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California English

California English (or Californian English) collectively refers to varieties of American English native to California. As California became one of the most ethnically diverse U.S. states, English speakers from a wide variety of backgrounds began to pick up different linguistic elements from one another and also develop new ones; the result is both divergence and convergence within Californian English.[1] However, linguists who studied English before and immediately after World War II tended to find few, if any, patterns unique to California,[2][3] and even today most California English still basically aligns to a General or Western American accent. Still, certain newer varieties of California English have been gradually emerging since the late 20th century.

California English
RegionUnited States of America
(California)
Early forms
Language codes
ISO 639-3
GlottologNone
IETFen-u-sd-usca
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Overview

A distinctive chain shift of vowel sounds, the California Vowel Shift, was first noted by linguists in the 1980s in southern California and the San Francisco Bay Area of northern California.[4] This helped to define an accent emerging primarily among youthful, white, urban, coastal speakers, and popularly associated with the valley girl and surfer dude youth subcultures.[5][3] The possibility that this is, in fact, an age-specific variety of English is one hypothesis;[6] however, certain features of this accent are intensifying and spreading geographically.

Other documented California English includes a "country" accent associated with rural and inland white Californians, which is also (to a lesser extent) affected by the California Vowel Shift; an older accent once spoken by Irish Americans in San Francisco; and distinctly Californian varieties of Chicano English mainly associated with Mexican Americans. Research has shown that Californians themselves perceive a linguistic boundary between northern and southern California,[7] particularly regarding the northern use of hella and southern (but now nationally widespread) use of dude, bro, and like.[8]

Urban coastal California English

Varieties of English most popularly associated with California largely correlate with the major urban areas along the coast. Notable is the absence of a distinct /ɔ/ phoneme (the vowel sound of caught, stalk, clawed, etc.), which has completely merged with /ɑ/ (the vowel sound of cot, stock, clod, etc.), as in most of the Western United States.[9]

Vowels of California English
Front Central Back
unrounded rounded
lax tense lax tense lax tense tense
Close i u
Close-mid ɪ ə, ʌ ʊ
Open ɛ æ ɑ
Diphthongs   ɔɪ  

A few phonological processes have been identified as being particular to urban and coastal California English. However, these vowel changes are by no means universal in Californian speech, and any single Californian's speech may only have some or none of the changes identified below. These sounds might also be found in the speech of some people from areas outside of California.[10]

  • Front vowels are raised before /ŋ/, so that the traditional "short a" /æ/ and "short i" /ɪ/ sounds are raised to the "long a" [eɪ~e] and "long ee" [i] sounds, respectively, when before the ng sound /ŋ/.[11] In other contexts, /ɪ/ (as in bit, rich, quick, etc.) has a fairly open pronunciation, as indicated in the vowel chart here. Similarly, a word like rang /ræŋ/ will often have the same vowel as rain /reɪn/ in California English, /ɹeɪŋ/, rather than the same vowel as ran /ræn/ (phonetically articulated as [ɹɛən~ɹeən]; see below). In addition, /ɪŋ/ may be pronounced with a raised vowel [iŋ], or even [in] in a nonfinite verb ending,[12] so that thinking is pronounced /ˈθiŋkin/ ('theenkeen'), rather than /ˈθɪŋkən/ or /ˈθɪŋkɪŋ/ and king is pronounced more like /kiŋ/ keeng, whereas bullying features two consecutive FLEECE vowels: /ˈbʊliiŋ/ bull-ee-eeng or /ˈbʊliin/ bull-ee-een (cf. GenAm /ˈbʊliɪŋ/, with FLEECE followed by KIT). As all vowels preceding /ŋ/ are historically short, this does not lead to a loss of phonemic contrast.
  • Before /n/ or /m/ (as in ran or ram), /æ/ is raised and diphthongized to [ɛə] or [eə] (a widespread shift throughout most of American English). Elsewhere, /æ/ is lowered and backed as a result of the California vowel shift (see below).
  • Uptalk, meaning a high-rising intonation in certain declarative sentences, is on the rise, for example in Southern Californian English. One 2014 study found uptalk used equally by Southern Californian men and women in 16% of declarative statements. However, women were twice as likely to use uptalk in order to hold the floor (a linguistic strategy similar to a filler or discourse marker).[13]
  • In Northern California generally, a tense [eɪ~e] is the pronunciation of /ɛ/ before /g/ in words such as egg, beg, leg, which can thus be pronounced as /eɪg/ ayg, /beɪg/ bayg, /leɪg/ layg, respectively.[14]

California Vowel Shift

 
The California vowel shift. The phoneme transcribed with o is represented in this article as .[11]

One topic that has begun to receive much attention from scholars in recent decades has been the emergence of a vowel-based chain shift in California. The image in this section illustrates the California vowel shift. The vowel space of the image is a cross-section (as if looking at the interior of a mouth from a side profile perspective); it is a rough approximation of the space in a human mouth where the tongue is located in articulating certain vowel sounds (the left is the front of the mouth closer to the teeth, the right side of the chart being the back of the mouth). As with other vowel shifts, several vowels may be seen moving in a chain shift around the mouth. As one vowel encroaches upon the space of another, the adjacent vowel in turn experiences a movement in order to maximize phonemic differentiation.

