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New England English

New England English is, collectively, the various distinct dialects and varieties of American English originating in the New England area.[1][2] Most of eastern and central New England once spoke the "Yankee dialect", some of whose accent features still remain in Eastern New England today, such as "R-dropping" (though this and other features are now receding among younger speakers).[3] Accordingly, one linguistic division of New England is into Eastern versus Western New England English, as defined in the 1939 Linguistic Atlas of New England[4] and the 2006 Atlas of North American English (ANAE). The ANAE further argues for a division between Northern versus Southern New England English, especially on the basis of the cot–caught merger and /ɑr/ fronting (applying twice, for example, in the phrase Park the car). The ANAE also categorizes the strongest differentiated New England accents into four combinations of the above dichotomies, simply defined as follows:

  • Northeastern New England English shows non-rhoticity, the cot–caught merger, and strong /ɑr/ fronting. It centers on Boston, Massachusetts, extending into New Hampshire and coastal Maine.[5]
  • Southeastern New England English shows non-rhoticity, no cot–caught merger, and no strong /ɑr/ fronting. It centers on Providence, Rhode Island and the Narragansett Bay.[5]
  • Northwestern New England English shows rhoticity, the cot–caught merger, and strong /ɑr/ fronting. It centers on Vermont.[5]
  • Southwestern New England English shows rhoticity, no (or a transitional state of the)[6] cot–caught merger, and no strong /ɑr/ fronting. It centers around the Hartford–Springfield area of Connecticut and western Massachusetts.[5]

Overview edit

 
Northeastern (NENE), Northwestern (NWNE), Southwestern (SWNE), and Southeastern (SENE) New England English represented here, as mapped by the Atlas of North American English on the basis of data from major cities
Dialect definitions
NENE is defined by: NWNE is defined by:
  • Widespread rhoticity
  • Full cot–caught merger → [ɑ]
  • Full horse–hoarse merger
  • Full father–bother merger → [ɑ~ä]
  • /ɑr/[äɹ~aɹ]
SWNE is defined by:
  • Widespread rhoticity
  • No or transitional cot–caught merger: [ɑ~ä] vs. [ɒ]
  • Full horse–hoarse merger
  • Full father–bother merger → [ɑ~ä]
  • /ɑr/[ɑɹ]
SENE is defined by:
  • Widespread non-rhoticity
  • No cot–caught merger: [ɑ~ä] vs. [ɔə]
  • Full horse–hoarse merger
  • Full father–bother merger → [ɑ~ä]
  • /ɑr/[ɑ(ɹ)][7]

Phonology edit

Distinctions edit

New England English is not a single American dialect, but a collective term for a number of dialects and varieties that are close geographic neighbors within New England, but which differ on a spectrum that broadly divides New England English into a unique north versus south (specifically, a northern merger of the LOT and THOUGHT vowels, versus a southern merger of the LOT and PALM vowels), as well as a unique east versus west (specifically, an eastern pronunciation of the "r" sound only before vowels, versus a western pronunciation of all "r" sounds). Regarding the former feature, all of northern New England (most famously including Boston, but going as far southeast as Cape Cod and as far north as central Maine) historically merges the open and open-mid back rounded vowels (so that, for instance, pond and pawned are pronounced the same, which is commonly called the cot–caught merger), while southern coastal New England (including Rhode Island) historically maintains a noticeable distinction between these two vowels. Regarding the second feature, all of Eastern New England is historically non-rhotic (famously pronouncing "car" like "kah"), while all of Western New England is historically rhotic (or "r-ful"). Therefore, four combinations of these two features are possible, and coincidentally all four exist among New England English speakers, largely correlated with the exact geographic quadrant in New England in which a speaker was raised.

