fbpx
Wikipedia

English language in Northern England

The English language in Northern England has been shaped by the region's history of settlement and migration, and today encompasses a group of related dialects known as Northern England English (or, simply, Northern English in the United Kingdom). The strongest influence on the modern varieties of the English language spoken in Northern England is the Northumbrian dialect of Middle English, but also contact with Old Norse during the Viking Age, with Irish English following the Great Famine and particularly in Lancashire and the south of Yorkshire, with midlands dialects since the industrial revolution, have produced new and distinctive styles of speech. Some "Northern" traits can be found further south than others: only conservative Northumbrian dialects retain the pre-Great Vowel Shift pronunciation of words such as town (/tn/, TOON), but all northern accents lack the FOOTSTRUT split, and this trait extends a significant distance into the Midlands.

The vowel sound in sun across England. Northern English dialects have not undergone the FOOTSTRUT split, distinguishing them from both Southern England and Scottish dialects.[1]

There are traditional dialects associated with many of the historic counties, including the Cumbrian dialect, Lancashire dialect, Northumbrian dialect and Yorkshire dialect, but new, distinctive dialects have arisen in cities following urbanisation in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries: The Manchester urban area has the Manchester dialect (which is sometimes considered a part of the Lancashire dialect but sometimes separated), Liverpool and its surrounds have Scouse, Tyneside has Geordie and Yorkshire has Tyke. Many Northern English accents are stigmatised, and speakers often attempt to repress Northern speech characteristics in professional environments, although in recent years Northern English speakers have been in demand for call centres, where Northern stereotypes of honesty and straightforwardness are seen as a plus.

Northern English is one of the major groupings of the English language in England; other major groupings include East Anglian English, East and West Midlands English, West Country (Somerset, Dorset, Devon, Cornwall) and Southern English English.

Definition

The varieties of English spoken across Great Britain form a dialect continuum, and there is no universally agreed definition of which varieties are Northern.[2] The most restrictive definition of the linguistic North includes only those dialects spoken north of the River Tees. Other linguists, such as John C. Wells, describe these as the dialects of the "Far North" and treat them as a subset of all Northern English dialects. Conversely, Wells uses a very broad definition of the linguistic North, comprising all dialects that have not undergone the TRAPBATH and FOOTSTRUT splits. Using this definition, the isogloss between North and South runs from the River Severn to the Wash – this definition covers not just the entire North of England (which Wells divides into "Far North" and "Middle North") but also most of the Midlands, including the distinctive Brummie (Birmingham) and Black Country dialects.[3]

In historical linguistics, the dividing line between North and the North-midlands (an area of mixed northumbrian-mercian dialects including the lancashire, the west riding and the peak district dialects) runs from the River Ribble or River Lune on the west coast to the River Humber on the east coast. The dialects of this region are descended from the Northumbrian dialect of Old English rather than Mercian or other Anglo-Saxon dialects. In a very early study of English dialects, Alexander J Ellis defined the border between the north and the midlands as that where the word house is pronounced with u: to the north (as also in Scots).[4] Although well-suited to historical analysis, this line does not reflect contemporary language; this line divides Lancashire and Yorkshire in half and few would today consider Manchester or Leeds, both located south of the line, as part of the Midlands.[3]

An alternative approach is to define the linguistic North as equivalent to the cultural area of Northern England – approximately the seven historic counties of Cheshire, Cumberland, County Durham, Lancashire, Northumberland, Westmorland and Yorkshire, or the three modern statistical regions of North East England, North West England and Yorkshire and the Humber.[5] This approach is taken by the Survey of English Dialects (SED), which uses the historic counties (minus Cheshire) as the basis of study. The SED also groups Manx English with Northern dialects, although this is a distinct variety of English and the Isle of Man is not part of England.[6] Under Wells' scheme, this definition includes Far North and Middle North dialects, but excludes the Midlands dialects.[3]

Scottish English is always considered distinct from Northern England English, although the two have interacted and influenced each other.[7] The Scots language and the Northumbrian and Cumrbrian dialects of English descend from the Old English of Northumbria (diverging in the Middle English period) and are still very similar to each other.[8]

History

Many northern dialects reflect the influence of the Old Norse language strongly, compared with other varieties of English spoken in England.[citation needed]

In addition to previous contact with Vikings, during the 9th and 10th centuries most of northern and eastern England was part of either the Danelaw, or the Danish-controlled Kingdom of Northumbria (with the exception of much of present-day Cumbria, which was part of the Kingdom of Strathclyde). Consequently, Yorkshire dialects, in particular, are considered to have been influenced heavily by Old West Norse and Old East Norse (the ancestor language of modern Norwegian, Swedish and Danish).[citation needed]

