Language And Region-Accent(thanni version) Flashcards

1
Q

What’s the difference between accents and dialects?

A

Accents=sounds
Dialects=words and grammar

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2
Q

What did Kevin watson say?

A

That people in Liverpool tend to be very proud of their scouts identity, it has become a “dialect island”

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3
Q

Kevin watson: what is the symbol for velar fricative?

A

/x/

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4
Q

What did Kevin watson say about people who don’t like their accent?

A

They will try to change it

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5
Q

What’s may happen to people’s accent when they move around?

A

They might converge with the accent from the area they have moved into

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6
Q

What’s happens to your accent the more you move?

A

The less localized (⬆️RP) you speak

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7
Q

How does the level of your education affect your accent?

A

The more educated you are the less regional your accent is

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8
Q

Universities are ___________ so the accent tends to be ___________

A

Delocalised

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9
Q

What is metathesis?

A

West Indians say “A:ks” not “A:sk”

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10
Q

Give an example of a letter that does not correspond to one sound

A

-The letter “e” in “everyone isn’t pronounced the same way as the word “enough”
-there are 10 different sounds for “ough”

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11
Q

What does IPA stand for?

A

International Phonetic Alphabet

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12
Q

Name of sound:What is the place of articulation?

A

The part of the mouth or throat which makes a sound

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13
Q

Name of sound:What is the manner of articulation?

A

What you do with them

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14
Q

How many names for sound is there?

A

2

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15
Q

What are the places of articulation?

A

Nasal cavity
Alveolar nasal
Lip labials(lip)
Palate:palatals(hard palate)
Velum:velars(glottis)
Uvula:uvulars (soft palate)

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16
Q

what are some manners of articulation?

A

-Polsives(stops airflow completely)
-Fricatives(articulates close up but leave a small gap)
-Nasal(air released through the nose)

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17
Q

What are the letters associated with polsives/stops?

A

B,p=labial plosives
T,d=palatal plosives
K,g=palatal plosives

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18
Q

What are the letters associated with fricatives?

A

Õ,ø=dental fricatives(tongue+teeth)
F,v=labial dentive
S,z=fricative alveolar

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19
Q

What are the letters associated with nasal?

A

M-labial nasal
N-valor nasal

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20
Q

What is a significant accent feature in England?

A

-major divide in English accents between north and south,the sounds are very different

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21
Q

Give and example of the divide in the English accent between north and south

A

1.The vowel in “bath” and “grass”:
northern pronunciation=/ae/ (bahth)
southern pronunciation=/a:/(bauth)
2.the vowel in “put and “cup”:
Northern pronunciation=/ʊ/
Southern pronunciation=/ʌ/

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22
Q

Give an example of h-dropping in the English accent

A

H-dropping of “hospital” is common in the English accents (but not in RP)

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23
Q

What’s once place that h drops?

A

East anglia

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24
Q

What is MUE?

A

MUE=L-pronouncing

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25
Q

What is /?/

A

Glottal stop (not pronouncing the consonant in the middle of “water” or “bottle” or “photograph)

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26
Q

What is t-glottalisation?

A

The glottal stop spreading rapidly throughout many English accents over the last few decades

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27
Q

What is the consonants /a:/ and /r/ called?

A

Non-prevocalic r or post vocalist r

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28
Q

Non/prevocalic r:For the final consonant in “car” which places pronounce it as /a:/ ?

A

London,leeds,manchester,Newcastle

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29
Q

Non/prevocalic r:For the final consonant in “car” which places pronounce it as /r/ ?

A

Most of the south west of England and a small amount in the North west Lancashire

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30
Q

Non prevocalic r:What is the name for accents that contain sounds?

A

Rhotic accents

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31
Q

Norwich study: what do some accents replace the velar nasal /n/ with for words like “walking” and “running”?

A

Alveolar /n/

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32
Q

Which place uses the velar nasal?

A

Norwich

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33
Q

What was William labov an expert in?

A

New York speech

34
Q

In Labov’s department store study(1996) what did is he look at?

A

The link between accent and overt prestige

35
Q

What did William Labov investigate?

A

he looked at the non prevocalic /r/ sound in the speech in New York shop assistants

36
Q

William Labov:What is the sound difference for America and Britain?

A

America=/r/
Britain=/a:/

37
Q

William Labov: what is the pronunciation like for the word “floor” in New York?

A

flɔrӨ flɔr=posh america
fɔ:Ө flɔ:= posh britian (without the /r/ as it would be in RP)

38
Q

What did William Labov make American and British shop assistants say?

A

“4th floor” (he asked them where certain things are)

39
Q

What 3 different clothing brands in New York did William Labov visit?

A

Saks (upper class)
Macy’s (middle class)
Klein’s (lower class)

40
Q

What happened when William Labov asked the shop assistants to repeat themselves?

A

First time they would say it spontaneous, second time more careful (careful speech)

41
Q

What happened to the pronounciation of the /r/ as the class of the store increased?

A

It increased

42
Q

What happened to the pronounciation of the /r/ in careful speech?

A

It increased

43
Q

What did Labov find in the speech of the sales assistants from saks,the upper class store?

A

They used the /r/ sound the most (direct correlation with class and pronunciation of the /r/)

44
Q

What did Labov find in the speech of the sales assistants from klein’s ,the lower class store?