Commonalities edit

All of New England raises the tongue in the first element of the diphthong /aɪ/ before voiceless consonants, so writer has a raised vowel, with this often being its only distinguishing feature versus rider. Eastern New England, specifically, also raises the first element of /aʊ/ before voiceless consonants (commonly known as Canadian raising).[8]

The local dialects of New England are also known for commonly pronouncing the unstressed sequences /tɪŋ/ and /tən/ (for example, found in "sitting" /ˈsɪtɪŋ/ or "Britain" /ˈbrɪtən/) with a glottal [ʔn̩]. While this form of t-glottalization (especially the /tən/ form) is found throughout the country (typical U.S. pronunciation of "mountain" as [ˈmaʊnʔn̩]), a realization with a full schwa vowel [ʔən] is also a variant sometimes observed particularly among New Englanders, with reportings for instance in New Hampshire, Vermont, Connecticut, and Massachusetts.[9] It may, however, be a younger pronunciation variant nationwide (also reported in places as diverse as Utah, California, and New Jersey).[10]

The extent that speakers raise the tongue in the "short a" vowel, or TRAP vowel, varies in New England; however, across the board, New Englanders demonstrate a definite "nasal" short-a system, in which the vowel is always raised the absolute strongest whenever occurring before the nasal consonants /m/ and /n/ (so that, pan, for example, nearly approaches the sound of the word paean).[11] In all of New England except Rhode Island, the short a may also be somewhat raised in many other environments, similar to the Great Lakes region.[12]

The lack of the weak vowel merger is a feature of more traditional New England English, making Lenin /ˈlɛnɪn/ distinct from Lennon /ˈlɛnən/, and rabbit /ˈræbɪt/ fail to rhyme with abbott /ˈæbət/. Contrarily, in General American English, the first two words are homophonous as [ˈlɛnɨn], whereas the latter two words are perfect rhymes: [ˈɹæbɨt, ˈæbɨt].[13]

Certain words have a tendency to use distinct phonemes when compared against the rest of the country: for example, aunt as /ɑːnt/, the noun route as /rt/, and syrup as /ˈsrəp/.

Vocabulary edit

The following terms originate from and are used commonly and nearly exclusively throughout New England:

  • grinder for sub, a long, large sandwich (with Italian sandwich specific to Maine English)[14]
  • hamburg as a largely older term for hamburger or hamburger meat[15]
  • package store or packie for liquor store (predominant in Boston and Southern New England English)[14]
  • tag sale for garage sale or yard sale (predominant in Southwestern New England English)[14]
  • rotary for traffic circle or roundabout[14]
  • wicked is used as an intensifier word, common before adjectives or adverbs (predominant in Northern, Central, and Eastern New England English, famously Boston).[16]

As in the rest of the Northeast, sneakers is the primary term for athletic shoes, tractor trailer for semi-trailer truck, cellar is a common alternative for basement, brook is common for stream, and soda is any sweet and bubbly non-alcoholic drink. Many Boston-originating local terms have dispersed throughout Eastern New England and, prominently, all the rest of Massachusetts.

Eastern New England English edit

Eastern New England English encompasses Boston and Maine accents, and, according to some definitions, the distinct Rhode Island accent. All Eastern New England English is famous for non-rhoticity, meaning it drops the r sound everywhere except before a vowel: thus, in words like car, card, fear, and chowder (listen). The phrase Park the car in Harvard Yard—dialectally transcribed [pʰak ðə ˈkʰaɹ‿ɪn ˈhavəd ˈjad]—is commonly used as a shibboleth, or speech indicator, for the non-rhotic Eastern New England dialect running from Boston north to Maine, and as far west as Worcester, which contrasts with the rhotic dialects in Western New England and the vast remainder of North America.[17] In all of Eastern New England except Rhode Island, words like caught and cot are pronounced identically (both are often rounded, thus: [kʰɒt]), because those two vowel sounds have fully merged.[18] A phenomenon called Canadian raising occurs throughout Eastern New England, causing writer to have a different stressed vowel sound than rider, and, particularly unique, for the verb house to have a different vowel sound than the noun house. The vowels /aʊ/ and /u/ have relatively back starting positions. The horsehoarse distinction is still present to some extent in some areas, as well as the Marymarrymerry distinction.<[19]

Western New England English edit

Western New England English encompasses the accents of Vermont, western Massachusetts, and Connecticut. They are largely perceived as General American accents in the following five ways. They are fully rhotic, meaning all r sounds are pronounced, /aʊ/ and /u/ have slightly fronted starting positions, and the Mary–marry–merry merger and horse–hoarse merger are fully complete. Western New England English exhibits the entire continuum of possibilities regarding the cot–caught merger: a full merger is heard in its northern reaches (namely, Vermont), a full distinction at its southern reaches (namely, coastal Connecticut), and a transitional area in the middle.[20] Western New England English is closely related to and possibly influential on, but more conservative (i.e. preserving more historical features) than, the Inland North dialect which prevails farther west along the Great Lakes,[21] and which has altered away from Western New England English due to an entirely new chain shift of the vowels since the 20th century. Some Western New England English speakers do have some of this shift's features, though it is not yet fully understood if and how New England directly influenced the Inland North dialect region.[22]