For convenience, California English will be compared with a "typical" General American English, abbreviated "GA". /ɪ/ is pulled towards /ɛ/ (bit and kit are sounding more like bet and ket in other dialects) /ɛ/ is pulled towards [æ] (wreck and kettle are sounding more like rack and cattle), /æ/ is pulled towards [ä], and /ɑ/ and /ɔ/ merge (cot and stock are sounding more like caught and stalk): the cot-caught merger.

Other vowel changes, whose relation with the shift is uncertain, are also emerging: /u/ moving through [ʉ] towards [y] (rude and true are almost approaching reed and tree, but with rounded lips), and /oʊ/ moving beyond [əʊ]. /ʊ/ is moving towards [ʌ] (so that, for example, book and could in the California dialect start to sound, to a GA speaker, more like buck and cud), /ʌ/ is moving through [ɜ], sometimes approaching [ɛ] (duck, crust, what, etc. are sounding like how U.S. Southerners pronounce them, or like how other Americans might pronounce deck, crest, wet, etc.).[15]

New vowel characteristics of the California Shift are increasingly found among younger speakers. As with many vowel shifts, these significant changes occurring in the spoken language are rarely noticed by average speakers.[citation needed] For example, while some characteristics such as the close central rounded vowel [ʉ] or close front rounded vowel [y] for /u/ are widespread in Californian speech, the same high degree of fronting for /oʊ/ is found predominantly among young speakers.[16]

Rural inland California English

One dialect of English, mostly reported in California's rural interior, inland from the major coastal cities,[17] has been popularly described as a "country," "hillbilly," or "twang" variety.[18][19] This California English variety is reminiscent of and presumably related to Southern or South Midland U.S. accents,[20] mostly correlated with white, outdoors-oriented speakers of the Central Valley. It has been studied even as far north as Trinity County but could possibly extend farther,[21][18] and as far south as Kern County (metropolitan Bakersfield). Similar to the nonstandard accents of the South Midland and Southern United States, speakers of such towns as Redding and Merced have been found to use the word anymore in a positive sense and the verb was in place of the standard English plural verb were.[22] Related other features of note include the pin–pen merger,[20][21][23][24] fill–feel merger, and full–fool merger.[18]

The Great Depression's westward Dust Bowl migrations of settlers into California from the Southern United States, namely from Oklahoma, Texas, Missouri, and Arkansas,[21] is the presumable cause of this rural white accent's presence in California's Central Valley.[20][25] Rural northern California was also settled by Oklahomans and Arkansans, though perhaps more recently in the 1970s and 1980s, due to the region's timber industry boom.[26] However, even in a single town, any given individual's identification with working and playing outdoors versus indoors appears to be a greater determiner of this accent than the authenticity of the individual's Southern heritage.[23] For example, this correlates with less educated rural men of northern California documented as raising /ɛ/ in a style similar to the Southern drawl.[21] Overall, among those who orient toward a more town lifestyle, features of the California Vowel Shift are more prominent, but not to the same extent as in urban coastal communities such as San Jose.[17] By contrast, among those who orient toward a more country lifestyle, the Southern features are more prominent, but some aspects of the California Vowel Shift remain present as well.[20][23]

Mission brogue (San Francisco)

The Mission brogue is a disappearing accent spoken within San Francisco, mostly during the 20th century in the Mission District. It sounds distinctly like New York and possibly Boston accents, due to a large number of Irish Americans migrating from those two East Coast cities to the Mission District in the late 19th century.[27] It is today spoken only by some of the oldest Irish-American and possibly Jewish residents of the city. From before the 1870s to the 1890s, Irish Americans were the largest share of migrants coming to San Francisco,[27] the majority arriving by way of Northeastern U.S. cities like New York and Boston,[28][29][27] thus bringing those cities' ways of speaking with them.[29] In San Francisco, the Mission District quickly became a predominantly Irish Catholic neighborhood,[30][29] and its local dialect became associated with all of San Francisco as a way to contrast it with the rest of California.[30] Sounding like a "real San Franciscan" therefore once meant sounding "like a New Yorker",[30] the speakers said to "talk like Brooklynites".[27] Other names included the "south of the Slot" (referring to the cable car track running down Market Street)[30] or "south of Market" accent.[31]

Pronunciation features of this accent included:

Overall, starting in the later half of the 20th century, San Francisco has been undergoing dialect levelling towards the broader regional Western American English,[28][32] for example: younger Mission District speakers now exhibit a full cot–caught merger, show the vowel shift of urban coastal Californians, and front the GOOSE and GOAT vowels.[33]

Other varieties

Certain varieties of Chicano English are also native to California, sometimes even being spoken by non-Latino Californians.[34][35] One example is East Los Angeles Chicano English, which has been influenced by both Californian and African American Vernacular English.[36]

The coastal urban accent of California traces many of its features back to Valleyspeak: a social dialect arising in the 1980s among a particular white youthful demographic in the San Fernando Valley, including Los Angeles.

Boontling is a jargon or argot spoken in Boonville, California, with only about 100 speakers today.[37]

Lexical overview

The popular image of a typical southern California speaker often conjures up images of the so-called Valley girls popularized by the 1982 hit song by Frank and Moon Zappa, or "surfer-dude" speech made famous by movies such as Fast Times at Ridgemont High. While many phrases found in these extreme versions of California English from the 1980s may now be considered passé, certain words such as awesome, totally, for sure, harsh, gnarly, and dude have remained popular in California and have spread to a national, even international, level.

