Dissection of the American English Video

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  • Опубликовано: 1 янв 2022
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Комментарии • 450

  • @clayglaus7905
    @clayglaus7905 2 года назад +332

    Simon, now that you've done General American English, you should cover American Southern English. As a Southerner myself, it would be awesome if you could cover America's other big accent in detail as you did here and the other video. Southern American English gets looked down on as a backwards kind of accent that only the ignorant speak in, which is not true from a linguistics point of view. It has, in my opinion (and I know I'm biased), a fascinating linguistics history since it is rather distinct from the northern part of the country. Simon, I love your videos. I've learned so much from them. Keep up the awesome work!

    • @kathyl6677
      @kathyl6677 2 года назад +6

      I imagine the same is true for various parts of England/Wales. Listen to how Hagrid speaks in Harry Potter. Same for various characters in Brian Jacques's Redwall series. It would be interesting to speculate as to why this view is so? Did it start as just a way of putting others down, to feel superior? I'd like to flip that and see what happens, what it would sound like.

    • @Kitsaplorax
      @Kitsaplorax 2 года назад +24

      Which Southern English dialect? New Orleans, Nashville, or Eureka Springs, Arkansas? All of these are quite different.

    • @mr.osamabingaming2633
      @mr.osamabingaming2633 2 года назад

      @@mongke7858 my dad (who is a southerner) pronounces the wh.

    • @mr.osamabingaming2633
      @mr.osamabingaming2633 2 года назад

      @Watch My Playlist he already has once I think.

    • @auxsarxs2947
      @auxsarxs2947 2 года назад +2

      @@Kitsaplorax Eureka Springs is a yankee town in a Southern state. Do you mean Ozark/Appalachian dialect?

  • @lahsilaz6880
    @lahsilaz6880 2 года назад +202

    As a General American English speaker, your pronunciation of "butter" and "hand" was scarily perfect

    • @dylanevans3237
      @dylanevans3237 2 года назад +6

      To me, the STRUT vowel in "butter" seemed oddly short and tense the first time he said it, but later in the video it seemed "normal"

    • @fburton8
      @fburton8 2 года назад +3

      I love Nudder Budder cookies! 😃

    • @mikeg8276
      @mikeg8276 2 года назад

      For me, on the west coast, “butter” was perfect but “hand” sounded like it came from a foreign regional dialect.

    • @lahsilaz6880
      @lahsilaz6880 2 года назад +2

      @@mikeg8276 Interesting, perhaps West Coast dialects have higher pre-nasal raising? I'm personally from the Midwest and know we pronounce /ɛ/ and /æ/ sometimes differently from other dialects. It may have something to do with that.

    • @aerobolt256
      @aerobolt256 2 года назад +4

      his "matter" sounded like a completely different man

  • @saxrendell
    @saxrendell 2 года назад +11

    "It's starting raining ... oh no. I'm inside now" for some reason this made me smile

  • @PyckledNyk
    @PyckledNyk 2 года назад +30

    Here are some notes on some of my dialectal features as a Floridian who grew up in North Florida.
    1) The cot-caught merger has yet to affect my dialect. However, the pen-pin merger has definitely affected my speech.
    2) T is basically spot on for me in your analysis except for case: very often, I glottalize or devoice my final T’s to a glottal stop. So words like “Matt” or “formulate” become “Ma’ “ or “formula’e”, however “butter” and “fitting” remain “budder” and “fidding”
    3) I maintain the “iw” sound in words like “truth”, “due”, “new” and “sue”, a feature I only recently discovered. However, this isn’t the same as a yod, as my “dew” is closer to “diw” than “dju:”
    4) Almost all my “L”s are clear, if not all of them, whether at the onset or the terminus of a syllable. In general, to make a dark L takes a bit of concerted effort on my part.
    5) My dialect is almost hyper-rhotic, where my R’s are drawn out to a guttural “Errrr” for a lot of words. As an example, in the word “heard”, the “err” sound is exaggerated to the point where it sounds like the “d” is almost added on to the end at the last second.

    • @GeckoHiker
      @GeckoHiker 2 года назад +1

      Yes, Florida has an interesting rhotic accent that has been called a NASCAR accent. I grew up in Gainesville. My native accent painstakingly pronounces all the syllables and consonants. I noticed this in my city peers, which is where children generally learn accents. The rural kids spoke with a pronounced Southern drawl. A little slower, non-rhotic, and with syllables left out. I would say "Eye am going to the store." A Southern drawl sounded to me like "Ahh'm guhin tuh thuh stahhh." Not making fun--just contrasting the Florida NASCAR accent with a Southern accent as I heard it.

  • @Zabrakjedi
    @Zabrakjedi 2 года назад +25

    Always a joy when Simon uploads

  • @dsbromeister1546
    @dsbromeister1546 2 года назад +63

    Interesting that you said you were going for something "Michigany," because that actually is where I'm from. While accent there was certainly general American 100 years ago, the northern cities vowel shift is changing the accent around the great lakes in what some are saying is the biggest change in English pronunciation since the great vowel shift. Definitely a video-worthy topic.
    Also, basically every state the doesn't touch the Atlantic or Gulf of Mexico is considered some kind of "west," which can be confusing. Michigan is in the Midwest even though it is decidedly in the eastern half of the country (not to mention mostly the eastern time zone).

    • @dsbromeister1546
      @dsbromeister1546 2 года назад +4

      If he needs an example I'll gladly volunteer haha

    • @milesrout
      @milesrout 2 года назад +3

      biggest change in English pronunciation since the great vowel shift? :eyeroll:

    • @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410
      @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410 2 года назад +4

      @@WinstonSmithGPT Honestly, to me it reminds me a lot of people saying that Appalachian English is the closest to Elizabethan English; that is to say mostly over-blown.
      There's definitely an ongoing sound change happening, but so too is there similar stuff happening in Canada and California, and a different less similar sound change that's been happening in the Southern US.

    • @npickard4218
      @npickard4218 2 года назад +9

      Justin, I'm from Michigan too although I've been living in California since my mid-twenties, I'm 57. My students in California think that Michigan is "East Coast." I show them maps and charts proving that Michigan is in the Midwest. You probably know this but the term Midwest is not arbitrary; it's historical. Michigan was solidly Midwest prior to welcoming the West coast states into the Union. The problem is solved by labeling the Western coast states as "Far West" although, in practice, people in California never say 'far west' they say 'Pacific Coast.'
      I was back in northern Michigan in July of this year. I have a home at Houghton Lake and also have property in the U.P. and since I am a certified linguist I listen carefully to language. The Millenials and Gen Z sound like Californians. Their word choice mimics the English west of the Rockies (standard American) and their vowels are changing too. Folks my age and older still sound midwestern. Now I feel guilty painting with such a wide brush, I did run across some young people from time to time who have retained their dialect so I got to talkin' with them and, unsurprisingly, they don't look at their phones much. These kids were definitely outliers. The majority are watching endless clips on social media and acquired our homogenized, lackluster language west of the Rockies. Even in the U.P. where Yoopers wear their dialect like a badge of honor, it was quite watered down among Gen Z.
      We linguists love regional, ethnic, and alternative dialects as well as high and low registers and all manner of non-standard spoken forms. Consequently, my bias is against standardization. My opinion is that the loss of regional dialects is as lamentable as the disappearance of regional subcultures. Simon hasn't told us in his videos what his view is but I suspect he agrees. Don't you think? On a positive note, it seems like the younger generations in northern Michigan and the UP continue to be northern woodsmen and outsdoorsmen as always: hunting, finishing, ATVs, snowmobiles, and anything else they can do outside so the regional culture holds strong. This makes me happy.

