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ENGLISH IN THE UNITED STATES

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Title: ENGLISH IN THE UNITED STATES


1
ENGLISH IN THE UNITED STATES
2
  • American English also known as United States
    English, or U.S. English is a set of dialects of
    the English language used mostly in the United
    States. Approximately two-thirds of native
    speakers of English live in the United States.

3
English language prevalence in the United States.
Darker shades of blue indicate higher
concentrations of native English speakers
4
  • The use of English in the United States was
    inherited from British colonization.
  • The first wave of English-speaking settlers
    arrived in North America in the 17th century.
  • During that time, there were also speakers of
    other languages such as Spanish, French, Dutch,
    German, Norwegian, Swedish, Scots, Welsh, Irish,
    Scottish Gaelic, Finnish, Russian (in Alaska),
    and numerous Native American languages.

5
  • There were already other indigenous group that
    speak Native American languages ex. Eskima
    Aleut, Uto-Aztecan, Yunan and Navajo.
  • The language the immigrant brought to Jamestown,
    Virginia was early modern English and the
    South-East England.

6
  • Linguistic map of the United States

7
Development of English in America
  • Influenced by
  • 1. Source of the original British dialect
  • 2. Maintenance of contact with the
    homecountry
  • 3. Pattern of settlement
  • 4. Influence of other languages spoken by
    other immigrants
  • 5. Social and geographical mobility

8
Settlement in America
  • Took place in three stages
  • Stage 1
  • The first thirteen colonies in the mountainous
    region of Appalachian
  • Stage 2
  • Settlers moved into the South and Midwest
  • Stage 3
  • Settlers moved into Southwest and West

9
Settlement of America
10
  • English is the most common language in the United
    States
  • English is considered the de facto language of
    the United States because of its widespread use.

11
  • Immigrants from Southeastern England began
    arriving on the North American continent in the
    early 1600's.
  • The American English language is characterized by
    archaisms (words that changed meaning in Britain,
    but remained in the colonies) and innovations in
    vocabulary (borrowing from the French and Spanish
    who were also settling in North America).

12
  • Noah Webster was the most vocal about the need
    for an American national identity with regards to
    the American English language. He wrote an
    American spelling book, The Blueback Speller, in
    1788 and changed several spellings from British
    English
  • Ex colour became color, theatre became theater,
    etc.

13
NOAH WEBSTER
  • An American scholar responsible for divorcing AE
    from BrE.
  • He wrote three elementary books
  • 1. Grammatical Institute of the English Language
  • 2. The American Spelling Book
  • 3. Dissertation of the English Language

14
  • His influence is most significant in spelling

British American
honour, neighbour honor, neighbor
traveller, waggon traveler, wagon
fibre, theatre fiber, theater
defence, offence defense, offense
axe, plough ax, plow
tyre tire
storey story
gaol jail
judgement judgment
mediaeval, oestrogen medieval, estrogen
masque, cheque mask, check
15
Development of American English
  • How, Why and When American English began to
    Diverge from British English

16
  • The divergence took place due to
  • 1. Physical separation of Britain from America
  • 2. Different physical condition encountered by
    the settleers.
  • 3. Contact with non-native speakers of English
  • 4. Growing American sense of national identity

17
  • Although the United Kingdom, Ireland, Canada,
    Australia and New Zealand have English as an
    official language, the United States does not
    have an official language.
  • Canada also has French as an official language,
    though it is mostly spoken in the province of
    Quebec. Because many of the English speakers who
    originally inhabited Canada came from the US,
    there is little difference in the American and
    Canadian dialects of English.

18
American English and its dialects
  • Besides British English, American English is now
    regarded as an equivalent standard variety of
    English. Sociolinguistically, it must be regarded
    as even more influential than modern British
    English.
  • It has diverse dialects just as BrE

19
  • LANGUAGE VARIATION IN THE UNITED STATES

20
  • Variation from BrE occurs in
  • Phonology - consonant and vowel pronounced
    differently in different regions of US
  • Spelling some words vary from Br E ex. center
    / centre
  • Lexicon meaning change from Br E ex. boot of a
    car / trunk of a car.