A common example of a northern Californian[38] colloquialism is hella (from "(a) hell of a (lot of)", and the euphemistic alternative hecka) to mean "many", "much", "so" or "very".[39] It can be used with both count and mass nouns. For example: "I haven't seen you in hella long"; "There were hella people there"; or "This guacamole is hella good". The word can be casually used multiple times in multiple ways within a single sentence. Pop culture references to "hella" are common, as in the song "Hella Good" by the band No Doubt, which hails from southern California, and "Hella" by the band Skull Stomp, who come from northern California.[40]

California, like other Southwestern states, has borrowed many words from Spanish, especially for place names, food, and other cultural items, reflecting the linguistic heritage of the Californios as well as more recent immigration from Mexico and elsewhere in Latin America. High concentrations of various ethnic groups throughout the state have contributed to general familiarity with words describing (especially cultural) phenomena. For example, a high concentration of Asian Americans from various cultural backgrounds, especially in urban and suburban metropolitan areas in California, has led to the adoption of the word hapa (itself originally a Hawaiian borrowing of English "half"[41]) to mean someone of mixed European/Islander or Asian/Islander heritage.

In 1958, essayist Clifton Fadiman pointed out that northern California is the only place (besides England and the area surrounding Ontario and the Canadian Prairies) where the word chesterfield is used as a synonym for sofa or couch.[42]

Freeways

In the Los Angeles metropolitan area, Inland Empire, Coachella Valley and San Diego, freeways are often referred to either by name or by route number but with the addition of the definite article "the", such as "the 405 North", "the 99" or "the 605 (Freeway)". This usage has been parodied in the recurring Saturday Night Live sketch "The Californians".[43] In contrast, typical northern California usage omits the definite article.[44][45][46] When southern California freeways were built in the 1940s and early 1950s, local common usage was primarily the freeway name preceded by the definite article, such as "the Hollywood Freeway".[47] It took several decades for southern California locals to start to commonly refer to the freeways with the numerical designations, but usage of the definite article persisted. For example, it evolved to "the 605 Freeway" and then shortened to "the 605".[47]

 
 
Signage along northbound U.S. Route 101, reflecting the different lexicon usage between Southern and Northern California.
Top: signage at the 110 Freeway interchange in Los Angeles, with the leftmost sign for the 101 freeway north listing both its name, the Hollywood Freeway, as well as its destination, Ventura.
Bottom: signage at the Interstate 80 interchange in San Francisco, with the leftmost sign for US 101 north only listing its destination, the Golden Gate Bridge.

