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Relation of the American nation to England (especially after 1776) Schizophrenic! - Violent rejection of English tyranny - Acute nostalgia for English culture
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Pronunciation British speakers: Received Pronunciation (RP), Oxford English, Public School English, BBC English, standard British English (around 3% of the population use RP) American English has no official standard
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RP developed at the end of the 18 th century, during the period of the American Revolution Until the 18 th century everyone in both Britain and America spoke a local dialect Difference between gentlefolks and commoners Dialect in novels: in UK to mark class and region origins In America: for comic effect Language of London: prestige dialect
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“Received pronunciation”: term introduced by John Walker (1791), “received” means “generally adopted and approved”, “the best” Main feature: loss of the postvocalic [r] with lengthening of the vowel Ex (BE): - horse: /h ɔː s/ - course: /k ɔː s/
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Accents Fairfax, Virginia http://accent.gmu.edu/searchsaa.php?function=de tail&speakerid=110 Hertfordshire http://accent.gmu.edu/searchsaa.php?function=de tail&speakerid=443
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Loss of [r] became the prestige norm: US areas more exposed to British influence (New England, “Old” South) followed this innovation, other areas kept the [r] Not only in the US, but in other geographical areas distant from the “linguistic center” (Ireland, Scotland) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rNzPsfnN3sU &feature=related http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rNzPsfnN3sU &feature=related
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