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1
Q

Northern English
5

A

1/l/ is typically dark (velarised) in all positions
2. Final -ng is pronounced [ŋɡ]
e.g. sing, tongue, nothing

  1. The vowel of STRUT
    /ʊ/ close-mid back rounded (= FOOT)
  2. The vowel of BATH
    [a] short open front
  3. The vowels of FACE and GOAT
    [eː] long close-mid front monophthong
    [oː] long close-mid back monophthong
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2
Q

Welsh English
4

A
  1. The vowel of STRUT
    [ə] mid central
  2. The vowels of PRICE and MOUTH
    [əɪ], [əʊ] mid central starting-point
  3. The vowel of BATH, PALM, START
    [aː] open front
  4. The vowels of FACE and GOAT
    name, safe: [eː] spelt a
    nail, grey: [eɪ] spelt ai, ey, ay, eigh
    boat, bone: [oː] spelt o, oa
    snow, grow [oʊ] spelt ow
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3
Q

Scottish English
7

A
  1. Rhotic (/r/: approximant, tap or trill)
  2. /l/ is dark (velarised) in all contexts
  3. The vowel of FOOT and GOOSE
    /ʉ/ close central rounded vowel
  4. The vowel of NURSE
    /ʌ/ open central (when spelt i, u, o)
    e.g. bird, hurt, word
    /ɛ/ open-mid front (when spelt e, ea)
    e.g. earth, term, person
  5. The vowels of FACE and GOAT
    Monophthongs /e/, /o/ close-mid front, close-mid back
  6. The vowel of KIT
    /ɛ/ open-mid front
  7. Vowel length is not phonemic (inherent). Varies according to the phonetic context.
    e.g. /i/: [i], [iː]
    seed [sid], see [siː]
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4
Q

Irish English
7

A
  1. Rhotic
  2. /l/ is typically clear in all contexts
  3. T-opening (t-frication)
    incomplete closure of /t/ finally and intervocalically
  4. TH-stopping
    /θ/, /ð/ → dental or alveolar plosives [t], [d]
  5. The vowel of LOT, THOUGHT
    [ɑː] open back unrounded
  6. The vowels of in FACE and GOAT
    Monophthongs [eː], [oː]
  7. The vowel of BATH, PALM, START
    [aː] open front
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5
Q

The south
7

A
  1. Variably rhotic (traditionally non-rhotic)
  2. The vowel of PRICE
    [aː] long open front monophthong
    (some: [aɪ] before fortis consonants)
  3. The vowel of STRUT
    [ə] mid central “luv”
  4. The vowel of BATH, TRAP
    [æɪ] front-closing diphthong “caint”
    except before fortis plosives
  5. The vowel of THOUGHT, CLOTH
    [ɑɔ] back-closing diphthong
  6. Breaking /diphthongisation in KIT, DRESS, TRAP
    [ɪə], [ɛə], [æə] “dayum”
    (realised as a diphthong or as two syllables)
  7. DRESS raising before nasals
    [ɪ] close-mid front
    pen = pin
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6
Q

New York City
3

A
  1. Variably rhotic. Broad/lower class NYC English is typically non-rhotic.
  2. Centring diphthongs (end in a mid central vowel quality)
    NEAR [ɪə]
    SQUARE [eə]
    CURE [ʊə]
    PALM [ɑə]
    START
    THOUGHT [ɔə]
    CLOTH
    NORTH
  3. BATH, TRAP raising + diphthonging
    [eə]
    In certain contexts:
    - before lenis stops: cab, bag, badge
    - before fortis fricatives: grass, half
    - before /m, n/: ham, man, dance
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7
Q

African American Vernacular English (AAVE)

10

A

African American Vernacular English (AAVE)
1. Non-rhotic
2. TH fronting or stopping
/θ, ð/ → /f, v/ or /t, d/
brother /brəvə/, nothing /nətn/, with them /wɪdəm/
3. Vocalisation of non-prevocalic /l/
/l/ → [ə] mid central vowel feel [fiːə]
4. Consonant cluster reduction (deletion of one or more consonants)
left /lef/, risked /rɪs/
5. “Southern” vowels
6. Deletion of the verb be:
She nice. She a doctor.
7. Invariant be:
They be working. He be tired.
8. Lack of subject-verb agreement:
He stay there. We was at work.
9. Irregular negation (inversion; multiple negation):
Ain’t nobody home. I didn’t do nothing.
10. Irregular past participle:
They had went home. She had gave me a present.