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ "Do you speak American? - California English". PBS. Retrieved October 28, 2013.
  2. ^ Walt Wolfram and Ben Ward, ed. (2006). American Voices: How Dialects Differ from Coast to Coast. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing. pp. 140, 234–236. ISBN 978-1-4051-2108-8.
  3. ^ a b "California English." Do You Speak American? PBS. Macneil/Lehrer Productions. 2005.
  4. ^ Gordon, Matthew J. (2004). "The West and Midwest: phonology." Kortmann, Bernd, Kate Burridge, Rajend Mesthrie, Edgar W. Schneider and Clive Upton (eds). A Handbook of Varieties of English. Volume 1: Phonology, Volume 2: Morphology and Syntax. Berlin / New York: Mouton de Gruyter. p. 347.
  5. ^ Podesva, Robert J., Annette D'Onofrio, Janneke Van Hofwegen, and Seung Kyung Kim (2015). "Country ideology and the California Vowel Shift." Language Variation and Change 48: 28-45. Cambridge University Press.
  6. ^ Ward (2003:41): "fronted features in the young speakers seems to indicate a nascent chain shift in progress, [but] the lack of a true generational age range in the study precludes too strong of a conclusion. Alternatively Hinton et al. also suggest that possibility that the age-specific pattern could also be a function of age-grading, where the faddish speech style of California adolescents is adopted for its prestige value, only to be abandoned as adolescence wanes."
  7. ^ Bucholtz, Mary et al (2007). "Hella Nor Cal or Totally So Cal". Journal of English Linguistics. 35 (4): 337. doi:10.1177/0075424207307780. S2CID 64542514.
  8. ^ Bucholtz et al., 2007, 343.
  9. ^ "The Voices of California Project". web.stanford.edu. Retrieved 2019-03-14.
  10. ^ Conn, Jeff (2002). "An investigation into the western dialect of Portland Oregon." Paper presented at NWAV31. San Diego, CA.
  11. ^ a b Eckert, Penelope. "Vowel Shifts in California and the Detroit Suburbs". Stanford University.
  12. ^ Eckert, Penelope (March 2008). "Where do ethnolects stop?". International Journal of Bilingualism. 12 (1–2): 25–42. doi:10.1177/13670069080120010301. ISSN 1367-0069. S2CID 35623478.
  13. ^ Ritchart, Amanda; Arvaniti, Amalia (2014). The use of high rise terminals in Southern Californian English. Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics. p. 060001. doi:10.1121/1.4863274.
  14. ^ Stanley, Joseph A. (2022). Regional patterns in prevelar raising. American Speech: A Quarterly of Linguistic Usage, 97(3), 374-411.
  15. ^ "Professor Penelope Eckert's webpage". Stanford.edu. Retrieved 2011-12-30.
  16. ^ "The Voices of California Project". web.stanford.edu. Retrieved 2019-03-14.
  17. ^ a b Podesva, Robert J. (2015). Country ideology and the California Vowel Shift Language Variation and Change. Stanford University.
  18. ^ a b c Ornelas, Cris (2012). "Kern County Accent Studied 2016-06-10 at the Wayback Machine." 23 ABC News. E. W. Scripps Company.
  19. ^ Geenberg, Katherine (2014). "The Other California: Marginalization and Sociolinguistic Variation in Trinity County". Doctoral Dissertation, Stanford University. p. iv.
  20. ^ a b c d Podesva, Robert J. (September 2014). The California Vowel Shift and Fractal Recursivity in an Inland, Non-Urban Community. Stanford University.
  21. ^ a b c d Geenberg, Katherine (August 2014). The Other California: Marginalization and Sociolinguistic Variation in Trinity County (PDF). Stanford University.
  22. ^ King, Ed (2012). "Stanford linguists seek to identify the elusive California accent". Stanford Report. Stanford University.
  23. ^ a b c Geenberg, Katherine (2014). What it means to be Norcal Country: Variation and marginalization in rural California. Stanford University.
  24. ^ Labov, Ash & Boberg (2006:279)
  25. ^ Geenberg, Katherine (2014). "The Other California: Marginalization and Sociolinguistic Variation in Trinity County". Doctoral Dissertation, Stanford University. pp. 4, 14.
  26. ^ Geenberg, Katherine (2014). "The Other California: Marginalization and Sociolinguistic Variation in Trinity County". Doctoral Dissertation, Stanford University. pp. 182-3.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g h i j DeCamp, David (1953). The Pronunciation of English in San Francisco. University of California, Berkeley. pp. 549–569.
  28. ^ a b Hall-Lew, Lauren (September 2009). Ethnicity and Phonetic Variation in a San Francisco Neighborhood. Stanford University.
  29. ^ a b c Veltman, Chloe. "Why the Myth of the 'San Francisco Accent' Persists". KQED News. Retrieved 27 November 2019.
  30. ^ a b c d e f g h i Hall-Lew, Lauren (2008). "I went to school back East... in Berkeley"1:San Francisco English and San Francisco Identity.
  31. ^ Nolte, Carl (28 February 2012). "How to Talk Like a San Franciscan". SFGATE. Retrieved 27 November 2019.
  32. ^ Graff, Amy (June 7, 2018). "Is there a San Francisco accent? The answer may have changed over the years". SFGATE. Retrieved 27 November 2019.
  33. ^ Hall-Lew, Lauren (August 2015). San Francisco English and the California Vowel Shift (PDF). The University of Edinburgh. Retrieved 27 November 2019.
  34. ^ Take Two (2013). "Map: Do Californians have an accent? Listen to some examples and add your own." Southern California Public Radio.
  35. ^ Guerrero, Armando Jr. (2014). "'You Speak Good English for Being Mexican' East Los Angeles Chicano/a English: Language & Identity". Voices. 2 (1): 56–7.
  36. ^ Guerrero, Armando Jr. (2014). "'You Speak Good English for Being Mexican' East Los Angeles Chicano/a English: Language & Identity". Voices. 2 (1): 4.
  37. ^ Rawles, Myrtle R. (1966); "'Boontling': Esoteric Language of Boonville, California." In Western Folklore, Vol. 25, No. 2, pp. 93–103. California Folklore Society [Western States Folklore Society].
  38. ^ "However, science isn't all that sets northern California apart from the rest of the world," Sendek wrote. "The area is also notorious for the creation and widespread usage of the English slang 'hella', which typically means 'very', or can refer to a large quantity (e.g. 'there are hella stars out tonight')." [1]
  39. ^ . Ling.ucsc.edu. Archived from the original on 2005-10-31. Retrieved 2011-12-30.
  40. ^ "Lyrics | Skull Stomp - Hella". SongMeanings. 2008-11-02. Retrieved 2011-12-30.
  41. ^ Mary Kawena Pukui, Samuel H. Elbert & Esther T. Mookini, The Pocket Hawaiian Dictionary (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1983)
  42. ^ Fadiman, Clifton. Any Number Can Play. 1958.
  43. ^ Rose, Joseph (April 16, 2012). "Saturday Night Live's 'The Californians': Traffic's one big soap opera (video)". The Oregonian. Portland, Oregon. Retrieved December 3, 2013.
  44. ^ Simon, Mark (2000-06-30). "'The' Madness Must Stop Right Now". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2012-11-19.
  45. ^ Simon, Mark (2000-07-04). "Local Lingo Keeps 'The' Off Road". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2012-11-19.
  46. ^ Simon, Mark (July 29, 2000). "S.F. Wants Power, Not The Noise / Brown rejects docking floating plant off city". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved June 13, 2017.
  47. ^ a b Geyer, Grant (Summer 2001). "'The' Freeway in Southern California". American Speech. 76 (2): 221–224. doi:10.1215/00031283-76-2-221. S2CID 144010897.

General and cited sources

  • Labov, William; Ash, Sharon; Boberg, Charles (2006), The Atlas of North American English, Berlin: Mouton-de Gruyter, pp. 187–208, ISBN 3-11-016746-8
  • Ward, Michael (2003), (PDF), Portland Dialect Study: The Fronting of /ow, u, uw/ in Portland, Oregon, Portland State University, pp. 39–45, archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-07-29

Further reading

  • Vowels and Consonants: An Introduction to the Sounds of Languages. Peter Ladefoged, 2003. Blackwell Publishing.
  • Language in Society: An Introduction to Sociolinguistics. Suzanne Romaine, 2000. Oxford University Press.
  • How We Talk: American Regional English Today. Allan Metcalf, 2000. Houghton Mifflin.

