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Vowel Movement: How Americans near the Great Lakes are radically changing the sound of English
Slate ^ | August 22, 2012 | Rob Mifsud

Posted on 08/24/2012 2:10:57 PM PDT by JerseyanExile

On July 4, 1960, the Eugene (Ore.) Register-Guard rang in Independence Day with a dire Associated Press report by one Norma Gauhn headlined “American Dialects Disappearing.” The problem, according to “speech experts,” was the homogenizing effect of “mass communications, compulsory education, [and] the mobility of restless Americans.” These conformist pressures have only intensified in the half-century since the AP warned “that within four generations virtually all regional U.S. speech differences will be gone.” And so as we enter the predicted twilight of regional American English, it’s no surprise that publications as venerable as the Economist now confirm what our collective intuition tells us: “Television and the Internet are definitely doing something to our regional accents: A Boston accent that would have seemed weak in the John F. Kennedy years now sounds thick by comparison.”

Before you start weeping into your chowdah, though, I have some news: All these people are wrong. Not about the Boston accent, necessarily; that one might really be receding. But American linguistic diversity as a whole isn’t dying—it’s thriving. Despite our gut-level hunch about the direction of the language; despite the fact that 70-cent, three-minute, off-peak, coast-to-coast long-distance calls that cost four inflation-adjusted dollars in 1970 are now free; despite cheap travel, YouTube, and the globalization of film and television, American dialects are actually diverging.

There are multiple examples of such divergence. But none is as dramatic, as baffling to linguists, and as mysteriously under the collective radar as what’s happening in the cities that ring the Great Lakes. From Syracuse, N.Y., in the east to Milwaukee in the west, 34 million Americans are revolutionizing the sound of English. Linguists first noted aspects of the change in the late 1960s.

(Excerpt) Read more at slate.com ...


TOPICS: Canada; Culture/Society; US: Illinois; US: Indiana; US: Michigan; US: Minnesota; US: Ohio; US: Oregon; US: Wisconsin
KEYWORDS: americanaccents; canada; englishlanguage; epigraphyandlanguage; godsgravesglyphs; greatlakes; illinois; indiana; language; michigan; minnesota; ohio; oregon; wisconsin
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To: JerseyanExile; All

You want to have some fun? Check out this website.

http://www.penceland.com/ne_dialect.html


101 posted on 08/24/2012 7:10:10 PM PDT by Right Wing Assault (Dick Obama is more inexperienced now than he was before he was elected.)
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To: Right Wing Assault

Pretty much.


102 posted on 08/24/2012 7:22:57 PM PDT by mylife (The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
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To: madison10
My family has been in the Cleveland area for 200 years and there is no Cleveland accent. Now Meeshegun on the other hand...
103 posted on 08/24/2012 7:52:12 PM PDT by eggman (End the Obama occupation of the White House!)
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To: mylife

It’s weird. The old Slovenian and Polish women talk like they’re from Jersey. With Italians, it’s the guys.

Irish guys like me speak perfectly, of course.

My son had a college roommate from Texas. I mentioned he must not have lived there for long since he sounded like he was from Ohio. He told me he lived there his whole life but that he was the only one in the family that talked “right.” LOL when he said that. He said he picked it up from TV.

73


104 posted on 08/24/2012 7:52:12 PM PDT by Right Wing Assault (Dick Obama is more inexperienced now than he was before he was elected.)
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To: Right Wing Assault
NCS speakers then slide the wha sound into the slot formerly occupied by short o. They now pronounce caught like people from Boston do, but they pronounce cot the way other people say cat. One link down the chain, but tilts toward bought, and further down the short e in words like bet starts to sound like but. The final link in this chain may be the short i of bit elbowing its way in the direction of bet, though its course isn’t entirely clear just yet.

I've never heard anyone talk like that. What city talks like this?

105 posted on 08/24/2012 7:58:39 PM PDT by Right Wing Assault (Dick Obama is more inexperienced now than he was before he was elected.)
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To: JerseyanExile

Wonderful article, thanks


106 posted on 08/24/2012 8:05:20 PM PDT by muir_redwoods (Legalize Freedom!!)
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To: Right Wing Assault

73


107 posted on 08/24/2012 8:13:57 PM PDT by mylife (The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
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To: JerseyanExile

Love the study of the English language. ty for posting this quite interesting article.