However, Northumbrian Anglo-Saxon and Old West Norse (from which modern Norwegian is descended) have arguably had a greater impact, over a longer period, on most northern dialects than Old East Norse. While authoritative quantification is not available, some estimates have suggested as many as 7% of West Cumbrian dialect words are Norse in origin or derived from it.[citation needed]

During the mid and late 19th century, there was large-scale migration from Ireland, which affected the speech of parts of Northern England. This is most apparent in the dialects along the west coast, such as Liverpool, Birkenhead, Barrow-in-Furness and Whitehaven. The east-coast town of Middlesbrough also has a significant Irish influence on its dialect, as it grew during the period of mass migration. There was also some influence on speech in Manchester, but relatively little on Yorkshire beyond Middlesbrough.[citation needed]

Varieties

Northern English contains:

In some areas, it can be noticed that dialects and phrases can vary greatly within regions too. For example, the Lancashire dialect has many sub-dialects and varies noticeably from West to East and even from town to town. Within as little as 5 miles there can be an identifiable change in accent.

Phonological characteristics

 
Red areas are where English dialects of the late 20th century were rhotic; in the North, only some of Lancashire is included.
 
Pronunciation of [ŋg] in the word tongue throughout England; the major Northern counties with this trait are located where the North West and West Midlands meet.

There are several speech features that unite most of the accents of Northern England and distinguish them from Southern England and Scottish accents:[9]