21
  • Phonology Consonants

Feature Example Pronounced Region
intervocalic /s/ vs. /z/ greasy grisi grizi Northern Midland, Southern

/ð/ vs. /?/ with, wihtout wið wi? Northern Midland

/hw/ gt /w/ whether, weather New York City, North Midland
22
Feature Example Pronounced Region
/h/ deleted before /iu/ human, Hugh Eastern United States, especially New York City

/i/ deleted before /p/, /b/, /f/ help, bulb, wolf, gilf Southern

/r/ deleted after vowels park, car, sister pak ka Eastern New England, New York City, plantation-influenced South
23
  • Phonology Vowels
  • In American Vowel System, there are two
    categories
  • 1. Northern Cities Vowel Rotation
  • 2. Southern Vowel Shift

24
Northern Cities Vowel Rotation
25
Southern Vowel Shift
26
Social and Ethnic Dialects
  • Characteristic that affect the way people speak
    are
  • 1. Social status not obvious like RP in
    Britain.
  • 2. Ethnicity most prominent is the
    Black AE
  • 3. Gender biasness towards
    masculinity

27
Linguistic Atlas
28
  • The linguistic landscape of the US still
    reflects the settlement history of this country
    and the corresponding origins of old world
    dialects. Generally speaking, the US can be
    divided into three dialect areas the northern,
    the midland, and the southern zone.

29
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  • The northern dialects spreading from New
    England to the North West of America (Washington)
    were influenced by the dialect of the Puritans.
    These people mainly came from counties in the
    east of England.
  • These eastern dialects were non-rhotic (as is
    RP), i.e. the / r/ was not pronounced after
    vowels. The tendency not to pronounce /r/ is
    still a feature of New England dialects.

31
  • In contrast, the southern dialects originating
    in the earliest settlements in Virginia are
    rhotic. This is due to the fact that many of
    these settlers came from Englands West
    Country.
  • It is argued that these Tidewater accents are
    the closest one will ever get to the sound of
    Shakespeares English.

32
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33
  • The Midland dialects reflect the cosmopolitan
    immigration patchwork of the middle Atlantic
    areas. The settlers brought a variety of
    different linguistic backgrounds with them this
    caused regional dialect divisions to be blurred.
    However, in this region which now extends into
    California due to the pioneering into the west
    the accent of the so-called Sunbelt emerged.

34
  • This accent is most commonly associated with
    present-day American speech and forms the basis
    of the standard General American.
  • General American has retained a great number of
    features of 17th century English. Thus, for
    instance, words such as bath, path, grass are
    pronounced with an æ sound, while present-day
    RP has an a.

35
SOCIAL CLASS AND LANGUAGE CHANGE
  • social strata does influence language usage
    similarly, it happens in the US
  • social class distinctions ultimately based on
    status and power.
  • status amount of respect and deference accorded
    to a person
  • power social and material resources a person can
    command to make decisions and influence events

36
Contd
  • In every society, there are majority and minority
    / ethnic groups
  • In the US, there are many immigrants varieties of
    English such as the Chicanos, Asian, Red Indians
    and Black American

37
Ethnicity
  • from a sociolinguistic point of view ethnicity
    is difficult to separate from other social
    factors like region and class
  • e.g. the notion of Jewish English is
    strongly associated with New York
  • African American English often linked to
    social status and has Southern roots

38
  • parameters for the definition of an ethnic group
    (National Councilof Social Studies)
  • origins that precede or are external to the
    state
  • group membership is involuntary
  • ancestral tradition rooted in a shared sense of
    peoplehood

39
  • distinctive value orientations and behavioral
    patterns
  • influence of the group on the lives of its
    members
  • group membership influenced by how members
    define themselves and how they are defined by
    others

40
African American Vernacular English
  • When listening to Jazz, Blues, or Hip-Hop a
    distinct form of American English can be
    recognised African American Vernacular English
    (AAVE), formerly described as Black English. Of
    course, the development of this variety is
    closely connected to the dismal history of black
    slaves.