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8
Q

Canada
1

A

MOUTH / PRICE raising (“Canadian raising”)
[əʊ], [əɪ]
mid central starting-point
before fortis consonants out, about, south, like, price

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9
Q

Australia
5

A

Australia

  1. /l/ is dark (velarised) in all contexts
  2. Intervocalic /t/ is realised as a voiced tap
  3. The vowel of BATH, PALM, START: [aː] open front
  4. Raising of DRESS and TRAP
    [e], [ɛ] close-mid, open-mid (RP DRESS, TRAP = [ɛ], [æ])
  5. Diphthong shift (cf. London English)
    FLEECE [əi] (diphthongised)
    GOOSE [əu] (diphthongised)
    FACE [æɪ] (more open starting point)
    PRICE [ɑɪ] (more back starting point)
    CHOICE [oɪ] (more close starting point)
    GOAT [ʌʊ] (more open starting point)
    MOUTH [ɛʊ] (more close starting point)
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10
Q

New Zealand
5

A

Consonants = AusE
BATH, PALM, START = AusE
Diphthong shift = AusE
1. (Extreme) raising of DRESS and TRAP
[ɪ] between close and close-mid, [e] close-mid
2. The vowel of KIT: [ə] mid central
3. The vowel of NURSE: [øː] close-mid front rounded

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11
Q

South Africa
6

A
  1. /r/ can be approximant, tap or trill
  2. /p, t, k/ are typically unaspirated (no puff of air accompanying the release)
  3. Raising of DRESS and TRAP
    [e], [ɛ] close-mid, open-mid
  4. Allophonic variation in KIT
    [ɪ] in some contexts (e.g. kiss, gift, lick, big, sing, hit, fish, inn)
    [ə] in other contexts (e.g. bit, lip, tin, slim, live, bill, mirror)
  5. Diphthong shift
    FACE [æɪ]
    PRICE [ɑɪ]
    (GOAT [ʌʊ])
  6. The vowel of BATH, PALM, START
    [ɑː] open back
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12
Q

THE INNER CIRCLE: THE CARIBBEAN
8

A

THE INNER CIRCLE: THE CARIBBEAN
1. Variably rhotic
2. /l/ is clear in all contexts
3. TH-stopping: plosives /t, d/ instead of dental fricatives /θ, ð/
4. H-dropping
5. Consonant cluster reduction (deletion of one or more consonants)
e.g. left, nest, looks, pushed /lef, nes, lʊk, pʊʃ/
6. The vowel of BATH, PALM, START
[aː] open front
7. Monophthongs in FACE and GOAT
[eː], [oː]
8. Syllable-timed rhythm (all the syllables have equal duration/weight), often leading to
lack of vowel reduction

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13
Q

London
5

A

London English (Cockney)
1. T-glottalling
Intervocalic /t/ → [ʔ]
alveolar plosive → glottal stop
e.g. butter, a lot of
2. TH fronting
/θ, ð/ → [f, v]
dental fricative → labiodental fricative
e.g. think, mother
3. L-vocalisation
non-prevocalic /l/ → [ʊ]
alveolar lateral → close-mid back vowel
e.g. milk, middle
4. H-dropping
/h/ dropped in lexical words
e.g. hard, hammer, behave

  1. Diphthong shift

FLEECE [ ə i ] [ iː] (diphthongised)
GOOSE [ ə u ] [uː] (diphthongised)
FACE [ æ ɪ ] [eɪ] (more open starting point)
PRICE [ ɑ ɪ ] [aɪ] (more back starting point)
CHOICE [ o ɪ ] [ɔɪ] (more close starting point)
GOAT [ ʌ ʊ ] [əʊ] (more open starting point)
MOUTH [ ɛ ʊ ] [aʊ] (more close starting point)

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