See also edit

Citations edit

General and cited references edit

  • Boberg, Charles (2010). The English Language in Canada: Status, History and Comparative Analysis. Cambridge University Press. p. 156. ISBN 9781139491440.
  • Boberg, Charles (Spring 2001). "The Phonological Status of Western New England". American Speech. 76 (1): 3–29. doi:10.1215/00031283-76-1-3. S2CID 143486914.
  • Fitzpatrick, Jim (2006). "Beantown Babble (Boston, MA)". In W. Wolfram; B. Ward (eds.). American Voices: How Dialects Differ from Coast to Coast. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 63–70. ISBN 978-1-4051-2109-5.
  • Labov, William; Ash, Sharon; Boberg, Charles (2006). The Atlas of North American English. Berlin: Mouton-de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-016746-7.
  • Nagy, Naomi; Roberts, Julie (2004). "New England phonology". In Burridge, Kate; Kortmann, Bernd; Mesthrie, Rajend; Schneider, Edgar W.; Upton, Clive (eds.). A handbook of varieties of English. Volume 1: Phonology. Berlin, FRG: Mouton de Gruyter. pp. 270–281.
  • Stanford, James (2019). New England English: Large-Scale Acoustic Sociophonetics and Dialectology. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780190625658. OCLC 1100425163.
  • Wells, John Christopher (1982). Accents of English. Cambridge [Cambridgeshire]: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-22919-7. OCLC 7578097. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  • Wolfram, Walt; Schilling-Estes, S. (1998). American English: Dialects and Variation. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 126–150. ISBN 978-0-631-20487-9.
  • Flemming, E.; Johnson, S. (2007). "Rosa's roses: reduced vowels in American English". The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 37 (1): 83–96. doi:10.1121/1.4783597.
  • Kim, Chaeyoon; Reddy, Sravana; Stanford, James N.; Wyschogrod, Ezra; Grieve, Jack (May 1, 2019). "Bring on the Crowd! Using Online Audio Crowd-Sourcing for Large-Scale New England Dialectology and Acoustic Sociophonetics". American Speech. Duke University Press. 94 (2): 151–194. doi:10.1215/00031283-7251252. ISSN 0003-1283.
  • Hirshberg, Jeffrey (1981). "Regional Morphology in American English: Evidence from Dare". American Speech. 56 (1): 33–52. doi:10.2307/454477. JSTOR 454477.
  • Reeves, Larkin (August 6, 2009). Patterns of Vowel Production in Speakers of American English from the State of Utah (MS thesis). Brigham Young University. hdl:1877/etd3133.
  • Jones, Jennifer G. (October 11, 2021). "Do Utahns Talk Funny?". Y Magazine. Brigham Young University. Retrieved November 26, 2012.
  • McCarthy, Corrine (March 21, 2010). "The Northern Cities Shift in Real Time: Evidence from Chicago Selected papers from NWAV 37". rUniversity of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics. p. 12.
  • McCarthy, Natalie (2004). "The Northern Cities Shift and Local Identity in a Suburban Cleveland Group" (PDF). p. 7.
  • Szelog, Mike (2012). "Ayuh, the Northern New England Accent in a Nutshell". The Heart of New England. Retrieved November 26, 2023.
  • "What do you call the long sandwich that contains cold cuts, lettuce, and so on?". The Harvard Dialect Survey. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Linguistics Department. Retrieved November 26, 2023.