External links

  • PBS.org: "Do you speak American? − California English"
  • Stanford.edu: Penelope Eckert Bolg − Vowel Shifts
  • Phonological Atlas of North America
  • by Rachelle Waksler, discussing usage of "hella"
  • Binghamton.edu: "Word Up: Social Meanings of Slang in California Youth Culture" — by Mary Bucholtz Ph.D., UC Santa Barbara Department of Linguistics, includes discussion of "hella"

california, english, californian, english, collectively, refers, varieties, american, english, native, california, california, became, most, ethnically, diverse, states, english, speakers, from, wide, variety, backgrounds, began, pick, different, linguistic, e. California English or Californian English collectively refers to varieties of American English native to California As California became one of the most ethnically diverse U S states English speakers from a wide variety of backgrounds began to pick up different linguistic elements from one another and also develop new ones the result is both divergence and convergence within Californian English 1 However linguists who studied English before and immediately after World War II tended to find few if any patterns unique to California 2 3 and even today most California English still basically aligns to a General or Western American accent Still certain newer varieties of California English have been gradually emerging since the late 20th century California EnglishRegionUnited States of America California Language familyIndo European GermanicWest GermanicIngvaeonicAnglo FrisianAnglicEnglishNorth American EnglishAmerican EnglishWestern American EnglishCalifornia EnglishEarly formsOld English Middle English Early Modern EnglishLanguage codesISO 639 3 GlottologNoneIETFen u sd uscaThis article contains IPA phonetic symbols Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Unicode characters For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA Contents 1 Overview 2 Urban coastal California English 2 1 California Vowel Shift 3 Rural inland California English 4 Mission brogue San Francisco 5 Other varieties 6 Lexical overview 6 1 Freeways 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 General and cited sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksOverview EditA distinctive chain shift of vowel sounds the California Vowel Shift was first noted by linguists in the 1980s in southern California and the San Francisco Bay Area of northern California 4 This helped to define an accent emerging primarily among youthful white urban coastal speakers and popularly associated with the valley girl and surfer dude youth subcultures 5 3 The possibility that this is in fact an age specific variety of English is one hypothesis 6 however certain features of this accent are intensifying and spreading geographically Other documented California English includes a country accent associated with rural and inland white Californians which is also to a lesser extent affected by the California Vowel Shift an older accent once spoken by Irish Americans in San Francisco and distinctly Californian varieties of Chicano English mainly associated with Mexican Americans Research has shown that Californians themselves perceive a linguistic boundary between northern and southern California 7 particularly regarding the northern use of hella and southern but now nationally widespread use of dude bro and like 8 Urban coastal California English EditVarieties of English most popularly associated with California largely correlate with the major urban areas along the coast Notable is the absence of a distinct ɔ phoneme the vowel sound of caught stalk clawed etc which has completely merged with ɑ the vowel sound of cot stock clod etc as in most of the Western United States 9 Vowels of California English Front Central Backunrounded roundedlax tense lax tense lax tense tenseClose i uClose mid ɪ eɪ e ʌ ʊ oʊOpen ɛ ae ɑDiphthongs aɪ ɔɪ aʊA few phonological processes have been identified as being particular to urban and coastal California English However these vowel changes are by no means universal in Californian speech and any single Californian s speech may only have some or none of the changes identified below These sounds might also be found in the speech of some people from areas outside of California 10 Front vowels are raised before ŋ so that the traditional short a ae and short i ɪ sounds are raised to the long a eɪ e and long ee i sounds respectively when before the ng sound ŋ 11 In other contexts ɪ as in bit rich quick etc has a fairly open pronunciation as indicated in the vowel chart here Similarly a word like rang raeŋ will often have the same vowel as rain reɪn in California English ɹeɪŋ rather than the same vowel as ran raen phonetically articulated as ɹɛen ɹeen see below In addition ɪŋ may be pronounced with a raised vowel iŋ or even in in a nonfinite verb ending 12 so that thinking is pronounced ˈ8iŋkin theenkeen rather than ˈ8ɪŋken or ˈ8ɪŋkɪŋ and king is pronounced more like kiŋ keeng whereas bullying features two consecutive FLEECE vowels ˈbʊliiŋ bull ee eeng or ˈbʊliin bull ee een cf GenAm ˈbʊliɪŋ with FLEECE followed by KIT As all vowels preceding ŋ are historically short this does not lead to a loss of phonemic contrast Before n or m as in ran or ram ae is raised and diphthongized to ɛe or ee a widespread shift throughout most of American English Elsewhere ae is lowered and backed as a result of the California vowel shift see below Uptalk meaning a high rising intonation in certain declarative sentences is on the rise for example in Southern Californian English One 2014 study found uptalk used equally by Southern Californian men and women in 16 of declarative statements However women were twice as likely to use uptalk in order to hold the floor a linguistic strategy similar to a filler or discourse marker 13 In Northern California generally a tense eɪ e is the pronunciation of ɛ before g in words such as egg beg leg which can thus be pronounced as eɪg ayg beɪg bayg leɪg layg respectively 14 California Vowel Shift Edit See also Canadian shift The California vowel shift The phoneme transcribed