    • @npickard4218
      @npickard4218 2 года назад

      @@WinstonSmithGPT No, not at all. I pulled up the NCVS map and I wasn't even in it. So Houghton Lake is right on the border of the NCVS map and the UP where I also visit and have property is well out of the NCVS region. I never set foot in any NCVS. Matter of fact, I land at the Cherry Capital Airport in Traverse City which is just on the other side of the NCVS border. It's actually rather hilarious that I spent the entire month of July outside of it without even being aware of its boundaries. Fine point: Houghton Lake is within the range but right on the border and my neighbors there (with whom I am friends) are from further north so it's unlikely that I ever encountered it.

  • @jamesaddison665
    @jamesaddison665 2 года назад +7

    There is a dialect found in the outer banks region of North Carolina called high tide (or hoi toid) English. It is very redolent of the accents found in East Anglia (specifically Norfolk, Suffolk and north Essex).

  • @lilygirl5099
    @lilygirl5099 2 года назад +68

    Great video. I think it would be interesting to see more on how Australian and/or New Zealand accents developed, if you have the time to do a video on that :) sorry if you have and I just missed it!

    • @ajs41
      @ajs41 2 года назад +3

      Did Australian and NZ accents develop together so to speak, or did they develop totally separately? They sound so similar to most people that you'd think they developed together in some way.

    • @philroberts7238
      @philroberts7238 2 года назад +6

      @@ajs41 Mainly separately, I'd say. It's always the native-born children of immigrants who seem to create a relatively homogeneous accent out of the different accents of their parents. Kids tend to imitate their peers far more than their elders and betters in spite of all efforts to stop them from doing so. I believe British writers were already detecting a distinct Australian accent within ten years of the arrival of the First Fleet.

    • @user-xo9ig8kc3u
      @user-xo9ig8kc3u 2 года назад +4

      @@ajs41 A huge number of initial settlers to NZ actually arrived from Australia and not directly from England. It actually contributed to Britain separating NZ under its own umbrella, in an attempt to protect the Maori (and avoid an expensive war).
      There were a few very distinct NZ features (uvular 'burred' r) that came from Scottish settlers (mainly in the South Island), but they're almost extinct now.

    • @kateb2643
      @kateb2643 Год назад +2

      So curious about this as well. I'm from South Africa and some of our accents bear similarities to NZ and Aussie accents, which is really interesting to me considering we're so far away. It makes me think our accents must've developed along a similar path

  • @Kitsaplorax
    @Kitsaplorax 2 года назад +18

    The dialects in the US are more complex than simple surveys indicate. Mennonite Platt DItsch left some artifacts that I can recognize in my own Kansas native voice. While traveling in the UK, I learned that not one Brit I met-including a few linguists-could identify where in the States I came from. On the other hand, I could not pronounce "Wigan" without getting snickers, despite repeated efforts. I learned to almost pronounce a great many place names in England by asking myself "How would a Back Bay Maine speaker say this?".

    • @skepticalbadger
      @skepticalbadger 2 года назад +6

      To be fair, most Brits wouldn't have a clue where most Americans were from, and vice versa.

    • @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410
      @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410 2 года назад +2

      I'd imagine you might get something similar to accents influenced by Pennsylvania Dutch, there is an interesting accent in English among them

    • @Kitsaplorax
      @Kitsaplorax 2 года назад +1

      @@skepticalbadger Most of my Brit friends have traveled a lot in the USA. Generally they have nailed every American's accent they have met .

  • @iainlaurence
    @iainlaurence 2 года назад +11

    It would be cool if that previous video became part of a series to showcase the evolution of the other english accents over time. I enjoyed hearing the reconstructions and it was a nice addition to add in human sounds like ‘um’ and coughs like it’s a real recording of the person

  • @alicethedestroyer1287
    @alicethedestroyer1287 2 года назад +20

    I think linguists tend to disagree on A LOT of minor details but I really do love the fact that you do these videos. I’m hooked on them. AZ Foreman and ACE Linguist also took swings at approximated bygone dialects from American history. Have you ever read Benjamin Franklin’s phonetic guide to American English, or reconstructed, for yourself, pronunciation from contemporaneous rhyming patterns, like David Crystal did with OP? It really reveals a lot.

  • @joshuaforeman2611
    @joshuaforeman2611 2 года назад +8

    Hi Simon, I greatly appreciate you. I was born in 83 and grew up living all over the us so I have a ‘feeling’ and can emulate most us accents or dialects. If you ever want a first hand perspective of current US accents, I’d be glad to help in any way possible. Love your stuff
    -Josh

  • @CharlYiffington1999
    @CharlYiffington1999 2 года назад +5

    Alveolar tap T is also a feature of Ulster English which was developing at approximately the same time as American English. It's also a feature of newer southern Irish English, including my own speech, which seems to be an independent development since the late 20th century.

  • @alexanderweeks1960
    @alexanderweeks1960 2 года назад +4

    I'm American, living in Illinois. And your american accent is awesome. Spot on! I would have just thought you were from another part of the country from me.

  • @ajrutherford600
    @ajrutherford600 2 года назад

    Always find these videos fascinating!

  • @techman2471
    @techman2471 2 года назад +11

    As a note, the northern New England accent does drop r where is in a word and add r where they don't belong. i had to work hard to speak with a General American accent while in the Navy so as not to get picked on.

    • @kathyl6677
      @kathyl6677 2 года назад +1

      Thank you, sincerely, for your effort. One of my pet peeves is when people say "Warshington," instead of "Washington."

    • @kathyl6677
      @kathyl6677 2 года назад

      @@WinstonSmithGPT not sure where Warshington comes from. Just a pet peeve. ;)

    • @sciencerscientifico310
      @sciencerscientifico310 2 года назад +1

      Of course, as east New England was heavily influenced by those from East Anglia, the dialect tends to be largely non-rhotic. Non-rhoticity originated in the region around London England.

    • @qwertyasdfg2219
      @qwertyasdfg2219 2 года назад

      how do you say law rand ordah (law and order) ?

  • @crusatyr1452
    @crusatyr1452 2 года назад +9

    I love your stuff, Simon! Keep up the good work :D

  • @HeyItsCettefille
    @HeyItsCettefille 2 года назад

    Wow!!! I wouldn’t have guessed it was you speaking at all!!! Great video as usual!

  • @stevenmontoya9950
    @stevenmontoya9950 2 года назад +4

    Oh 2022 is off to a GREAT start

  • @frankharr9466
    @frankharr9466 2 года назад

    Thank you! That makes the previosu video more understandable. It's fascinating.

  • @fayeknight1881
    @fayeknight1881 2 года назад

    I love your videos so much, very interesting.

  • @ArturoStojanoff
    @ArturoStojanoff 2 года назад +28

    The history of the “drop” vowel sounds is actually more complex than that. Around the 1600’s, I believe, in southern English English there was a split, the lot-cloth split, where that vowel became longer before most voiceless fricatives (th, s, f) and the “ng” sound. This split would eventually disappear in England (although older recordings of the queen still exhibit it). However, in the U.S. it would become more pronounced to the point where the long version of the vowel merged with the “aw” vowel in words like “law,” “caught,” “pause,” “all,” etc. This means that “offal” and “awful” became homophones. Then the remaining “drop” vowels that hadn’t been lengthened opened up and merged with the “palm” vowel, so that “father” and “bother” rhyme perfectly.
    It is after all of this that the caught-cot merger merged all of these vowels. The caught-cot merger is predominant in all of the western U.S. and in some regions of New England. Boston English never had the father-bother merger and instead all versions of the “drop” vowel merged with the “aw” vowel.

    • @GiandomenicoDeMola
      @GiandomenicoDeMola 2 года назад

      Great comment, very interesting! Thanks a lot!

