المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
المرجع الألكتروني للمعلوماتية

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The West and Midwest: phonology  
  
819   09:11 صباحاً   date: 2024-03-26
Author : Matthew J. Gordon
Book or Source : A Handbook Of Varieties Of English Phonology
Page and Part : 338-19


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Date: 2023-10-20 916
Date: 2024-02-29 842
Date: 2024-03-29 831

The West and Midwest: phonology

This topic offers a phonological sketch of the varieties of English spoken across the midwestern and western United States. The area covered can be visualized as a fairly narrow band that stretches from western Pennsylvania across central sections of Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois and widens at the Mississippi River to include Missouri, Iowa, and Minnesota and eventually the Great Plains and the western states as it continues to the Pacific coast. To be sure, this vast territory is by no means linguistically homogenous; indeed almost all of the speech characteristics described here occur variably across the regions considered and across speakers within any given region. Nevertheless, there are traits that can be heard throughout this broad territory and that serve to distinguish it from neighboring areas. The region seems also to have some coherence in popular perceptions of American dialects. The speech of this region generally lacks features that are salient markers of place to the ears of most Americans, a tendency that contributes to the perception that the region is “accentless”. This sense of the region is encoded in the notion of a “General American” dialect, a term that was used by observers of American English such as H.L. Mencken before Kurath’s tripartite division (North, Midlands, South) became received wisdom among dialectologists. General American was typically distinguished from Southern and Eastern speech and was defined negatively as a dialect that lacked the regionally distinctive features of the other two. Some linguists still employ the General American label though they are quick to add that it does not designate a monolithic accent.