with o is represented in this article as oʊ 11 One topic that has begun to receive much attention from scholars in recent decades has been the emergence of a vowel based chain shift in California The image in this section illustrates the California vowel shift The vowel space of the image is a cross section as if looking at the interior of a mouth from a side profile perspective it is a rough approximation of the space in a human mouth where the tongue is located in articulating certain vowel sounds the left is the front of the mouth closer to the teeth the right side of the chart being the back of the mouth As with other vowel shifts several vowels may be seen moving in a chain shift around the mouth As one vowel encroaches upon the space of another the adjacent vowel in turn experiences a movement in order to maximize phonemic differentiation For convenience California English will be compared with a typical General American English abbreviated GA ɪ is pulled towards ɛ bit and kit are sounding more like bet and ket in other dialects ɛ is pulled towards ae wreck and kettle are sounding more like rack and cattle ae is pulled towards a and ɑ and ɔ merge cot and stock are sounding more like caught and stalk the cot caught merger Other vowel changes whose relation with the shift is uncertain are also emerging u moving through ʉ towards y rude and true are almost approaching reed and tree but with rounded lips and oʊ moving beyond eʊ ʊ is moving towards ʌ so that for example book and could in the California dialect start to sound to a GA speaker more like buck and cud ʌ is moving through ɜ sometimes approaching ɛ duck crust what etc are sounding like how U S Southerners pronounce them or like how other Americans might pronounce deck crest wet etc 15 New vowel characteristics of the California Shift are increasingly found among younger speakers As with many vowel shifts these significant changes occurring in the spoken language are rarely noticed by average speakers citation needed For example while some characteristics such as the close central rounded vowel ʉ or close front rounded vowel y for u are widespread in Californian speech the same high degree of fronting for oʊ is found predominantly among young speakers 16 Rural inland California English EditOne dialect of English mostly reported in California s rural interior inland from the major coastal cities 17 has been popularly described as a country hillbilly or twang variety 18 19 This California English variety is reminiscent of and presumably related to Southern or South Midland U S accents 20 mostly correlated with white outdoors oriented speakers of the Central Valley It has been studied even as far north as Trinity County but could possibly extend farther 21 18 and as far south as Kern County metropolitan Bakersfield Similar to the nonstandard accents of the South Midland and Southern United States speakers of such towns as Redding and Merced have been found to use the word anymore in a positive sense and the verb was in place of the standard English plural verb were 22 Related other features of note include the pin pen merger 20 21 23 24 fill feel merger and full fool merger 18 The Great Depression s westward Dust Bowl migrations of settlers into California from the Southern United States namely from Oklahoma Texas Missouri and Arkansas 21 is the presumable cause of this rural white accent s presence in California s Central Valley 20 25 Rural northern California was also settled by Oklahomans and Arkansans though perhaps more recently in the 1970s and 1980s due to the region s timber industry boom 26 However even in a single town any given individual s identification with working and playing outdoors versus indoors appears to be a greater determiner of this accent than the authenticity of the individual s Southern heritage 23 For example this correlates with less educated rural men of northern California documented as raising ɛ in a style similar to the Southern drawl 21 Overall among those who orient toward a more town lifestyle features of the California Vowel Shift are more prominent but not to the same extent as in urban coastal communities such as San Jose 17 By contrast among those who orient toward a more country lifestyle the Southern features are more prominent but some aspects of the California Vowel Shift remain present as well 20 23 Mission brogue San Francisco EditThe Mission brogue is a disappearing accent spoken within San Francisco mostly during the 20th century in the Mission District It sounds distinctly like New York and possibly Boston accents due to a large number of Irish Americans migrating from those two East Coast cities to the Mission District in the late 19th century 27 It is today spoken only by some of the oldest Irish American and possibly Jewish residents of the city From before the 1870s to the 1890s Irish Americans were the largest share of migrants coming to San Francisco 27 the majority arriving by way of Northeastern U S cities like New York and Boston 28 29 27 thus bringing those cities ways of speaking with them 29 In San Francisco the Mission District quickly became a predominantly Irish Catholic neighborhood 30 29 and its local dialect became associated with all of San Francisco as a way to contrast it with the rest of California 30 Sounding like a real San Franciscan therefore once meant sounding like a New Yorker 30 the speakers said to talk like Brooklynites 27 Other names included the south of the Slot referring to the cable car track running down Market Street 30 or south of Market accent 31 Pronunciation features of this accent included Th stopping 27 30 No cot caught merger with ɔ being raised and accompanied with an inglide so as to produce a vowel sound approximating oe 27 30 Non rhoticity 27 30 The use of eɪ for ɜːr before unvoiced consonants such that NURSE would have almost the same vowel sound as choice 27 30 Glottal stop ʔ instead of t before syllabic l such as in bottle 27 this and all the above features were reminiscent of a New York accent Possible TRAP BATH split reminiscent of older Boston English 27 30 Overall