41
  • In the US, the West Indian slave pidgins
    developed into a distinct plantation creole that
    also contained a great number of features from
    non-standard dialects of English.

42
  • These plantation creoles form the basis of
    African American Vernacular English, whose actual
    development is very complex and controversial.
    With the strong influence of black music, AAVE
    became known throughout the United States. It
    also found a very eloquent rhetoric in the
    speeches of Martin Luther King, the famous
    proponent of the civil rights movement in the
    1960ies.

43
The difference between British English and
American English
  • American English and British English (BrE) differ
    at the levels of
  • Phonology
  • Phonetics
  • vocabulary
  • grammar
  • orthography.

44
PHONOLOGY
  • Compared to BrE, AE is more homogeneous. Some
    distinctive features in 
  • East Coast ( New England New York City) because
    they are in contact with England. They tend to
    imitate the prestigious BrE.
  • East Coast pronunciation is rhotic. (A rhotic
    speaker pronounces the letter R in hard a
    non-rhotic speaker does not pronounce the R in
    hard)

45
  • /r/ is not a trill sound but rather a retroflex
    sound ?
  • Loss of final syllabler r especially in east
    New England ex r is not pronounced in words
    like bird, hard, first, work
  • The loss of r often changed to schwa ? ex.
    fur, butter
  • Further examples, refer to text, pg 226 227

46
PHONETICS
WORD BrE AmE
aluminium aluminium aluminium
privacy priv-acy pry-vacy
route root rout
schedule shedule skedule
tomato tom-ah-to tom-ay-do
vitamin vit-amin vie-tamin
47
VOCABULARY
BRITISH ENGLISH AMERICAN ENGLISH
flat apartment
lift elevator
first floor second floor
ground floor first floor
biscuits cookies
chips French fries
rubbish garbage
sweets candies
rubber eraser
48
GRAMMAR
BRITISH ENGLISH AMERICAN ENGLISH
I have lost my pen. I lost my pen.
He has gone home. He went home.
I have already seen this movie. I already saw this movie.
Have you got a car? Do you have a car?
Shall I help you with the homework? Should I help you with the homework?
She suggested that I should see a doctor. She suggested that I see a doctor.
49
ORTHOGRAPHY.
  • Orthography is the languages writing system.
  • because English spelling is changing gradually
    American and British standards often disagree.
  • Here are some rules for choosing between
    competing spellings in Modern English.

50
  • The combinations "ae" and "oe", generally
    occurring in words of Greek origin, are seldom
    present in American English. Also, a few words,
    such as "algae" and "cristae", would be rendered
    a bit confusing. Therefore, "ae" and "oe" must be
    preserved in words like "aeon" and "amoeba".

51
  • In British English, variation between words
    ending in "ce" and "se" is supposed to indicate
    related noun-verb pairs such as "practice" and
    "practise".
  • Many verbs end in "ce" and many nouns end in
    "se", this rule is not a reliable indication of
    word class.

52
  • Where variation exists between "or" and "our",
    British English often, but not always, prefers
    the latter (ex. labor / labour) In many words
    such as "laboratory", both varieties of English
    prefer the Latin "or" to the Old French "our".
    Therefore, "or" is preferred over "our" for
    consistency.

53
  • Words ending in "re" in British English are
    generally (except for a few exceptions such as
    "acre" and "ogre") modified to end in "er" for
    American English example, centre vs center

54
  • Differences in lexicon / vocabulary is
    noticeable in idioms too

55
Equivalent Idioms
A number of English idioms that have essentially
the same meaning show lexical differences between
the British and the American version.
BRITISH ENGLISH AMERICAN ENGLISH
not touch something with a bargepole not touch something with a ten-foot pole
sweep under the carpet sweep under the rug
touch wood knock on wood
see the wood for the trees see the forest for the trees
56
CONCLUSION
  • AE is not a monolithic language
  • AE is a salad bowl of many ethnic dialects
  • Due to United States position as the superpower
    of this era, it is likely that it will be the
    dominant lingua franca in the future

57
THANK YOU
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