  • The accents of Northern England generally do not have the trap–bath split observed in Southern England English, so that the vowel in bath, ask and cast is the short TRAP vowel /a/: /baθ, ask, kast/, rather than /ɑː/ found in the south. There are a few words in the BATH set like can't, shan’t, half, calf, rather which are pronounced with /ɑː/ in many Northern English accents as opposed to /æ/ in Northern American accents.
  • The /æ/ vowel of cat, trap is normally pronounced [a] rather than the [æ] found in traditional Received Pronunciation or General American while /ɑː/, as in the words palm, cart, start, tomato may not be differentiated from /æ/ by quality, but by length, being pronounced as a longer [aː].
  • The foot–strut split is absent in Northern English, so that, for example, cut and put rhyme and are both pronounced with /ʊ/; words like love, up, tough, judge, etc. also use this vowel sound. This has led to Northern England being described "Oop North" /ʊp nɔːθ/ by some in the south of England. Some words with /ʊ/ in RP even have /uː/book is pronounced /buːk/ in some Northern accents (particularly in Lancashire, eastern parts of Merseyside where the Lancashire accent is still prevalent and Greater Manchester), while conservative accents also pronounce look as /luːk/.
  • The Received Pronunciation phonemes /eɪ/ (as in face) and /əʊ/ (as in goat) are often pronounced as monophthongs (such as [eː] and [oː]), or as older diphthongs (such as /ɪə/ and /ʊə/). However, the quality of these vowels varies considerably across the region, and this is considered a greater indicator of a speaker's social class than the less stigmatised aspects listed above.
  • The most common R sound, when pronounced in Northern England, is the typical English  postalveolar approximant; however, an  alveolar tap is also widespread, particularly following a consonant or between vowels.[10] This tap predominates most fully in the Scouse accent. The North, like most of the South, is largely (and increasingly) non-rhotic, meaning that R is pronounced only before a vowel or between vowels, but not after a vowel (for instance, in words like car, fear, and lurk). However, regions that are rhotic (pronouncing all R sounds) or somewhat rhotic are possible, particularly amongst older speakers:
  • The vowel in dress, test, pet, etc. is slightly more open, transcribed by Wells with ⟨ɛ⟩ rather than ⟨e⟩, used in transcriptions of RP.
  • In most areas, the letter y on the end of words as in happy or city is pronounced [ɪ], like the i in bit, and not [i]. This was considered RP until the 1990s. The tenser [i] is found in the far north, and in the Merseyside and Teesside areas.
  • The North does not have a clear distinction between the  "clear L" and  "dark L" of most other accents in England; in other words, most Northern accents pronounce all L sounds with some moderate amount of velarization. Exceptions to this are in Tyneside, Wearside and Northumberland, which universally use only the clear L,[11] and in Lancashire and Manchester, which universally use only the dark L.[12][13]
  • Some northern English speakers have noticeable rises in their intonation, even to the extent that, to other speakers of English, they may sound "perpetually surprised or sarcastic."[14]
Major distinctive sounds of Northern English[15][16][17]
English
diaphoneme
Example words Manchester
(Mancunian)
Lancashire Yorkshire Cumbria Northumberland
(Pitmatic)
Merseyside
(Scouse)
Tyneside
(Geordie)
/æ/ bath, dance, trap [æ~a~ä]  listen
/ɑː/ bra, calm, father [aː~äː]  listen [ɒː]  listen
// fight, ride, try
[aɪ~äɪ]  listen
Geordie and Northumberland, when not final or before a voiced fricative: [ɛɪ~əɪ]  listen
// brown, mouth [aʊ] [æʊ] [aʊ~æʊ] [ɐʊ] [æʊ] [ɐʊ~u:]  listen
// lame, rein, stain [ɛɪ~e̞ɪ]  listen
[e̞ː]  listen
Lancashire, Cumbria, and Yorkshire, in a word spelt "ght": [eɪ~ɛɪ]
[eɪ]  listen [ɪə~eː]
/ɜːr/ first, learn, word
[ɜː~ɛː]  listen
rhotic Lancashire: [əɹː]
[eː]  listen [øː~ʊː]  listen
/ər/ doctor, martyr, smaller
[ə~ɜ~ɛ]  listen
rhotic Lancashire and Northumberland: [əɹ~ɜɹ]; also, Geordie: [ɛ~ɐ]
// beam, marine, fleece [ɪi] [i]  listen [iː~ɨ̞i] [iː~ei]
/i/ city, honey, parties
[ɪ~e]  listen
also, North Yorkshire: [i]
[ɪi~i] [i]
/ɔː/ all, bought, saw [ɒː~ɔː]
// goal, shown, toe [ɔʊ~ɔo]
[oː~ɔː]  listen
West Yorkshire, more commonly: [ɔː]
[ɔu~ɜu~ɛʉ] [ʊə~oː]
/ʌ/ bus, flood, put
Northumberland, less rounded: [ʌ̈]; in Scouse, Manchester, South Yorkshire and (to an extent) Teesside the word one is uniquely pronounced with the vowel [ɒ], and this is also possible for once, among, none, and nothing
/ʊ/
// food, glue, lose [ʏː]  listen
[ʊu]
North Yorkshire: [ʉ:]
[ʉː]  listen [yː] [ʉː]  listen [ʉu~ʊu~ɵʊ]
/ɒ/ lot, wasp [ɒ]
/ɛ/ bed, egg [ɛ]
intervocalic & postvocalic /k/ racquet, joker, luck [k] or [k~x] [k]  listen [k~x]  listen or
[k~ç]  listen
[k~kˀ]
initial /h/ hand, head, home [∅] or [h] [h]
/l/ lie, mill, salad
[l~ɫ]
/l/ is often somewhat "dark" (meaning velarised) [ɫ]  listen throughout northern England, but it is particularly dark in Manchester and Lancashire.
[l]  listen
stressed-syllable /ŋ/ bang, singer, wrong
[ŋg~ŋ]
[ŋ] predominates in the northern half of historical Lancashire
[ŋ]
[ŋg] predominates only in South Yorkshire's Sheffield
[ŋg~ŋ] [ŋ]
post-consonantal & intervocalic /r/ current, three, pray
[ɹ] or, conservatively, [ɹ~ɾ]
[ʁ] in Lindisfarne and traditional, rural, northern Northumberland
[ɾ] [ɹ~ɾ]
intervocalic, final
& pre-consonantal
/t/
attic, bat, fitness [ʔ] or [t(ʰ)] [θ̠]  listen or [ʔ]

Grammar and syntax

The grammatical patterns of Northern England English are similar to those of British English in general. However, there are several unique characteristics that mark out Northern syntax from neighbouring dialects.

Under the Northern subject rule (NSR), the suffix "-s" (which in Standard English grammar only appears in the third person singular present) is attached to verbs in many present and past-tense forms (leading to, for example, "the birds sings"). More generally, third-person singular forms of irregular verbs such as to be may be used with plurals and other grammatical persons; for instance "the lambs is out". In modern dialects, the most obvious manifestation is a levelling of the past tense verb forms was and were. Either form may dominate depending on the region and individual speech patterns (so some Northern speakers may say "I was" and "You was" while others prefer "I were" and "You were") and in many dialects especially in the far North, weren't is treated as the negation of was.[18]

The "epistemic mustn't", where mustn't is used to mark deductions such as "This mustn't be true", is largely restricted within the British Isles to Northern England, although it is more widely accepted in American English, and is likely inherited from Scottish English. A few other Scottish traits are also found in far Northern dialects, such as double modal verbs (might could instead of might be able to), but these are restricted in their distribution and are mostly dying out.[19]