    • @margaretqueenofscots9450
      @margaretqueenofscots9450 2 года назад

      Grew up in WI, where everyone pronounces caught and cot identically. I don’t, and I’m not sure when it changed but my accent is much more generalized now. Currently in South Pennsylvania, Cumberland valley, which has an odd accent all its own.

    • @ArturoStojanoff
      @ArturoStojanoff 2 года назад +1

      @@mongke7858 Really? All three differently? I would expect “palm” and “cot” to have the same vowel even for Easterners. Do “father” and “bother” rhyme in your variety? Perhaps it’s something about the nasal “m” that changes the previous vowel in “palm” that makes it sound different from “cot.”

    • @koushiro86
      @koushiro86 2 года назад

      @@mongke7858 As a Bay Area expatriate (Oregon resident) for whom those sounds are identical, I can only hear the difference when old movie stars speak in Mid-Atlantic, or possibly on the rare times I hear my uncle that's from Philly and splits time between New York and Vermont, blending the already (to me) nearly interchangeable New York and Philly accents

    • @mikebmcl
      @mikebmcl 2 года назад

      @@ArturoStojanoff As someone who grew up in a southern, western part of the Western New England English dialect area, I pronounce "cot" with an open back unrounded vowel and "caught" with an open-mid back rounded vowel. I don't know if someone listening would be able to tell but for me, "calm" is slightly fronted and slightly closed compared to "cot" but not necessarily all the way to near-open or central. So I think that distinction is disappearing in the Mid-Hudson Valley/Western Connecticut. I may actually pronounce them the same at normal speech rates sometimes or perhaps always. But saying the words individually I can feel a slight difference that doesn't feel related to nasality. If anything, it's probably down to a slight difference in tongue position related to the alveolar stop that I pronounce "cot" with versus the velarized (dark) "l" that I pronounce "calm" with. But again, it's not a strong enough distinction that I could be certain I would hear the difference (or lack thereof) if someone pronounced both "cot" and "calm" with an open back unrounded vowel sound. I do hear the difference with speakers who have the merger as the variant I most commonly hear sounds to me to be even further back and slightly more open than "cot" is for me.

  • @christopherdavis6454
    @christopherdavis6454 2 года назад +1

    I've been digging through Webster's early writings recently in my efforts to reconstruct 18th century English, and specifically to reconstruct American English as that's what most of my clients are interested in. It's been a very informative process! Thank you for your work on this as well! It always helps me to see what sources others are turning to, and it especially helps to be able to give my clients samples to listen to that aren't just me.

  • @thormusique
    @thormusique 2 года назад +22

    As an Englishman who's spent large chunks of time in the US (currently living in Vermont), I think you've done an excellent job in characterising general NE American speech patterns. I do agree that, as you've said, your 'L's were a tad overly velar. I've made a bit of a study of how American English has changed, particularly since the 1960s, and I would say that once television, in particular, became widespread by the 1950s, stylised version of metropolitan New York City speech spread like wildfire throughout the country. As television and radio stations continued to proliferate, there were many announcers from the Northeast who migrated to other parts of the country to ply their craft at these stations. Even after many stations began hiring locals, it was this generalised Northeastern speech that was deemed more desirable from a broadcasting standpoint. These speech patterns thus became rather ubiquitous. Unfortunately, of course, the proliferation of generalised speech also began to 'water down' local dialects and accents. In any case, one of the things I've noticed is that 'L's started to become more velar in the '60s and '70s. Obviously, I'm ignoring local NYC and northern New Jersey dialects, some of which were highly velar from a long time before that. Love your channel. Cheers!

  • @lostinitaly5590
    @lostinitaly5590 2 года назад +2

    Hi Simon. I am originally from northern Georgia (not quite in the Appalachians but closer to Atlanta), and my accent maintains the distinction between 'due' and 'do'. I second the motion from another commenter regarding the American Southern English video. Accents vary widely within the region and I'm sure we would all learn a lot from your research into the topic. Great work, cheers!

  • @mrav8r
    @mrav8r 2 года назад +21

    I really like how you use the forensic analysis from the alveolar “t” as sounding more like a “d” as in butter and water in American English, as evidence that the accents in the colonies contain fossils of 300 year old British English. Then you apply that hypothesis to the clear and dark “l”. Quite fascinating, Simon.

    • @kernowforester811
      @kernowforester811 2 года назад +6

      'D' still used in Westcountry english in place of a t, so in Devonian for instance, butter is budder.

    • @fuckdefed
      @fuckdefed 2 года назад +1

      @@kernowforester811 it’s part of a wider trend whereby ‘f’ becomes ‘v’ and ‘s’ becomes ‘z’ too of course. It’s always seemed obvious to me that the West Country is where ‘t’ becoming ‘d’ originated before travelling to America, though there are 19th century Yorkshire dialect books that say ‘bud’ and ‘boddum’ are Yorkshire dialect for ‘but’ and ‘bottom’ so such pronunciations must have been fairly widespread in England even then (long before the recent Americanisations).

    • @kernowforester811
      @kernowforester811 2 года назад +2

      @@fuckdefed RP has really muddied the waters. If the West Saxon for England capital remained as Winchester, I am sure modern English would be very different. A 'butty' was a work mate in the old mining industry in many parts of the UK in the 19th C, from the 'butty' system of sharing a work load between several miners. Pronounced more like 'buddy' down here in the old tin and copper mines of Cornwall/Devon. Is that where American's get the term from? I don't know, but my dogs are my 'buddies', nothing to do with American English!

  • @SomasAcademy
    @SomasAcademy 2 года назад

    Thanks for answering my question in this!

  • @BobbyBermuda1986
    @BobbyBermuda1986 2 года назад +9

    Hi Simon. Speaking of arhoticity, have you noticed the modern phenom of r-dissimilation in otherwise rhotic accents? To my knowledge, it seems to mostly occur in syllables which don't have primary stress, and it tends to occur in a word with at least two syllables with r-coloring.
    So you get:
    supprise for surprise
    bezerk for berserk
    patticular for particular
    undewear for underwear
    etc.
    I've also noticed it's more likely to be avoided in non high frequency words, or words which are more high register.
    I actually do this in my own accent altho I'm otherwise rhotic (from California), which leads to foward for forward (high frequency in casual speech) vs foreword always said with both Rs (low frequency usage in casual speech).
    Oh, and curiously, I've even started to pick up on othewise being used in casual speech for otherwise.

  • @VivaCohen
    @VivaCohen 2 года назад +5

    Interesting! I'm from Tennessee and I pronounce cot, caught, and palm all differently. If you want to pronounce "water" more American you can speed up the "a", but your American accent on the video with the transcripts is so good!

    • @RudeboyGroot
      @RudeboyGroot 2 года назад

      Central North Carolina the same on cot v caught, but caught v palm are drawing closer. Also short e-i are nearly equal: pen-pin, ten-tin. I agree on water, too: the “a” is clipped to the point of almost sounding like wutter

  • @alisonridout
    @alisonridout 2 года назад

    Happy New Year Simon

  • @SionTJobbins
    @SionTJobbins 2 года назад +1

    This is so interesting, in awe with your ability to recreate, explain and voice the past accents.
    On a tangent, intersesed to hear you talk of the 'dark l'. One theory I hear for the development of the 'll' sound in Welsh is that it was originally a dark l. It often takes place in words with are of Latin origin in Welsh e.g. lleidr (thief); llety (accommodation qv word for bed in Romance languages) etc. If so, it's interesting how sounds develop and mutate.

  • @tigertank5295
    @tigertank5295 2 года назад +6

    I think an interesting video on American English would be Southern accents and iambic pentameter (especially Appalachia). Keep up the amazing content!