starting in the later half of the 20th century San Francisco has been undergoing dialect levelling towards the broader regional Western American English 28 32 for example younger Mission District speakers now exhibit a full cot caught merger show the vowel shift of urban coastal Californians and front the GOOSE and GOAT vowels 33 Other varieties EditCertain varieties of Chicano English are also native to California sometimes even being spoken by non Latino Californians 34 35 One example is East Los Angeles Chicano English which has been influenced by both Californian and African American Vernacular English 36 The coastal urban accent of California traces many of its features back to Valleyspeak a social dialect arising in the 1980s among a particular white youthful demographic in the San Fernando Valley including Los Angeles Boontling is a jargon or argot spoken in Boonville California with only about 100 speakers today 37 Lexical overview EditThe popular image of a typical southern California speaker often conjures up images of the so called Valley girls popularized by the 1982 hit song by Frank and Moon Zappa or surfer dude speech made famous by movies such as Fast Times at Ridgemont High While many phrases found in these extreme versions of California English from the 1980s may now be considered passe certain words such as awesome totally for sure harsh gnarly and dude have remained popular in California and have spread to a national even international level A common example of a northern Californian 38 colloquialism is hella from a hell of a lot of and the euphemistic alternative hecka to mean many much so or very 39 It can be used with both count and mass nouns For example I haven t seen you in hella long There were hella people there or This guacamole is hella good The word can be casually used multiple times in multiple ways within a single sentence Pop culture references to hella are common as in the song Hella Good by the band No Doubt which hails from southern California and Hella by the band Skull Stomp who come from northern California 40 California like other Southwestern states has borrowed many words from Spanish especially for place names food and other cultural items reflecting the linguistic heritage of the Californios as well as more recent immigration from Mexico and elsewhere in Latin America High concentrations of various ethnic groups throughout the state have contributed to general familiarity with words describing especially cultural phenomena For example a high concentration of Asian Americans from various cultural backgrounds especially in urban and suburban metropolitan areas in California has led to the adoption of the word hapa itself originally a Hawaiian borrowing of English half 41 to mean someone of mixed European Islander or Asian Islander heritage In 1958 essayist Clifton Fadiman pointed out that northern California is the only place besides England and the area surrounding Ontario and the Canadian Prairies where the word chesterfield is used as a synonym for sofa or couch 42 Freeways Edit In the Los Angeles metropolitan area Inland Empire Coachella Valley and San Diego freeways are often referred to either by name or by route number but with the addition of the definite article the such as the 405 North the 99 or the 605 Freeway This usage has been parodied in the recurring Saturday Night Live sketch The Californians 43 In contrast typical northern California usage omits the definite article 44 45 46 When southern California freeways were built in the 1940s and early 1950s local common usage was primarily the freeway name preceded by the definite article such as the Hollywood Freeway 47 It took several decades for southern California locals to start to commonly refer to the freeways with the numerical designations but usage of the definite article persisted For example it evolved to the 605 Freeway and then shortened to the 605 47 Signage along northbound U S Route 101 reflecting the different lexicon usage between Southern and Northern California Top signage at the 110 Freeway interchange in Los Angeles with the leftmost sign for the 101 freeway north listing both its name the Hollywood Freeway as well as its destination Ventura Bottom signage at the Interstate 80 interchange in San Francisco with the leftmost sign for US 101 north only listing its destination the Golden Gate Bridge See also Edit California portalAfrican American Vernacular English Boontling Chain shift Chicano English Hyphy North American English regional phonology Sociolect Sociolinguistics Spanglish Valspeak Vowel shift Western American EnglishReferences EditCitations Edit Do you speak American California English PBS Retrieved October 28 2013 Walt Wolfram and Ben Ward ed 2006 American Voices How Dialects Differ from Coast to Coast Malden MA Blackwell Publishing pp 140 234 236 ISBN 978 1 4051 2108 8 a b California English Do You Speak American PBS Macneil Lehrer Productions 2005 Gordon Matthew J 2004 The West and Midwest phonology Kortmann Bernd Kate Burridge Rajend Mesthrie Edgar W Schneider and Clive Upton eds A Handbook of Varieties of English Volume 1 Phonology Volume 2 Morphology and Syntax Berlin New York Mouton de Gruyter p 347 Podesva Robert J Annette D Onofrio Janneke Van Hofwegen and Seung Kyung Kim 2015 Country ideology and the California Vowel Shift Language Variation and Change 48 28 45 Cambridge University Press Ward 2003 41 fronted features in the young speakers seems to indicate a nascent chain shift in progress but the lack of a true generational age range in the study precludes too strong of a conclusion Alternatively Hinton et al also suggest that possibility that the age specific pattern could also be a function of age grading where the faddish speech style of California adolescents is adopted for its prestige value only to be abandoned as adolescence wanes Bucholtz Mary et al 2007 Hella Nor Cal or Totally So Cal Journal of English Linguistics 35 4 337 doi 10 1177 0075424207307780 S2CID 64542514 Bucholtz et al 2007 343 The Voices of California Project web stanford edu Retrieved 2019 03 14 Conn Jeff 2002 