External links edit

  • Szelog, Mike. "Ayuh, the Northern New England Accent in a Nutshell". The Heart of New England.
  • "Rhode Island 1". International Dialects of English Archive. 9 November 2012. Age: 34, Providence, Rhode Island male Caucasian

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This article contains phonetic transcriptions in the International Phonetic Alphabet IPA For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA For the distinction between and see IPA Brackets and transcription delimiters New England English is collectively the various distinct dialects and varieties of American English originating in the New England area 1 2 Most of eastern and central New England once spoke the Yankee dialect some of whose accent features still remain in Eastern New England today such as R dropping though this and other features are now receding among younger speakers 3 Accordingly one linguistic division of New England is into Eastern versus Western New England English as defined in the 1939 Linguistic Atlas of New England 4 and the 2006 Atlas of North American English ANAE The ANAE further argues for a division between Northern versus Southern New England English especially on the basis of the cot caught merger and ɑr fronting applying twice for example in the phrase Park the car The ANAE also categorizes the strongest differentiated New England accents into four combinations of the above dichotomies simply defined as follows Northeastern New England English shows non rhoticity the cot caught merger and strong ɑr fronting It centers on Boston Massachusetts extending into New Hampshire and coastal Maine 5 Southeastern New England English shows non rhoticity no cot caught merger and no strong ɑr fronting It centers on Providence Rhode Island and the Narragansett Bay 5 Northwestern New England English shows rhoticity the cot caught merger and strong ɑr fronting It centers on Vermont 5 Southwestern New England English shows rhoticity no or a transitional state of the 6 cot caught merger and no strong ɑr fronting It centers around the Hartford Springfield area of Connecticut and western Massachusetts 5 New England EnglishRegionNew EnglandLanguage familyIndo European GermanicWest GermanicIngvaeonicAnglo FrisianAnglicEnglishNew England EnglishEarly formsOld English Middle English Early Modern EnglishDialectsEastern New England English Western New England EnglishWriting systemLatin English alphabet Language codesISO 639 3 Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Phonology 1 1 1 Distinctions 1 1 2 Commonalities 1 2 Vocabulary 2 Eastern New England English 3 Western New England English 4 See also 5 Citations 6 General and cited references 7 External linksOverview edit nbsp Northeastern NENE Northwestern NWNE Southwestern SWNE and Southeastern SENE New England English represented here as mapped by the Atlas of North American English on the basis of data from major cities Dialect definitionsNENE is defined by Widespread non rhoticity Full cot caught merger ɒ ɑ Full or transitional horse hoarse merger No father bother merger a a vs ɒ ɑ ɑr a ɹ a ɹ NWNE is defined by Widespread rhoticity Full cot caught merger ɑ Full horse hoarse merger Full father bother merger ɑ a ɑr aɹ aɹ SWNE is defined by Widespread rhoticity No or transitional cot caught merger ɑ a vs ɒ Full horse hoarse merger Full father bother merger ɑ a ɑr ɑɹ SENE is defined by Widespread non rhoticity No cot caught merger ɑ a vs ɔe Full horse hoarse merger Full father bother merger ɑ a ɑr ɑ ɹ 7 Phonology edit Distinctions edit New England English is not a single American dialect but a collective term for a number of dialects and varieties that are close geographic neighbors within New England but which differ on a spectrum that broadly divides New England English into a unique north versus south specifically a northern merger of the LOT and THOUGHT vowels versus a southern merger of the LOT and PALM vowels as well as a unique east versus west specifically an eastern pronunciation of the r sound only before vowels versus a western pronunciation of all r sounds Regarding the former feature all of northern New England most famously including Boston but going as far southeast as Cape Cod and as far north as central Maine historically merges the open and open mid back rounded vowels so that for instance pond and pawned are pronounced the same which is commonly called the cot caught merger while southern coastal New England including Rhode Island historically maintains a noticeable distinction between these two vowels Regarding the second feature all of Eastern New England is historically non rhotic famously pronouncing car like kah while all of Western New England is historically rhotic or r ful Therefore four combinations of these two features are possible and coincidentally all four exist among New England English speakers largely correlated with the exact geographic quadrant in New England in which a speaker was raised Commonalities edit All