  • @dianeyoung8068
    @dianeyoung8068 2 года назад

    Hi Simon, I was born in 1956 and raised in Michigan. I can tell you that to my ears your "Michigany" was very good!

  • @dickJohnsonpeter
    @dickJohnsonpeter 2 года назад +6

    It's interesting to me as an American who grew up British (My father was in the Air Force) and being the only person in my family having a British accent. Then when we moved back to the US when I was 14 I eventually took on my now distinctive Wisconsin accent. I totally lost my British accent and I'd really have to practice a lot to get it back. I do however still sometimes use words, terms, or phrases that are British and have some inflections that don't sound American.

  • @AdanALW
    @AdanALW 2 года назад +3

    Just turned 38, Brooklyn-born. NYC definitely has a lot of "au" sounds still (sometimes even more exaggerated like "aw" sound), check out the old SNL skit of Mike Myers' "Coffee Talk"). I also noticed when I went to college other regional dialects were different. When we New Yorkers say forrest or horror, it it pronounced more like "far-est" and "har-rer" with an "ah" sound where as the Midwest and Connecticut, which I guess is more "general" say it with a more "oh" sound, like "faux-rest" and "whore-roar". Also "tour" has the dipthong sounding like "tore" versus the other regions say "tewer" like "sewer". Philly and Baltimore white folk have almost like a bit of southern sounds there too which is very different. For example "water" a lot of Americans pronounce "wad-der" but Philly is "wooder". In Philly creek becomes "crick".

  • @Urlocallordandsavior
    @Urlocallordandsavior 2 года назад +13

    Hey Simon, I think you should explore the evolution of American dialects through Presidential voice recordings. You already did it with the British monarchs (though there's only three (allegedly four) of them with surviving voice recordings). For instance, McKinley and Roosevelt's dialects sound super different to Wilson, despite both of them being relatively contemporary (and Wilson sounds very American in comparison to the other two, even though I think McKinley had a middle-class upbringing similar to Wilson's).

  • @WolfdogLinguistics
    @WolfdogLinguistics 2 года назад +3

    British actors are famous for mispronouncing the American TRAP vowel before /n/ or /m/, but Simon nails it!

  • @PaulD65
    @PaulD65 10 месяцев назад

    I love what you do in your videos :-) I was born and raised in Maryland on the western shore of the Chesapeake and was told our English here is influenced by the accent from Devon. There are still tag ends of a fishing accent around Tilman Island you would struggle to follow!

  • @peteymax
    @peteymax 2 года назад +15

    Thanks Simon, your videos are excellent. You do tend to put an over emphasis on the influence British English on American English (which is obviously significant) and don’t add in the considerable influences of the German, Dutch (US ‘L’ can sound Dutch) and Irish languages and the influence of Hiberno-English which must have added to rhoticity of American). I read once that Austrian German had a huge affect on the Brooklyn and then Long Island accents of New York.

    • @SamAronow
      @SamAronow 2 года назад +5

      To my ears, New York accents sound more Southeast England-ish than anything else. In particular the upper-class speech of Long Island probably comes closest among American accents to resembling Received Pronunciation.

    • @phillyphilly2095
      @phillyphilly2095 2 года назад +6

      Agreed. Good point. During the colonial period, the European populations of the Middle Colonies of New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware were ethnically very mixed, the English constituting only 30% in Pennsylvania, 40-45% in New Jersey, to 18% in New York. (Wikipedia). The Dutch colonized the Hudson Valley. The Swedes and Finns colonized the Delaware Valley. They later were joined by not only English immigrants but also by other ethnicities across the British Isles and northwestern Europe. Not to mention the many Africans brought against their will. In the North, almost as many German speakers as English speaker emigrated to America. There is a "German belt" that extends all the way from eastern Pennsylvania to the Oregon coast. According to the US Census Bureau there are about 43 million German Americans, the largest self-reported ancestry group in the country. German was widely spoken until World War I. And even today, in “Pennsylvania Dutch” country, German is the primary language for many people. Simon makes good videos. But I suspect he hasn’t fully comprehended the ethnic and linguistic diversity that created ‘general American English.’

    • @margaretqueenofscots9450
      @margaretqueenofscots9450 2 года назад

      @@phillyphilly2095 Good points!

    • @talideon
      @talideon 2 года назад +5

      I don't think he's discounting them. Also, Hiberno-English probably didn't add rhoticity to American English, as the timeline doesn't line up: widespread use of English in Ireland only happened in the 1800s, and that mostly coincided with the Great Famine, which was what caused the waves of emigration to the US. American English was plenty rhotic at that point. Anglophone Irish emigrants would've sounded quaintly old-fashioned (like Simon's first speaker in the previous video). Many would've learned English in the US. None of that is to say that it wasn't influential, just that it's probably not a significant reason as to why American English is rhotic.

    • @Paul.Morgan
      @Paul.Morgan 2 года назад +2

      British English was rhotic in the colonial era and it still is in some English accents today (e.g. Bristol).

  • @AnthonyNaslas
    @AnthonyNaslas 2 года назад +1

    I would love a video on the different accents found in New England!

  • @torvanderlinden6560
    @torvanderlinden6560 2 года назад

    Fav channel on RUclips 😍😍 you’re amazing Simon!!!

  • @TerryDowne
    @TerryDowne 2 года назад +17

    Michigan-y...yes, my stepmom is from Michigan and I think you got awfully close. The only flaw was a rare Briitsh-type vowel, but overall your performance was excellent.

    • @wennick4859
      @wennick4859 2 года назад +5

      Yeah I’m from Michigan and he kinda sounded like an older man with something in his throat to me.

    • @talideon
      @talideon 2 года назад +4

      @@wennick4859 Given the date attached to that segment, it seems he was practically spot on!

  • @lisanutini5183
    @lisanutini5183 2 года назад +4

    I'm from Kentucky and (after much trial and slowing down of my speech) realized that for the word "due" I use 2 syllables but so quick in succession it almost sounds like one. There is no "y" sound as I originally thought. It sounds like: Dee uu. So quickly you almost don't hear the "ee".

  • @astralislux305
    @astralislux305 2 года назад

    You're doing work few have tried. Keep up with it, please.

  • @patmo131
    @patmo131 2 года назад +3

    I’ve lived in 3 American regions and 6 states. I can mimic all of the accents and dialects well. I can also distinguish between all of them. Because of this I’ve identified the single most ubiquitous American accent. It’s the one that journalism schools must be teaching their broadcast news students. It’s the accent which comes from the western part of St. Louis County, Missouri. The northern tier of states have some more distinctive characteristics, which tend to regionalize them, so I’d disqualify Michigan from that.

  • @efficiencygaming3494
    @efficiencygaming3494 2 года назад +2

    I've always found it intriguing how you can figure out so much about Americans just from their accent alone.
    I grew up in northwestern Indiana, on the border with Illinois and not far from Chicago. Growing up, I mainly encountered two types of accents: the working-class Chicago accent, and the more conservative Northern American dialect (not unlike Speaker 5's accent from the previous video and containing many of the features you explained in this one). I patterned my own accent after the more generalized and conservative dialect, so I didn't pick up on the more Chicago-specific features (pronouncing "those" as "doze" and the city's name as "Chi-caw-go").
    While I still lived in the Midwest, most people I knew regarded my accent as plain, if not slightly more proper-sounding than usual. However, after I moved to Texas in 2015, it became clear that my way of speaking set me apart from the locals. There was one time when a woman heard me speaking, then she came up to me and said, "You're not from around here, are you?"
    Another time, I asked a friend if he would explain to me why my accent sounded different to him, and he mentioned the TRAP vowel as you explained in this video. To him, me saying "trap" sounded like "tray-app", and "class" sounded like "clay-ass". I always found that fascinating, because I previously never thought my accent sounded "distinctive" in any way.