An investigation into the western dialect of Portland Oregon Paper presented at NWAV31 San Diego CA a b Eckert Penelope Vowel Shifts in California and the Detroit Suburbs Stanford University Eckert Penelope March 2008 Where do ethnolects stop International Journal of Bilingualism 12 1 2 25 42 doi 10 1177 13670069080120010301 ISSN 1367 0069 S2CID 35623478 Ritchart Amanda Arvaniti Amalia 2014 The use of high rise terminals in Southern Californian English Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics p 060001 doi 10 1121 1 4863274 Stanley Joseph A 2022 Regional patterns in prevelar raising American Speech A Quarterly of Linguistic Usage 97 3 374 411 Professor Penelope Eckert s webpage Stanford edu Retrieved 2011 12 30 The Voices of California Project web stanford edu Retrieved 2019 03 14 a b Podesva Robert J 2015 Country ideology and the California Vowel Shift Language Variation and Change Stanford University a b c Ornelas Cris 2012 Kern County Accent Studied Archived 2016 06 10 at the Wayback Machine 23 ABC News E W Scripps Company Geenberg Katherine 2014 The Other California Marginalization and Sociolinguistic Variation in Trinity County Doctoral Dissertation Stanford University p iv a b c d Podesva Robert J September 2014 The California Vowel Shift and Fractal Recursivity in an Inland Non Urban Community Stanford University a b c d Geenberg Katherine August 2014 The Other California Marginalization and Sociolinguistic Variation in Trinity County PDF Stanford University King Ed 2012 Stanford linguists seek to identify the elusive California accent Stanford Report Stanford University a b c Geenberg Katherine 2014 What it means to be Norcal Country Variation and marginalization in rural California Stanford University Labov Ash amp Boberg 2006 279 Geenberg Katherine 2014 The Other California Marginalization and Sociolinguistic Variation in Trinity County Doctoral Dissertation Stanford University pp 4 14 Geenberg Katherine 2014 The Other California Marginalization and Sociolinguistic Variation in Trinity County Doctoral Dissertation Stanford University pp 182 3 a b c d e f g h i j DeCamp David 1953 The Pronunciation of English in San Francisco University of California Berkeley pp 549 569 a b Hall Lew Lauren September 2009 Ethnicity and Phonetic Variation in a San Francisco Neighborhood Stanford University a b c Veltman Chloe Why the Myth of the San Francisco Accent Persists KQED News Retrieved 27 November 2019 a b c d e f g h i Hall Lew Lauren 2008 I went to school back East in Berkeley 1 San Francisco English and San Francisco Identity Nolte Carl 28 February 2012 How to Talk Like a San Franciscan SFGATE Retrieved 27 November 2019 Graff Amy June 7 2018 Is there a San Francisco accent The answer may have changed over the years SFGATE Retrieved 27 November 2019 Hall Lew Lauren August 2015 San Francisco English and the California Vowel Shift PDF The University of Edinburgh Retrieved 27 November 2019 Take Two 2013 Map Do Californians have an accent Listen to some examples and add your own Southern California Public Radio Guerrero Armando Jr 2014 You Speak Good English for Being Mexican East Los Angeles Chicano a English Language amp Identity Voices 2 1 56 7 Guerrero Armando Jr 2014 You Speak Good English for Being Mexican East Los Angeles Chicano a English Language amp Identity Voices 2 1 4 Rawles Myrtle R 1966 Boontling Esoteric Language of Boonville California In Western Folklore Vol 25 No 2 pp 93 103 California Folklore Society Western States Folklore Society However science isn t all that sets northern California apart from the rest of the world Sendek wrote The area is also notorious for the creation and widespread usage of the English slang hella which typically means very or can refer to a large quantity e g there are hella stars out tonight 1 Jorge Hankamer WebFest Ling ucsc edu Archived from the original on 2005 10 31 Retrieved 2011 12 30 Lyrics Skull Stomp Hella SongMeanings 2008 11 02 Retrieved 2011 12 30 Mary Kawena Pukui Samuel H Elbert amp Esther T Mookini The Pocket Hawaiian Dictionary Honolulu University of Hawaii Press 1983 Fadiman Clifton Any Number Can Play 1958 Rose Joseph April 16 2012 Saturday Night Live s The Californians Traffic s one big soap opera video The Oregonian Portland Oregon Retrieved December 3 2013 Simon Mark 2000 06 30 The Madness Must Stop Right Now San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved 2012 11 19 Simon Mark 2000 07 04 Local Lingo Keeps The Off Road San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved 2012 11 19 Simon Mark July 29 2000 S F Wants Power Not The Noise Brown rejects docking floating plant off city San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved June 13 2017 a b Geyer Grant Summer 2001 The Freeway in Southern California American Speech 76 2 221 224 doi 10 1215 00031283 76 2 221 S2CID 144010897 General and cited sources Edit Labov William Ash Sharon Boberg Charles 2006 The Atlas of North American English Berlin Mouton de Gruyter pp 187 208 ISBN 3 11 016746 8 Ward Michael 2003 The California Movement etc PDF Portland Dialect Study The Fronting of ow u uw in Portland Oregon Portland State University pp 39 45 archived from the original PDF on 2007 07 29Further reading EditVowels and Consonants An Introduction to the Sounds of Languages Peter Ladefoged 2003 Blackwell Publishing Language in Society An Introduction to Sociolinguistics Suzanne Romaine 2000 Oxford University Press How We Talk American Regional English Today Allan Metcalf 2000 Houghton Mifflin External links EditPBS org Do you speak American California English Stanford edu Penelope Eckert Bolg Vowel Shifts Phonological Atlas of North America USC edu A hella new specifier by Rachelle Waksler discussing usage of hella Binghamton edu Word Up Social Meanings of Slang in California Youth Culture by Mary Bucholtz Ph D UC Santa Barbara Department of Linguistics includes discussion of hella Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title California English amp oldid 1152064483, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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