A

They used the /r/ sound the least

45
Q

William Labov:What else made the pronunciation of the /r/ increase other than the class of the store?

A

Careful speech

46
Q

William Labov also found that Macy’s showed the greatest change from low prestige form to high when asked to repeat themselves,what does this suggest?

A

Middle class people care more about being correct

47
Q

What is the high prestige form for pronouncing book?

A

Book with Ʊ symbol

48
Q

What is the low prestige form for pronouncing book?

A

Book with a /u:/ symbol

49
Q

What is the high prestige form for pronouncing my?

A

My with a /aI/ symbol

50
Q

What is the low prestige form for pronouncing my?

A

My with the /I:/ symbol

51
Q

What is the low prestige form for pronouncing my?

A

My with the /I:/ symbol

52
Q

Labov’s Martha’s Vinyard Study:what are the 3 types of people living in Martha’s Vinyard?

A

-Islanders(live on the island not born,posh)
-Summer people (tourists)
-The chilmark fishermen(born there,not posh)

54
Q

Martha’s Vineyard:what were some of the unusual features of the islanders?

A

The vowel sound /a Ʊ/ became /əƱ/
The vowel sound /aI/ became /əl/
The posh islanders use low prestige

55
Q

Martha’s Vineyard: Who used the vowels /əƱ/ and /əl/ and what was this apart of?

A

The fishermen use it and this was part of the traditional accent of the island so that’s why the posh islanders use it to

56
Q

Martha’s Vineyard: why did the posh islanders change their variety to sound more like the fishermen?

A

They use a lower prestige form So that they aren’t associated with the “summer people” group (tourists)

57
Q

Social network theory: what does it meant to have a closed network and what type of people usually have this?

A

Everyone knows each other and children/babies have a closed network(the more you grow the less closed it it)

58
Q

Social network theory: what does it meant to have a open network?

A

Nobody if your network knows anyone else

59
Q

Social network theory: what does multiplex connections mean?

A

It’s where someone in your network have more than one role (e.g my best friend may also my neighbor)

60
Q

Social network theory: what does uniplex connections mean?

A

Only one connections between us (eg my school friend is not my neighbor,cousin or anything else,just my friend)

61
Q

What is the meaning of a norm-enforcement?

A

Making you behave in a way that’s expected (social expectations/standards)

62
Q

What is a norm-enforcement mechanism?

A

A thing that pressures you to obey the norms

63
Q

Wha does it mean if you have a closed network?

A

Your have more multi connections, more norm-enforcement

64
Q

What does it mean if you have a open network?

A

More uniplex connections,less norm enforcement

65
Q

James Milroy and Lesley Milroy look at in their Belfast study?

A

The connection between people’s social networks and their accent in working class communities

66
Q

What was Belfast like in the 80s?

A

Belfast is the principle city of northern island and it was deeply divided(catholic and Protestant) because there was a civil war, Milroy and milroy live in the communities they investigated

67
Q

Milroy and Milroy’s Belfast study:what was the Belfast accent like?

A

The consonant/õ/ becomes /d/ in “mother”
The vowel /ae/ becomes /ɔ:/ in “hat”

68
Q

Milroy and Milroy’s Belfast study: what is the meaning of a Network strength score?

A

It’s what Milroy and Milroy gave to each individual according to how open or closed their network was

69
Q

What did Milroy and Milroy’s find in terms of a high or low network strength score?

A

That people with a high network strength score (closed network)used the features of the Belfast accent more than those with a low score (open network)

70
Q

Milroy and Milroy’s Belfast study: who particularly have a strong network strength score?

A

Men,they lived in very tight networks (shared the same faith,employer,social links)

71
Q

Milroy and Milroy’s Belfast study:What were women’s network like?

A

Closed networks,they usually didnt work and socialized in groups of 3 or 4

72
Q

Milroy and Milroy: what happened to employment in Belfast?

A

Unemployment for males increased and this caused women to work more

73
Q

Milroy and Milroy: what happened to men’s network in Belfast as the lack of unemployment increased?

A

Networks started to break down

74
Q

Milroy and Milroy: what happened to women’s network in Belfast as the lack of unemployment for menincreased?

A

They started to work more and so networks becoming more dense so /ɔ:/ increased and they became more linguistically homogeneous

75
Q

Peter trudging Norwich study: what were the rates for g-pronouncing?

A

0%-29% lower class
29%-100% higher class

76
Q

Trudgill and gender: what did women and men do with g-pronouncing?

A

Women over report with g-pronouncing
Men under report with g-pronouncing

77
Q

Trudgill and gender: which prestige forms did women and men value?

A

Men value low prestige form
Women value high prestige form

78
Q

What does the accommodation theory (by Gile) mean?

A

To change your variety to suite the person to talking to

79
Q

Gile’s Accommodation theory: what are the names of the 2 changes a speaker can do to “accommodate” the interlocutor?

A

Convergence and Divergence

80
Q

Gile’s Accommodation theory: what is the meaning of convergence?

A

Changing your accent to sound more like the interlocutor(who your speaking to)

81
Q

Gile’s Accommodation theory: what is the meaning of Divergence?

A

Talking less like your interlocutor(the person your talking to) this can be either positive or negative

82
Q

Coupland’s Cardiff study: what are the 3 distinctive accents?

A

Cardif,south wales English and Bristol English