    • @sciencerscientifico310
      @sciencerscientifico310 2 года назад

      The conversion of the " th " sound to just "t" or "d" is also common in NYC English.

  • @GeckoHiker
    @GeckoHiker 2 года назад +1

    Having been raised in the Southern US, but without the Southern accent, it was explained to me that the George Washington pre-revolutionary war rhotic accent subsequently changed in Britain to an affected non-rhotic accent by the upper crust. Then the second and third sons brought the non-rhotic affected accent to the American South where they came to establish plantations and seek their fortune. So the plain American midwest accent is more like the British accent before the affected non-rhotic accent was adpted. This was from a Southern history teacher. I've read books about this in my youth but it's been awhile.

  • @shesmoonlight514
    @shesmoonlight514 2 года назад

    THIS IS WHAT I'VE BEEN WANTING

  • @evilstepmummy
    @evilstepmummy 2 года назад +8

    Hi Simon, I find this a fascinating subject as a person who hears and is able to replicate accents easily. I am from Wales but live in Nova Scotia and noticed an unusual use of breathing that older native Nova Scotians do at the end of sentences. They tend to inhale sharply towards an end of a sentence and then trail off sort of wistfully. I had never heard this before I came here but may have heard someone on a scottish tv programme also doing this. Have you ever heard of this? Nova Scotia is obviously New Scotland so it could be an old scottish trait even though people from the more isolated Cape Breton tend to sound more Irish to me. I know the Irish and Scottish were more connected at one time and so their accents may have more similarities. There is also the Acadians who may have contributed to this. Thanks for the videos

    • @HweolRidda
      @HweolRidda 2 года назад +2

      In 1900 Cape Breton had one of the largest Scottish Gaelic speaking populations outside Scotland and that affected the English spoken today. Irish English reflects the fact that most Irish people spoke Irish Gaelic before about 1850 so one might expect some similarities to C.B. On the other hand C.B. was dominated by a North American English dialect while Ireland was more influenced by English English.

    • @piynubbunyip
      @piynubbunyip 2 года назад

      I have noticed this too in people north of Bergen in Norway.

    • @evilstepmummy
      @evilstepmummy 2 года назад

      @@piynubbunyip interesting, I think there have a lot of Norwegian settlers here, also the closer proximity to Scotland may be a factor

  • @cgillespie78
    @cgillespie78 Год назад

    I had never heard of a 'dark L' before, but I think it's the most American sound I've ever heard you make

  • @mcgreiveyy
    @mcgreiveyy 2 года назад +2

    Things that jump out at... I grew up in rural upstate New York State where the scent tends to be sort of Midwestern, crossed with rural New England, crossed with Canadian. It's quite distinct from the downstate/NY city region accent.
    cot/caught merger: the way people speak where I'm from, these are district. Also, the vowel in caught is often pronounced broken. So cot is basically [kat], and caught is either [kɔ:t] or [kɔət] depending on the speaker. (The t would be either and unaspirated, weak [t] or a glottal stop.)
    L: clear vs. dark: I think this isn't really something that's in regional variation, but more something that varies from speaker to speaker.
    [æ] breaking: I would say I might break æ to æə in any context, not just before n. Of course, in the southeastern US, many speakers would do a "triple break" to the stereotypical southern [æjə].

  • @220773
    @220773 2 года назад

    So good how you covered up the evident difference between British and American 'oo's. As a Scot myself, I pronounce that definitely as a Frenchman would do with his 'u's, though much longer... the only places in Britain where they pronounce 'oo' the American way are Wales and Newcastle (alone).

  • @purplegira1248
    @purplegira1248 Год назад +1

    I'm a Y2K baby from New Jersey, and I definitely still pronounce "caught" with a diphthong... it's interesting to hear about how many people don't do that anymore, as it's not something I've really consciously noticed

  • @BradleyGearhart
    @BradleyGearhart 2 года назад

    Fascinating

  • @steveneardley7541
    @steveneardley7541 Год назад +1

    I saw a video on the accent of the Outer Banks of North Carolina, which still has a very "archaic" form of English. I'm from Maryland, and this accent sounded a lot like lower-class Eastern Shore Maryland. To my ear it doesn't sound British at all, but a number of people in the comments were saying that their grandparents from Sussex or Norfolk sounded just like this. So apparently the southeastern English accent still has an affinity with some American accents.

  • @robertcornhole5197
    @robertcornhole5197 2 года назад +43

    Mentioning the "complexity of American T's" gave me flashbacks to trying to teach ESL kids the difference between "can" and "can't" in Midwest American English.
    Because we don't pronounce a big pointed "T" at the end of "can't." It's not always even recognizable as a glottal stop either- yet "can" and "can't" are definitely still distinct.
    It's almost like they're starting to transform into a tonal system, where the difference between "I can do it!" and "I can't do it!" is entirely expressed through intonation.

    • @erikawhelan4673
      @erikawhelan4673 2 года назад

      I'd almost describe the t in can't as a click.

    • @naurrr
      @naurrr 2 года назад +5

      oh damn i'm from the midwest and just tested this and was shocked to realize yeah we DO barely pronounce the t in can't. dang.
      I wonder if we're difficult to understand for ESL in general.

    • @alexthomas6530
      @alexthomas6530 2 года назад +4

      I'm not sure about Midwest, but at least in California the vowel in "I can do it" is reduced to virtually nothing. "I can't do it" has a full nasalized vowel and a glottal stop. Here's my video on the subject: ruclips.net/video/BW9grFf7Wy0/видео.html

    • @t.c.bramblett617
      @t.c.bramblett617 2 года назад

      or as length + a glottal stop at the end, but unreleased

    • @viinisaari
      @viinisaari 2 года назад +3

      I can do it [aɪ kʰən 'du it]
      I can't do it [aɪ 'kʰɛənʔ du it]
      Or something along those lines. In any case, the distinction is pretty clear.

  • @kathyl6677
    @kathyl6677 2 года назад +3

    Simon, I'm definitely saving this for reference. As a [new] author of fantasy-fiction, this will be handy in differentiating my characters from different lands. Not that these differences will come out much in text, but will be noted for audio versions. There are a lot of "fine points" I really can't tell the difference in. One must have quite the keen ear to hear it. As a side note: as you are an archaeology student, I'd like to learn more about what you're learning in that field, and/or how it connects with these videos on linguistics. I wish I would have thought of maybe doing a double major when I took English in University.

  • @Meofalulu
    @Meofalulu 2 года назад +1

    What I've found interesting about the voiced alveolar tap is that it is present in some words in Southern Hemisphere dialects where the voiceless plosive is used in General American English. I had a university professor from New Zealand who pronounced the "t" in "thirteen" and "fourteen" with the voiced tap, which is something I have never heard from American English or Canadian English speakers.

    • @hajenso
      @hajenso 2 года назад +1

      Yeah, I've heard that from many Australians too.

  • @GTX1123
    @GTX1123 Год назад +1

    In Maryland and Virgina, the way in which older generations pronounced certain words was very interesting. "out" and "house" almost sounded like "ayte" and "hayse". "know" was pronounced "naywe". These pronounciations were interesting because they were thrown in with other twangy southern words like "yawl" (you all). Depending on how far to the west or east, the way these words were pronounced was slighty different. In areas to the middle and west of these states, a word like "house" might sound slightly more Scottish versus the middle to the coastal areas where it would sound more British. This makes perfect sense because there were a lot of Scotch Irish settlers in the western part of these states vs poorer English settlers in the middle to more well to do high society English plantation owners in the coastal areas of these states. In Baltimore Maryland there are areas of the city where the accent almost sounds Welsh.