Pronouns

While standard English now only has a single second-person pronoun, you, many Northern dialects have additional pronouns either retained from earlier forms or introduced from other variants of English. The pronouns thou and thee have survived in many rural Northern dialects. In some case, these allow the distinction between formality and familiarity to be maintained, while in others thou is a generic second-person singular, and you (or ye) is restricted to the plural. Even when thou has died out, second-person plural pronouns are common. In the more rural dialects and those of the far North, this is typically ye, while in cities and areas of the North West with historical Irish communities, this is more likely to be yous.[20]

Conversely, the process of "pronoun exchange" means that many first-person pronouns can be replaced by the first-person objective plural us (or more rarely we or wor) in standard constructions. These include me (so "give me" becomes "give us"), we (so "we Geordies" becomes "us Geordies") and our (so "our cars" becomes "us cars"). The latter especially is a distinctively Northern trait.[21]

Almost all British vernaculars have regularised reflexive pronouns, but the resulting form of the pronouns varies from region to region. In Yorkshire and the North East, hisself and theirselves are preferred to himself and themselves. Other areas of the North have regularised the pronouns in the opposite direction, with meself used instead of myself. This appears to be a trait inherited from Irish English, and like Irish speakers, many Northern speakers use reflexive pronouns in non-reflexive situations for emphasis. Depending on the region, reflexive pronouns can be pronounced (and often written) as if they ended -sen, -sel or -self (even in plural pronouns) or ignoring the suffix entirely.[20]

Vocabulary

In addition to Standard English terms, the Northern English lexis includes many words derived from Norse languages, as well as words from Middle English that disappeared in other regions. Some of these are now shared with Scottish English and the Scots language, with terms such as bairn ("child"), bonny ("beautiful"), gang or gan ("go/gone/going") and kirk ("church") found on both sides of the Anglo-Scottish border.[22] Very few terms from Brythonic languages have survived, with the exception of place name elements (especially in Cumbrian toponymy) and the Yan Tan Tethera counting system, which largely fell out of use in the nineteenth century. The Yan Tan Tethera system was traditionally used in counting stitches in knitting,[23] as well as in children's nursery rhymes,[23] counting-out games,[23] and was anecdotally connected to shepherding.[23] This was most likely borrowed from a relatively modern form of the Welsh language rather than being a remnant of the Brythonic of what is now Northern England.[23][24]

The forms yan and yen used to mean one as in someyan ("someone") that yan ("that one"), in some northern English dialects, represents a regular development in Northern English in which the Old English long vowel /ɑː/ <ā> was broken into /ie/, /ia/ and so on. This explains the shift to yan and ane from the Old English ān, which is itself derived from the Proto-Germanic *ainaz.[25][26]

A corpus study of Late Modern English texts from or set in Northern England found lad ("boy" or "young man") and lass ("girl" or "young woman") were the most widespread "pan-Northern" dialect terms. Other terms in the top ten included a set of three indefinite pronouns owt ("anything"), nowt ("naught" or "nothing") and summat ("something"), the Anglo-Scottish bairn, bonny and gang, and sel/sen ("self") and mun ("must"). Regional dialects within Northern England also had many unique terms, and canny ("clever") and nobbut ("nothing but") were both common in the corpus, despite being limited to the North East and to the North West and Yorkshire respectively.[27]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Upton, Clive; Widdowson, John David Allison (2006). An Atlas of English Dialects. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-869274-4.
  2. ^ Hickey (2015), p. 8–14.
  3. ^ a b c Wells (1982), pp. 349–351.
  4. ^ On early English pronunciation : with especial reference to Shakspere and Chaucer, containing an investigation of the correspondence of writing with speech in England from the Anglosaxon period to the present day (1889), Alexander John Ellis, page 19, Line 6
  5. ^ Hickey (2015), pp. 1–8.
  6. ^ Wales (2006), pp. 13–14.
  7. ^ Hickey (2015), p. 2.
  8. ^ "Germanic and Other Languages". Scots Language Centre. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  9. ^ Wells (1982), section 4.4.
  10. ^ a b c d Wells (1982), p. 368.
  11. ^ Beal, Joan, C.; Burbano-Elizondo, Lourdes; Llamas, Carmen (2012). Urban North-eastern English: Tyneside to Teesside (Dialects of English). Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
  12. ^ Beal (2004:130). Note that the source incorrectly transcribes the dark L with the symbol ⟨ɬ⟩, i.e. as if it were the voiceless alveolar lateral fricative.
  13. ^ Hughes, Arthur, Peter Trudgill, and Dominic James Landon Watt. English Accents & Dialects : an Introduction to Social and Regional Varieties of English in the British Isles. 5th ed. London: Hodder Education, 2012. p. 116
  14. ^ Cruttenden, Alan (March 1981). "Falls and Rises: Meanings and Universals". Journal of Linguistics Vol. 17, No. 1: Cambridge University Press. p. 83. "[T]he rises of Belfast and some northern English cities may sound perpetually surprised or sarcastic to southern Englishmen (the precise attitude imputed will depend on other factors like pitch height and the exact type of rise)".
  15. ^ Heggarty, Paul; et al., eds. (2013). "Accents of English from Around the World". University of Edinburgh.
  16. ^ Collins, Beverley; Mees, Inger M. (2003). The Phonetics of English and Dutch (Fifth Revised ed.). ISBN 9004103406.
  17. ^ "English Accents & Dialects". google.com.
  18. ^ Pietsch (2005), pp. 76–80.
  19. ^ Beal (2010), pp. 26, 38.
  20. ^ a b Hickey (2015), pp. 85–86.
  21. ^ Hickey (2015), pp. 84–85.
  22. ^ Trudgill (2002), p. 52.
  23. ^ a b c d e Roud, Steve; Simpson, Jacqueline (2000). A Dictionary of English Folklore. Oxford University Press. p. 324. ISBN 0-19-210019-X
  24. ^ "The Celtic Linguistic Influence". Yorkshire Dialect Society. Retrieved 11 July 2017.
  25. ^ Leith, Dick (1997). A Social History of English. Routledge. p. 45. ISBN 0-415-09797-5. (Alternate ISBN 978-0-415-09797-0)
  26. ^ Griffiths, Bill (2004). A Dictionary of North East Dialect. Northumbria University Press. p. 191. ISBN 1-904794-16-5.
  27. ^ Hickey (2015), pp. 144–146.