of New England raises the tongue in the first element of the diphthong aɪ before voiceless consonants so writer has a raised vowel with this often being its only distinguishing feature versus rider Eastern New England specifically also raises the first element of aʊ before voiceless consonants commonly known as Canadian raising 8 The local dialects of New England are also known for commonly pronouncing the unstressed sequences tɪŋ and ten for example found in sitting ˈsɪtɪŋ or Britain ˈbrɪten with a glottal ʔn While this form of t glottalization especially the ten form is found throughout the country typical U S pronunciation of mountain as ˈmaʊnʔn a realization with a full schwa vowel ʔen is also a variant sometimes observed particularly among New Englanders with reportings for instance in New Hampshire Vermont Connecticut and Massachusetts 9 It may however be a younger pronunciation variant nationwide also reported in places as diverse as Utah California and New Jersey 10 The extent that speakers raise the tongue in the short a vowel or TRAP vowel varies in New England however across the board New Englanders demonstrate a definite nasal short a system in which the vowel is always raised the absolute strongest whenever occurring before the nasal consonants m and n so that pan for example nearly approaches the sound of the word paean 11 In all of New England except Rhode Island the short a may also be somewhat raised in many other environments similar to the Great Lakes region 12 The lack of the weak vowel merger is a feature of more traditional New England English making Lenin ˈlɛnɪn distinct from Lennon ˈlɛnen and rabbit ˈraebɪt fail to rhyme with abbott ˈaebet Contrarily in General American English the first two words are homophonous as ˈlɛnɨn whereas the latter two words are perfect rhymes ˈɹaebɨt ˈaebɨt 13 Certain words have a tendency to use distinct phonemes when compared against the rest of the country for example aunt as ɑː n t the noun route as r uː t and syrup as ˈ s iː r e p Vocabulary edit The following terms originate from and are used commonly and nearly exclusively throughout New England grinder for sub a long large sandwich with Italian sandwich specific to Maine English 14 hamburg as a largely older term for hamburger or hamburger meat 15 package store or packie for liquor store predominant in Boston and Southern New England English 14 tag sale for garage sale or yard sale predominant in Southwestern New England English 14 rotary for traffic circle or roundabout 14 wicked is used as an intensifier word common before adjectives or adverbs predominant in Northern Central and Eastern New England English famously Boston 16 As in the rest of the Northeast sneakers is the primary term for athletic shoes tractor trailer for semi trailer truck cellar is a common alternative for basement brook is common for stream and soda is any sweet and bubbly non alcoholic drink Many Boston originating local terms have dispersed throughout Eastern New England and prominently all the rest of Massachusetts Eastern New England English editMain article Eastern New England English Eastern New England English encompasses Boston and Maine accents and according to some definitions the distinct Rhode Island accent All Eastern New England English is famous for non rhoticity meaning it drops the r sound everywhere except before a vowel thus in words like car card fear and chowder listen The phrase Park the car in Harvard Yard dialectally transcribed pʰak de ˈkʰaɹ ɪn ˈhaved ˈjad is commonly used as a shibboleth or speech indicator for the non rhotic Eastern New England dialect running from Boston north to Maine and as far west as Worcester which contrasts with the rhotic dialects in Western New England and the vast remainder of North America 17 In all of Eastern New England except Rhode Island words like caught and cot are pronounced identically both are often rounded thus kʰɒt because those two vowel sounds have fully merged 18 A phenomenon called Canadian raising occurs throughout Eastern New England causing writer to have a different stressed vowel sound than rider and particularly unique for the verb house to have a different vowel sound than the noun house The vowels aʊ and u have relatively back starting positions The horse hoarse distinction is still present to some extent in some areas as well as the Mary marry merry distinction lt 19 Western New England English editMain article Western New England English Western New England English encompasses the accents of Vermont western Massachusetts and Connecticut They are largely perceived as General American accents in the following five ways They are fully rhotic meaning all r sounds are pronounced aʊ and u have slightly fronted starting positions and the Mary marry merry merger and horse hoarse merger are fully complete Western New England English exhibits the entire continuum of possibilities regarding the cot caught merger a full merger is heard in its northern reaches namely Vermont