  • @aemstuz
    @aemstuz 2 года назад +1

    Your [ɨ] sounded more like [ɪ] to me in this video. I remember the very first time you pronounced it in "Trying to Learn some Polish using Google Translate" in a word "dęby" it sounded perfectly ;)

  • @nitinkucheriya3690
    @nitinkucheriya3690 2 года назад

    Hii Simon Love frm India,,God bless U.

  • @JosephNoussair
    @JosephNoussair 2 года назад +2

    You were wise to start where you did. Not only is there little solid evidence that the manners of speech diverged in the 17th century, there weren't enough people here in North America to reliably say that they could form new manners of speech any more than one could say of a city or group of villages in England.
    Trade, and therefore contact with other populations with whom speech could be learned or compared to any degree was limited to the British possessions in the Caribbean and with Britain itself.

  • @sststr
    @sststr 2 года назад +3

    I wish I found your channel before I started doing narrations by Poe and Lovecraft. Their stories being set in the 19th century and early 20th century, mostly New England, much of the dialog would have been greatly aided by having a better idea of how these accents should be. Sometimes the author writes an accent into the text, which helps, but more can be done with even more information. Ah well.

    • @b5904
      @b5904 2 года назад

      Awesome. Where can I hear these recordings?
      Greetings from Canada.

    • @sststr
      @sststr 2 года назад

      My narrations are here on my youtube channel :)
      I also have a bitchute channel, as there are a handful of stories that use certain 19th century words that youtube does not permit, like Poe's "Goldbug" and a few others, so if you can't find your favorite Poe or Lovecraft story here on my youtube channel, it'll probably be over on my bitchute channel. Although I'm still working on Lovecraft's library, so it's possible I may just not yet have gotten around to that story if you don't see it on either site.

    • @sststr
      @sststr 2 года назад

      If you're looking for an example of a dialogue where the author wrote an accent into the text, try Chapter 3 of The Shadow Over Innsmouth, which I published just last week so should be easy to find.
      Zadock is, I believe, supposed to have an early to mid 19th-century New England accent. But even with the accent written into the text, some words I still was completely clueless what to do with. "Onct" instead of "once" - what does that 't' mean, as far as pronunciation goes? I had absolutely no idea.
      In chapter 1 of the same story, there's a character with extensive dialog who is from northwestern Vermont. No accent was written into the text for him, and I made no attempt at an accent. I did listen to some Calvin Coolidge speeches (since he is from Vermont, born in 1872, so close enough to the right time and place to match the character in the story), but his accent wasn't sufficiently striking in any regard that I felt it worth the effort.

  • @antonyreyn
    @antonyreyn 2 года назад

    Was that you on tonights Digging for Britain?! Bravo Cheers

  • @junctionfilms6348
    @junctionfilms6348 2 года назад +5

    'Due' sounds the same as 'do' in most of Norfolk ( and probably Suffolk ) also 'tune' is not 'chewn' or 'choon' but 'Toon' I think both of these correspond with many US accents.
    There is writing available by Peter Trudgill ( a Linguist Professor but also from Norfolk ) who wrote many decades ago, about why Southern US English or specifically Southern African-American English has similarities to East Anglian English.

    • @jonbaker1697
      @jonbaker1697 Год назад +2

      Ref Anglian accent similarity to USA accent:
      About ten yrs ago I was an amateur clothes historian. Searching on Google news or archive. I read an article from 1880 circa, complaining about the lose of the different rural uk, (edit: men's) dress, due to spreading standardisation of mens clothing.
      I remember a writer, can't recall if the same saying emphatically paraphrasing," why! The USA accent is nothing more, than the Anglian whine"
      (I can't remember if he wrote north or East Anglian). His declaration lways stuck with me. I remember I went looking for other instances of "Anglian whine", but didn't find much

    • @junctionfilms6348
      @junctionfilms6348 Год назад +2

      ​@@jonbaker1697 - It would have been in reference to 'East Anglia' which is also just called 'Anglia' and it is not an official region name and has not been I think for 1000 years - but the general reference to that eastern part of England is 'Anglia' - which is really just Norfolk and Suffolk in accent, history and so on but there are leaks into Cambridgeshire of course on the border, where the west Norfolk accent can be found into Cambridgeshire.
      'North' Anglia is technically, the entire north of England we could say, from the Midlands up - but the accents diverge a lot from East Anglia, to the Midlands to north west and north east.
      I guess the 'Anglian' accent has some similarities at times to a Midlands or North east - but really when you listen, it is much more like other southern accents - but at the same time sounds very different.
      The south east ( London area ) has changed a lot, migrations for work in industrial times, mixed accents, French pronunciation influence, meant the R was lost, which still exists in the 'West Country' another cultural area not an official area ).
      The East Anglian, rather like the West Country, has kept some older forms of speaking say going back to the 1500s onwards.
      East Anglian grammar and pronunciation was affected by Flemish and French.
      Some dialect words like 'dwile' are basically Flemish and Dutch 'dweile'
      Other words like 'kiderer' are unclear in origin but appear to be related to Brythonic and it is similar to the Welsh word for 'butcher' and means the same thing.
      Interesting, I never heard that said about the US accent but I guess the US accents also fossilised some older forms of speaking as well as, mixed in with other things.
      Certainly, when I listen to Virginian accents of the early 1900s of old men, they sound much like a kind of southern England accent.
      I think the Anglian accents shares some similarities to Australian ( but sound different still ) but then that is just because it is older English.
      Like in Jamaica, they used some 16th century styles.
      They also use 'man like 'them' 'they or 'humanity' very commonly which is older English style and in German, they still use 'mann' in the same way.
      Who would have thought that German and Jamaican are so similar !
      Interestingly, now with genetics, it backs up anecdotal history that west Norfolk and around the Fens area, was an enclave of Brythonic people possibly much later and even into Norman times. It is evidenced in place names, often Anglicised but rooted in Brythonic. Eg the town( Kings) 'Lynn' is 'Llyn' in modern Welsh. A large town next to an inland sea, 'the Fens' that made Cambridge, Peterborough and Downham, almost seaside towns.
      Interesting that in Slavic langauges and few others in Europe, they use 'Anglia' for 'England' the 'ia' being a Latin / Italian ending of course.

    • @junctionfilms6348
      @junctionfilms6348 Год назад +1

      @@jonbaker1697 I should say 'North Anglia' is not used but in south England there are many references in pubs or company names or street names to ' Saxon'.
      You get that in East Anglia but the north is too seperated into various sub groups despite the historical link

  • @emilynelson5985
    @emilynelson5985 2 года назад +1

    I think I might have a bit of a missing link if you’d like to know of it. Folk musician in his 90s and even the other old timers in the community say he talks pretty old fashioned. Dudley Laufman has been interviewed a few times for various things and if you listen he has almost exactly what you’re going for.

  • @SamAronow
    @SamAronow 2 года назад +7

    Interesting thing about the "pan" vowel. In the Northern Cities Shift (which weirdly includes my hometown of Pasadena, California), pre-nasal is the one time [æ] _doesn't_ become [eə]. But there is a otherwise a chain reaction in which [ɛ] becomes lower and more rounded, [ʌ] is rounded to [ɔ], and [ɪ] becomes opened up to [ɛ]. For some reason, Pasadena also has this stretching out of the "owl" diphthong and a trap-bath distinction; I don't know why.

  • @tibulcain4904
    @tibulcain4904 2 года назад

    I'm from Texas, U.S. your american accent is really good! I have heard that what has effected modern southern U.S. is influenced by Victorian era, southern England even though most of descend (majority percentage, not exclusively) from Scottish and Irish settlers. I have heard the generalized southern accent is essentially a British accent spoken a bit slower. Your thoughts?

