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Processes Part 4
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Processes Part 4 In Part 1 we looked at Residualisms, which leave scattered traces in modern dialects. Part 2 dealt with more prominent processes. In Part 3 we began looking at processs which occurred in Britain after the Atlantic Split (Amrican vs. British English) In Part 4 will will finish with British processes
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Wells Chapter 3 Middle English Wells 3.2 British prestige innovations Wells 3.3 Some American innvoations Wells 3.4 Later British innvoations 1400 1600 "The Great Divide" Wells 3.1 Residualisms
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p.212 Those changes which occurred in British prestige English (RP) after the “great divide” p.242 Changes occurring in American English after the “great divide” which did not affect British English p 252 Later British non-prestige changes (not in RP)
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p. 242 (Later, when we move to America)
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p252 Non-prestige (non-RP innovations) H Dropping Diphthong Shift L Vocalization Glottalization (and Glottaling) The –ing variable
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p253 Non-prestige (non-RP innovations) H Dropping Diphthong Shift L Vocalization Glottalization (and Glottaling) The –ing variable
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H-Dropping on unstressed structural words occurs in most native English accents, including RP and GA. This is not what we call H-Dropping! Review the material on Weak Forms from the first-year Phonetics course at http://www.hi.is/~peturk/KENNSLA/02/TOP/ weakforms.html http://www.hi.is/~peturk/KENNSLA/02/TOP/ weakforms.html (Scroll down to (d) h-dropping)
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H-Dropping on unstressed structural words occurs in most native English accents, including RP and GA he, his, her, have, has, had
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I think he arrives on Monday I gave it to her yesterday Bush has changed his mind What had Harriet got to say? I have her certificate here No, sorry, that’s his.
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H-Dropping on unstressed structural words occurs in most native English accents, including RP and GA he, his, her, have, has, had
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H-Dropping on unstressed structural words occurs in most native English accents, including RP and GA he, his, her, have, has, had “H-Dropping” refers to loss of h in stressed words
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What had Harriet got to say? I have her certificate here No, sorry, that’s his.
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Repercussions: hypercorrection Harthur and Henry No, he hisnt And use of h in weak fors (Adoptive RP, for instance): I have just sent off her certificate
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p256 Non-prestige (non-RP innovations) H Dropping Diphthong Shift L Vocalization Glottalization (and Glottaling) The –ing variable
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p.256
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FLEECE FACE PRICE CHOICE GOOSE GOAT MOUTH
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Diphthong Shift What is the difference between a buffalo and a bison? You can't wash your hands in a buffalo
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bison basin
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Oh I am the cook and the captain bold And the mate of the Nancy brig, And the bo’sun tight, And the midshipmite And the crew of the Captain’s gig. http://www.stormy.ca/marine/nancy_bell.html W.S. Gilbert, The Yarn of the 'Nancy Bell'
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Diphthong Shift (Melchers and Shaw call this “Wide Diphthongs”) Initial simplification: paint pint point RPLondon
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Sub-systems A BC D
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Sub-system B
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Sub-systems A BC D
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Sub-system C
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Wells deals briefly with Diphthong Shift in Vol. 1 pp.256-6 and in greater detail: Vol 2 pp. 306-310 ( London) Vol 3 pp.597-8 (Australia), p. 614 (South Africa)
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p259 Non-prestige (non-RP innovations) H Dropping Diphthong Shift L Vocalization Glottalization (and Glottaling) The –ing variable
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p.258 Rule for allophones of l in RP: Rule for allophones of l in accents with L Vocalization:
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p.258 From Phonetics exam 2006: Lazy girls lie all night long on piled-up milk-white pillows
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Non-prestige (non-RP innovations) H Dropping Diphthong Shift L Vocalization Glottalization (and Glottaling) The –ing variable p.262
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L = lateral, S = sibilant, true C = other consonants
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in all environments except #__V
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Found in:
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p.262 Non-prestige (non-RP innovations) H Dropping Diphthong Shift L Vocalization Glottalization (and Glottaling) The –ing variable
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p.262
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hi lo
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p.262 ME : -inde originally a verbal inflection, -ing originally a verbal noun. Later both current as either. ?
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p.262
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Subject to the Weak Vowel Merger (Lenin-Lennon Merger): wanted, kisses, rabbit, stop it
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p.262
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p.263
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