a full distinction at its southern reaches namely coastal Connecticut and a transitional area in the middle 20 Western New England English is closely related to and possibly influential on but more conservative i e preserving more historical features than the Inland North dialect which prevails farther west along the Great Lakes 21 and which has altered away from Western New England English due to an entirely new chain shift of the vowels since the 20th century Some Western New England English speakers do have some of this shift s features though it is not yet fully understood if and how New England directly influenced the Inland North dialect region 22 See also editBoston accent Maine accent New England French North American English regional phonology New England Regional accents of English speakers Regional vocabularies of American EnglishCitations edit Labov Ash amp Boberg 2006 p 148 Boberg 2001 pp 24 5 Labov Ash amp Boberg 2006 p 226 Stanford 2019 pp 120 160 161 Boberg 2001 p 3 a b c d Labov Ash amp Boberg 2006 p 225 Labov Ash amp Boberg 2006 p 1 Labov Ash amp Boberg 2006 p 227 229 231 Boberg 2010 p 156 Stanford 2019 p 54 Jones 2021 p 1 Reeves 2009 p 1 Labov Ash amp Boberg 2006 p 84 Labov Ash amp Boberg 2006 p 82 Flemming amp Johnson 2007 pp 83 96 Wells 1982 pp 167 520 a b c d The Harvard Dialect Survey What do you call the long sandwich that contains cold cuts lettuce and so on Hirshberg 1981 pp 33 52 Szelog 2012 p 1 Wolfram amp Schilling Estes 1998 pp 126 150 Fitzpatrick 2006 pp 63 70 Kim et al 2019 pp 151 194 Boberg 2001 pp 19 27 Nagy amp Roberts 2004 pp 270 281 McCarthy 2010 p 12 McCarthy 2004 p 7 General and cited references editBoberg Charles 2010 The English Language in Canada Status History and Comparative Analysis Cambridge University Press p 156 ISBN 9781139491440 Boberg Charles Spring 2001 The Phonological Status of Western New England American Speech 76 1 3 29 doi 10 1215 00031283 76 1 3 S2CID 143486914 Fitzpatrick Jim 2006 Beantown Babble Boston MA In W Wolfram B Ward eds American Voices How Dialects Differ from Coast to Coast Wiley Blackwell pp 63 70 ISBN 978 1 4051 2109 5 Labov William Ash Sharon Boberg Charles 2006 The Atlas of North American English Berlin Mouton de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 016746 7 Nagy Naomi Roberts Julie 2004 New England phonology In Burridge Kate Kortmann Bernd Mesthrie Rajend Schneider Edgar W Upton Clive eds A handbook of varieties of English Volume 1 Phonology Berlin FRG Mouton de Gruyter pp 270 281 Stanford James 2019 New England English Large Scale Acoustic Sociophonetics and Dialectology New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190625658 OCLC 1100425163 Wells John Christopher 1982 Accents of English Cambridge Cambridgeshire Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 22919 7 OCLC 7578097 Retrieved November 26 2023 Wolfram Walt Schilling Estes S 1998 American English Dialects and Variation Wiley Blackwell pp 126 150 ISBN 978 0 631 20487 9 Flemming E Johnson S 2007 Rosa s roses reduced vowels in American English The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 37 1 83 96 doi 10 1121 1 4783597 Kim Chaeyoon Reddy Sravana Stanford James N Wyschogrod Ezra Grieve Jack May 1 2019 Bring on the Crowd Using Online Audio Crowd Sourcing for Large Scale New England Dialectology and Acoustic Sociophonetics American Speech Duke University Press 94 2 151 194 doi 10 1215 00031283 7251252 ISSN 0003 1283 Hirshberg Jeffrey 1981 Regional Morphology in American English Evidence from Dare American Speech 56 1 33 52 doi 10 2307 454477 JSTOR 454477 Reeves Larkin August 6 2009 Patterns of Vowel Production in Speakers of American English from the State of Utah MS thesis Brigham Young University hdl 1877 etd3133 Jones Jennifer G October 11 2021 Do Utahns Talk Funny Y Magazine Brigham Young University Retrieved November 26 2012 McCarthy Corrine March 21 2010 The Northern Cities Shift in Real Time Evidence from Chicago Selected papers from NWAV 37 rUniversity of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics p 12 McCarthy Natalie 2004 The Northern Cities Shift and Local Identity in a Suburban Cleveland Group PDF p 7 Szelog Mike 2012 Ayuh the Northern New England Accent in a Nutshell The Heart of New England Retrieved November 26 2023 What do you call the long sandwich that contains cold cuts lettuce and so on The Harvard Dialect Survey Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Linguistics Department Retrieved November 26 2023 External links edit nbsp Look up Appendix List of shibboleths in Wiktionary the free dictionary Szelog Mike Ayuh the Northern New England Accent in a Nutshell The Heart of New England Rhode Island 1 International Dialects of English Archive 9 November 2012 Age 34 Providence Rhode Island male Caucasian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title New England English amp oldid 1187014840, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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