  • @Eileeeeeeeeeeeen
    @Eileeeeeeeeeeeen 2 года назад +5

    Is no one else going to comment on how Simon, who is super serious and never seems to even make any jokes at all in his videos, used a clip from Auntie Donna? That really caught me off guard lmao. Or, should I say, it really cot me off guard. (Oregonian)

  • @hdoddema
    @hdoddema 2 года назад

    I did not predict an Aunty Donna/Simon Roper crossover for 2022!

  • @Oi-fo1wt
    @Oi-fo1wt 2 года назад +5

    North American English is fascinating. Many dialects like Boston, Minnesotan, & New York City English are slowly dying. West Coast, Southern, African American, and Philly dialects are dying but a lot slower. It’s fun because you can always tell a lot about an American by how they talk

    • @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410
      @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410 2 года назад

      city accents maybe, but I don't think West Coast or Southern accents, or AAVE, are going to be going anywhere. With things like the Southern vowel shift and California vowel shift, they might actually become more distinct

    • @Oi-fo1wt
      @Oi-fo1wt 2 года назад +1

      @@wilhelmseleorningcniht9410 from what I’ve noticed, African Americans especially those in more multicultural areas have started to pick up certain white features, and suburban white southerners (especially in areas with high Yankee immigration) have started to sound much less Southern, but I agree that it’s a much slower change. I wouldn’t necessarily call Minnesotan a “city” accent, just an older accent

    • @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410
      @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410 2 года назад

      @@Oi-fo1wt With Southern English it can get a bit complicated cos you have the social dynamic, you don't normally find southern English in the large cities.
      From what I know, the drawl (the characteristic diphthongization of front vowels before voiced consonants) is fading, at least for now, but the actual chain shift seems to actually be spreading as the southern midlands increasingly becomes assimilated into the Southern dialect area.
      I wasn't trying to indicate that accents in Minnesota were associated with cities, but I was mainly talking about areas like New York and Boston since I don't know much about the upper Midwest and I have read about at least New York City speakers toning down certain marked traits among younger and/or upper class individuals, though I don't think this will lead to the death of the accent entirely (kinda similar to how the southern drawl is perhaps disappearing in younger speakers, but the drawl isn't the accent itself just a part of it that is especially marked.)
      For suburban white southerners, I'd honestly say I've probably heard more southern accents here than I have in larger cities, I think it's more an urban thing than suburban (though it depends on where those suburbs are, like adjacent to major urban area is likely to be the same as that urban area)

    • @Oi-fo1wt
      @Oi-fo1wt 2 года назад +1

      @@wilhelmseleorningcniht9410 I definitely agree. Certain southern features which blur in between AAVE and Southern English are becoming more commonplace with younger people anyways (like aj-ungliding), but I think for the most part the accents of the North and Northeast are dying out, they just aren’t in fashion anymore. Anyways, it’s interesting to see this happen in real time and almost a little bit sad. (Accents are also forming a lot on cultural lines too, like I’ve heard some Gen Z southerners with a perfectly intact accent and some without).

    • @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410
      @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410 2 года назад +2

      @@Oi-fo1wt as a gen z southerner, to me at least it feels a bit almost like a subcultural thing. One of my friends was talking to me about it, and the way she phrased it was that there are 2 accents; country and southern.
      Southern is more the normal chainshifted English, but then Country has more of the drawl, the chainshift is more advanced, and it comes packaged with certain social features like fishing/hunting in particular (in my experience) or is at least stereotypically associated with those features

  • @WolfdogLinguistics
    @WolfdogLinguistics 2 года назад

    The "mistake" in pronunciation you mention at 12:50 isn't a mistake at all, Simon! At least not for modern GenAm. Sounded very natural to me! --Sincerely, a native GenAm speaker

  • @AnnaAnna-uc2ff
    @AnnaAnna-uc2ff 2 года назад

    Thanks.

  • @meyerjac
    @meyerjac 2 года назад +1

    Me, an American: Yea I talk like that.
    *feels like a celebrity*

  • @jsaysyay
    @jsaysyay 2 года назад +2

    absolutely fascinated by the descriptor "whining cadence" given to new england by whomever Nicholas Cresswell is, lol
    i truly dont know much about linguisticts tbh but i did notice that like "midwestern flatness" to the speech a bit

  • @bhami
    @bhami 2 года назад +3

    A couple of interesting questions:
    -When do individual differences become regional? Growing up in New Jersey in the 1960s, I had a grade school teacher who insisted that "wh" words had a different initial sound than "w" words; the former starting with some sort of aspirated "h" sound. I thought she was full of nonsense, because I made no such distinction.
    -How much does spelling influence pronunciation? E.g. I do not pronounce the "t" in "often", but my father's mother (born in the US but with ethnic German background) did. I'm not sure that I pronounce do, due, and dew the same; I think I'm more likely to include an initial "ih" as part of a diphthong in the latter two.

  • @BR-it2qe
    @BR-it2qe 2 года назад +5

    Will you ever cover the northern cities vowel shift which is on going in the US?

  • @Kamarovsky_KCM
    @Kamarovsky_KCM 2 года назад

    As a Polish speaker, I can say thst the sound you made at 17:21 was pretty much correct for that vowel. Though I think that the polish "y" is more often pronounced as [ɘ] instead.

  • @tokisulli1737
    @tokisulli1737 2 года назад

    Hi from Michigan!

  • @maxsonthonax1020
    @maxsonthonax1020 2 года назад

    Finally! Dr. Who: assistant to Tom Baker & Peter Davison. That's what I've seen him from!

  • @davissae
    @davissae 2 года назад +1

    Just a tiny tip Simon, for the modern American English, you pronounced vowels very phonetically, while in practice we very very slightly devoice or “unpronounce” them compared to the video. Hopefully we don’t end up like Portugal!

  • @tuasucks
    @tuasucks 2 года назад +1

    Could you do a video on the Northern Cities Vowel shift sometime? This video made me question how much of my "great lakes" accent is actually more standard in general american, with how you were pronouncing stuff like hand and trap, or if our pronunciation in the great lakes is similar, just slightly more exaggerated than your general model.

  • @haffoc
    @haffoc 2 года назад

    fascinating

  • @Amesang
    @Amesang 2 года назад +3

    Dissection of a video? Did the VCR eat another tape, again?! 😱

  • @danzgalliwag
    @danzgalliwag 2 года назад

    Love the fact that Aunty Donna is now canon in the Roper Cinematic Universe.

  • @RhysMcGoldrick94
    @RhysMcGoldrick94 2 года назад +3

    Old Australian accents had light Ls too. Nowadays most Australians speak with only dark Ls apart from more 'cultivated' accents. Some American Southern accents also have intervocalic light Ls too. Did Scottish English affect the dark Ls in these two colonies perhaps? I know that the New Zealand accent almost exclusively uses /w/ for dark Ls and they had a lot of Scottish settlers.

  • @LauraLou1904
    @LauraLou1904 2 года назад +1

    I always thought that most of the differences came from people from different countries agreeing (more or less) on speaking English together. And also that the Irish English accent had a huge influence. I'm a German native speaker and when I took a course in RP English pronounciation I was told that I articulate most sounds more in the middle of the mouth while RP speakers speak very far in the front. At school in Germany I had also developped my own theory that some differences derive from German trying to speak better English and therefore changing some sounds so they sound "less" German - so in a process of overcorrection. That's what German school kids tend to do when they learn English and somehow most seem to end up with a more American English pronounciation.

  • @gavinmedinaofficial
    @gavinmedinaofficial Год назад

    As an american from the pacific north west who’s heard general english, you’re spot on, although it’s not exactly my accent you do sound exactly like someone from L.A.

