they would be employed.
- Very small sample size??
People feel proud of their accents
- ‘Daft as a brush’ - Yorkshire
- '’Codswallop’ - Scotland
- ‘Apples and pears’ (stairs) - Cockney
People still use these phrases which shows they are comfortable and proud of their accents.