108 posted on 08/24/2012 8:22:07 PM PDT by nicmarlo
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To: steve86; JerseyanExile
Wow!

I am from what is now NW London, England. Wife is from W.London. Reside at the border with Upper Michigan, twin cities with Sault Ste Msrie, Ontario. Army child live in eight different locations in England. Know accents. Find Yoopers quite articulate and note that where certain groups settled there variations occur. Finnish descendants seem to have a slightly different edge with their dialect and so on.

Always chuckle at the common and garden variety of English people like myself, who put on a "special accent" when talking to someone of higher class. This is usually on the telephone.

Some of us need a jolly good laugh and this thread has provided it. This after the stress of the Akin affair.

109 posted on 08/24/2012 8:26:29 PM PDT by Peter Libra
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To: dfwgator

you forgot the old timers who called Port Huron Port Urine.


110 posted on 08/24/2012 8:51:47 PM PDT by cyclotic (People who live within their means are increasingly being forced to pay for people who didn't.)
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To: dfwgator

you forgot the old timers who called Port Huron Port Urine.


111 posted on 08/24/2012 8:53:44 PM PDT by cyclotic (People who live within their means are increasingly being forced to pay for people who didn't.)
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To: Right Wing Assault

Chicago really would be the right (yet cliched) answer.


112 posted on 08/24/2012 10:06:57 PM PDT by JSDude1
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To: Right Wing Assault

Isn’t that Wis CAHN sin ?


113 posted on 08/25/2012 3:04:11 AM PDT by knarf (I say things that are true ... I have no proof ... but they're true)
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To: cripplecreek
In New Jersey, those who live in the northern part of the state typically sound like Anthony Bourdain. When you get closer to Philly, folks start to sound more mentally challenged (ew-pen the drew-er fer my sucks, go Iggles!, etc.). The only people who say "joisey" are Italian-American transplants from the outer boroughs of NYC, and, contrary to popular media, they are a minority in the state.

Here in Brazil, regional accents remain strong, despite mass media. Much as in the northeast in the US, accents are strong among the proles, weak amongst the yuppies.

114 posted on 08/25/2012 3:30:53 AM PDT by Clemenza ("History, I believe, furnishes no example of a priest-ridden people maintaining a free civil governm)
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To: cripplecreek

The auto companies recruited southerners with the belief that they were less likely to unionize.


115 posted on 08/25/2012 3:33:02 AM PDT by Clemenza ("History, I believe, furnishes no example of a priest-ridden people maintaining a free civil governm)
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To: JSDude1
Chicago really would be the right (yet cliched) answer.

I've been to Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland and I do not recall hearing "cot" pronouneced "cat," "but" like "bought," or "bit" like "bet."

I do marvel at how New Zealanders say "best" as "beast."

116 posted on 08/25/2012 4:23:48 AM PDT by Right Wing Assault (Dick Obama is more inexperienced now than he was before he was elected.)
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To: knarf

Yah, dat’s the place.

My late FIL said it “West-CON-sin.” He was from Rochester. I always wanted to ask him if he’s ever been to “East-CON-sin” but he was hard of hearing so I’m sure he would have replied, “Sure! You know we go to “West-CON-sin” every summer.”


117 posted on 08/25/2012 4:28:31 AM PDT by Right Wing Assault (Dick Obama is more inexperienced now than he was before he was elected.)
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To: Right Wing Assault

” It was funny when, after hearing us N. Ohioans talk, they said, “You’re not from around here.” I restrained myself from saying, “No shit? How could you tell?”

I got the same thing when I moved to Colorado. The checkout girl at the supermarket could not understand me at all then the bagger thought it would be amusing to make fun of my accent. He was downright insulting and doesn’t know how close he came to being outside my ‘comfort zone’.


118 posted on 08/25/2012 4:51:37 AM PDT by dljordan ("Tyranny, like Hell, is not easily conquered.")
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To: JerseyanExile; Daffynition; martin_fierro
A treasure trove of linguistic anomalies ping!
119 posted on 08/25/2012 6:51:22 AM PDT by Ezekiel (The Obama-nation began with the Inauguration of Desolation.)
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To: JerseyanExile
I been to Michigan several times, I didn't hear no accent!

Oh yeah, we wuz visitin’ some Texans!

120 posted on 08/25/2012 7:02:04 AM PDT by Ditter
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