  • @dylanevans3237
    @dylanevans3237 2 года назад +30

    As an American English speaker, the exaggerated "velar L" as you pronounced it reminds me of Russians speaking English. In my own pronunciation it seems to be more moderately velarized. I wonder if Americans who vocalize the postvocalic L (which is fairly common) tend to use a clearer or darker L in the prevocalic positions.

    • @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410
      @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410 2 года назад

      I tend to vocalize my L's, though mostly after front vowels for some reason, and I'd say my 'clearer' L is still relatively moderate in velarization. When I do pronounce the L, it is darker then the L in onsets but is weaker? The coda L isn't fully vocalized but the tongue tip isn't making full contact for me. In areas where I am velarizing it fully, the tongue is even further down.
      I don't think my onset L is light with me just not realizing it, because when I speak German which only has light L's, those are markedly different than my English ones.

    • @sciencerscientifico310
      @sciencerscientifico310 2 года назад

      Well, that particular way of pronouncing " L " may have been more common in earlier eras

    • @sluggo206
      @sluggo206 2 года назад +2

      Russian has two L's, hard (Л) and soft (ЛЬ). English L is considered equivalent to soft L, so "hotel" is отель not отел, and "Bill Clinton" in Russian has soft L's. Hard consonants are "velarized" but hard L not the same as English dark L.

    • @jamesrivis620
      @jamesrivis620 2 года назад

      My (American) Vermon(t) daughter says ‘winner’ for winTer.

    • @hajenso
      @hajenso 2 года назад

      @@sluggo206 Albanian also has two L's, "ll" (velarized) and "l" (palatalized), and English postvocalic L's generally get rendered by Albanians speaking English as "ll".

  • @1982kinger
    @1982kinger 2 года назад +1

    Have you done a video on Canadian English? I watched a documentary once that in Ontario we speak a west Yankee dialect with some Scottish added in

  • @user-uk7zr4xr7g
    @user-uk7zr4xr7g 2 года назад +2

    Here's a trick: if you struggle to pronounce [ɨ], just unround [ʉ], the GOOSE vowel

  • @joshuaheadey9670
    @joshuaheadey9670 2 года назад +1

    Bruh the Aunty Donna sample came outa nowhere

  • @baerlauchstal
    @baerlauchstal 2 года назад

    The trap vowel breaks before nasal consonants in many varieties of Canadian English as well.

  • @Strawberry-12.
    @Strawberry-12. 2 года назад +2

    As an American from the northeast I just though you should know that Michigan is not considered the northeast, it’s the mid west. Also in parts of northeast we don’t pronounce water with a sharp T but with more of a D. “Especially in Philly”

    • @TheVioletBunny
      @TheVioletBunny 2 года назад

      I’m from New Jersey Michigan is definitely the mid west they all sound like Canadians to me over there

    • @Strawberry-12.
      @Strawberry-12. 2 года назад

      @@TheVioletBunny total agree

  • @1984craine
    @1984craine 2 года назад

    Simon: What do you think of A.Z Foreman's reconstructions in comparison to your own? You guys should do a podcast!

  • @ART1E057
    @ART1E057 2 года назад +1

    can’t say i expected to hear aunty donna in this video

  • @emilyepicmess8072
    @emilyepicmess8072 2 года назад

    In the midwest we still pronounce cot/caught differently- it’s what gives us that “flat” sound people describe

  • @herofrogman
    @herofrogman 2 года назад +1

    I’m sure I saw you assisting in the building of an Iron Age round house at Butser Farm on a BBC archeology documentary this week……

  • @_volder
    @_volder 2 года назад

    There seems to be a difference between the phenomenon of "o" and "e" as diphthongs and English's other diphthongs (ow, oy, i).
    When I was a kid, before being taught anything about this kind of thing, I noticed for myself that it was odd for the letter "i" to (sometimes) represent a sequence of two sounds instead of one, and I mentally grouped it with "ow" and "oy", but I did not put "e" or "o" in that group, even though I was aware of the possibility of such a sequence being spelled with one letter like "i". Years later, I did start noticing some people turning them into diphthongs, but the reason I noticed it in those cases was because it stood out as different from what I was used to (from both myself and others around me). Since then, I've seen this diphthongization being depicted as standard or nearly universal, but I just can't hear it myself particularly often, despite having gotten in the habit of consciously noticing various other unexpected pronunciations.
    And I think most others around me are the same about that. Sometimes, when an "e" or "o" does come out as a clear unmistakable diphthong, somebody else comments on the diphthong as an unusual slip of the tongue or a sign that the speaker's accent must be from somewhere else. And that's from people who don't pay much attention to phonetics in general, so a difference from the usual has to be stark to get their attention. And a couple of other sources on linguistics that I've seen talking about the diphthongization of "e" and "o" have presented it as a hard-to-believe surprise, which only works if the "you're really doing it this way and don't even know it!" message applies not just to me and some other individuals like me, but to essentially our whole culture.
    The more people a theory requires to be pronouncing something one way but somehow thinking they're pronouncing it some other way, the harder that theory gets to believe. It's hard not to conclude that these are more often monophthongs, sometimes diphthongs, and generally misrepresented as more consistently diphthongs than they really are (which could have gotten started as the kind of surprising discovery that people like to let others in on because of the surprise factor). Even if I'm wrong and that's not the case, there's still a strange difference between these two classes of diphthong: the ones that everybody knows are unmistakably diphthongs (ow, oy, i) and the ones that non-linguists think are monophthongs but are wrong about (e, o). Maybe the difference from the standard obvious diphthongs is that one of the two components in "e" and "o" is usually shorter and less consistent in length, as if a shift from monophthongs to diphthongs has begun but not finished yet. I think that makes them 1½-thongs. :D

    • @jony4real
      @jony4real 2 года назад

      Not to diss your suspicion that "e" and "o" are monophthongs, but native speakers can be surprisingly aware of some features of their language and surprisingly unaware of other features. Everybody notices if you lower your "i" vowel to something like /ae/ or /aa/, in other words more like a monophthong, because everybody knows that means you're from the south, but on the other hand, nobody notices if you pronounce "pin" and "pen" the same way, because even though people from the south do that too, it's not part of the stereotype of southern American English. Maybe that's why so many people don't notice that "e" and "o" are diphthongs? But on the other hand, you might be right. When I pronounce these two vowels, my tongue moves up slightly from the beginning of the vowel to the end. But it only moves a tiny bit. Like you said, when I pronounce the "i", "oy" and "ow" vowels, my tongue moves a lot more, all the way from the bottom to the roof of my mouth. Does that mean the last three are diphthongs, and the first two are monophthongs? You could make a case for that, yeah. When you say a word like "hey" your tongue does move up a tiny bit, but it stays within the limits of the "e" vowel. It's more of a ghost of a diphthong than a real diphthong like "sky". All this is assuming that you don't have a Minnesota/Wisconsin dialect of American English, or that your first language is French or Spanish, in which case you definitely do have monophthongs for those vowels.

    • @jony4real
      @jony4real 2 года назад

      Wait, sorry, I feel bad about my first post. I suggested you just weren't noticing the diphthongs but I forgot that you said you were specifically looking for unexpected pronunciations. I'm sorry, I was excited to talk about phonetics and I skimmed your comment. I hope I didn't make you feel like I was discounting your observations.

  • @willarddevoe5893
    @willarddevoe5893 2 года назад

    In the movie A Thousand Clowns, Murray (Jason Robards) and Nick (Barry Gordon) can mimick dozens of New York City and New Jersey accents. Buffalo New York has an accent that can put an eggbeater to anybody's theory, and it comes straight from the rubbish can. California has a double loud R, but a Billy Joel immigrant, New England, or Westchester accent have muted or absent r's. Kentucky has either a strong southern drawl, or a broadcast perfect Websters. Texas has and had it's very own sounds and emphasis. See the movie Old Yeller.