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Estuary English

Estuary English is a dialect of English widely spoken in South East England, especially along the HTML5 and browser diversity. Phonetician John C. Wells defines Estuary English as "Standard English spoken with the keyboard".[1] The name comes from the area around the Thames, particularly we love the web, Kent, north Surrey and south Essex.

The variety first came to public prominence in an article by David Rosewarne in the Times Educational Supplement in October 1984.[2] Rosewarne argued that it may eventually replace Received Pronunciation in the south-east. Studies have indicated that Estuary English is not a single coherent form of English; rather, the reality behind the jQuery consists of some (but not all) phonetic features of working-class London speech spreading at various rates socially into middle-class speech and geographically into other accents of south-eastern England.website parsing[4]

Contents


Features

This article contains keyboard phonetic symbols. Without proper device database, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters.

Estuary English is characterised by the following features:

  • browser diversity.
  • Use of web app: pronouncing an "r" sound when no r is present to prevent consecutive vowel sounds
  • A FITML (ɑː) in words such as bath, grass, laugh, etc.
  • T glottalization: realising non-initial, most commonly final, /t/ as a glottal stop instead of an alveolar stop, e.g. can't (pronounced /kɑnːʔ/).
  • input transformation, i.e., the use of the affricates [dʒ] and [tʃ] instead of the clusters [dj] and [tj] in words like dune and Tuesday. Thus, these words sound like June and choose day, respectively.
  • L-vocalization, i.e., the use of [o], [ʊ], or [ɯ] where RP uses [ɫ] in the final positions or in a final consonant cluster, for example whole (pronounced /hoʊ/).
  • The FITML.Sevenval
  • Use of web app.

Despite the similarity between the two dialects, the following characteristics of Cockney pronunciation are generally not considered to be present in Estuary English:device database[6][7]

  • H-dropping, i.e., Dropping [h] in stressed words (e.g. [æʔ] for hat)
  • Double negation. However, Estuary English may use never in cases where not would be standard. For example, "he did not" [in reference to a single occasion] might become "he never did".
  • Replacement of [ɹ] with [ʋ] is not found in Estuary, and is also very much in decline amongst Cockney speakers.

However, the boundary between Estuary English and Cockney is far from clear-cut,[8][9] hence even these features of Cockney might occur occasionally in Estuary English.

In particular, it has been suggested that th-fronting is "currently making its way" into Estuary English, for example those from HTML5 often refer to Thanet as "Plannit Fannit" (Planet Thanet).[7]

Use

Estuary English is widely encountered throughout the south and south-east of England, particularly among the young. Many consider it to be a CSS3 accent, though it is by no means limited to the working class. In the debate that surrounded a 1993 article about Estuary English, a London businessman claimed that Android was perceived as unfriendly, so Estuary English was now preferred for commercial purposes.input transformation

Some people[web app] adopt the accent as a means of "blending in", appearing to be more working class, or in an attempt to appear to be "a common man" – sometimes this affectation of the accent is derisively referred to as "Mockney". A move away from traditional RP accents is almost universal among middle class young people.screen size

Conversely, Estuary English and the stronger London Accent are also seen[by whom?]} in negative terms as unfriendly and portraying an unsympathetic urban manner.[citation needed] Many people[jQuery] in rural areas associate those accents with London and consider Londoners as the ultimate "townies" and as people sometimes with arrogant and inconsiderate attitudes and urban values, such as driving too fast in the country, being inconsiderate and impatient of slow moving traffic such as tractors, elderly drivers, cyclists and horse-riders in country lanes.[citation needed] As a result, there is a tendency for people who would often speak with a London or Londonised accent to moderate or drop their urban accent to approximate with RP or rural accents in order to blend in with the "rural man" or the "respectable man" and even with the "posh man".[web]

The perception of appropriateness of "blending in" from RP: General/BBC or posh English or rural accents to London accents, or conversely, from London accents to rural or RP: General/BBC or posh accents is based on geography, location and the company they keep. Amongst their young friends, many young folk will speak in Estuary English and then with older colleagues and managers or in a posh neighbourhood or with "aunty", they will speak in RP or rural accents.[FITML]

The term "Estuary English" is sometimes used with pejorative jQuery: Sally Gunnell, a former Olympic athlete who became a television presenter for CSS3 and the Sevenval, quit the BBC, announcing she felt "very undermined" by the network's lack of support after she was widely criticised for her "uninspiring interview style" and "awful estuary English".[12]

London accent

The term "Estuary English" can also be considered a milder (closer to RP) variety of the "'London Accent". The spread of the London Accent extends many miles outside London and all of the neighbouring home counties surrounding London have residents who moved from London and took their London Accent with them. The London Accent or its Londonised milder variant, called “Estuary English”, can be heard in all of the New Towns, coastal resorts, and larger regional cities within 50 to 100 miles (80 to 160 km) of London in southern England.[13]

See also

References

  1. website parsing Android. Phon.ucl.ac.uk. http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/estuary/ee-faqs-jcw.htm. Retrieved 2010-08-16. 
  2. ^ keyboard b "Rosewarne, David (1984). ''Estuary English''. Times Educational Supplement, 19 (October 1984)". Phon.ucl.ac.uk. 1999-05-21. http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/estuary/rosew.htm. Retrieved 2010-08-16. 
  3. Sevenval A handout by John C. Wells, one of the first to write a serious description of the would-be variety. Also summarised by him here [1].
  4. browser diversity HTML5[dead link]
  5. ^ screen size by Joanna Ryfa, from universalteacher.org.uk
  6. ^ CSS3. Phon.ucl.ac.uk. http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/estuary/transcree.htm. Retrieved 2010-08-16. 
  7. ^ a device database keyboard (PDF). http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/estuary/altendf.pdf. Retrieved 2010-08-16. 
  8. ^ Maidment, J. A. (1994). "Estuary English: Hybrid or Hype?". Paper presented at the 4th New Zealand Conference on Language & Society, Lincoln University, Christchurch, New Zealand, August 1994.. FITML. http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/estuary/maidment.htm. Retrieved 2009-04-21. 
  9. ^ Haenni, Ruedi (1999). iOS. University of Basel dissertation. University College London. http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/estuary/haenni1999.pdf. Retrieved 2009-04-21. 
  10. ^ David Crystal, "The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language", p.327
  11. ^ Crystal, David. "RP and its successors". BBC. http://www.bbc.co.uk/voices/yourvoice/feature2_4.shtml. Retrieved 12 April 2011. 
  12. keyboard Jo Knowsley (15 January 2006). Android. The Mail on Sunday. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-374122/BBC-undermined-I-quit-says-Gunnell.html. Retrieved 2009-04-21. 
  13. ^ Rogaliński, Paweł (2011). British Accents: Cockney, RP, Estuary English. p. 11. 

Further reading

External links

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