References

  • Beal, Joan (2004). "English dialects in the North of England: phonology". In Schneider, Edgar W.; Burridge, Kate; Kortmann, Bernd; Mesthrie, Rajend; Upton, Clive (eds.). A handbook of varieties of English. Vol. 1: Phonology. Mouton de Gruyter. pp. 113–133. ISBN 3-11-017532-0.
  • Hickey, Raymond (2015). Researching Northern English. John Benjamins. ISBN 978-90-272-6767-2.
  • Lodge, Ken (2009). A Critical Introduction to Phonetics. Continuum International Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-8264-8873-2.
  • Wales, Katie (2006). Northern English: A Social and Cultural History. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-511-48707-1.
  • Wells, John C. (1982). Accents of English. Volume 2: The British Isles (pp. i–xx, 279–466). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-52128540-2 .

Further reading

  • Katie Wales (2006), Northern English: A Social and Cultural History, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-86107-1

english, language, northern, england, this, article, about, modern, northern, england, english, english, northern, united, states, northern, american, english, english, form, northumbrian, english, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, ple. This article is about Modern Northern England English For the English of the northern United States see Northern American English For the Old English form see Northumbrian Old English This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources English language in Northern England news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The English language in Northern England has been shaped by the region s history of settlement and migration and today encompasses a group of related dialects known as Northern England English or simply Northern English in the United Kingdom The strongest influence on the modern varieties of the English language spoken in Northern England is the Northumbrian dialect of Middle English but also contact with Old Norse during the Viking Age with Irish English following the Great Famine and particularly in Lancashire and the south of Yorkshire with midlands dialects since the industrial revolution have produced new and distinctive styles of speech Some Northern traits can be found further south than others only conservative Northumbrian dialects retain the pre Great Vowel Shift pronunciation of words such as town t uː n TOON but all northern accents lack the FOOT STRUT split and this trait extends a significant distance into the Midlands The vowel sound in sun across England Northern English dialects have not undergone the FOOT STRUT split distinguishing them from both Southern England and Scottish dialects 1 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 There are traditional dialects associated with many of the historic counties including the Cumbrian dialect Lancashire dialect Northumbrian dialect and Yorkshire dialect but new distinctive dialects have arisen in cities following urbanisation in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries The Manchester urban area has the Manchester dialect which is sometimes considered a part of the Lancashire dialect but sometimes separated Liverpool and its surrounds have Scouse Tyneside has Geordie and Yorkshire has Tyke Many Northern English accents are stigmatised and speakers often attempt to repress Northern speech characteristics in professional environments although in recent years Northern English speakers have been in demand for call centres where Northern stereotypes of honesty and straightforwardness are seen as a plus Northern English is one of the major groupings of the English language in England other major groupings include East Anglian English East and West Midlands English West Country Somerset Dorset Devon Cornwall and Southern English English Contents 1 Definition 2 History 3 Varieties 4 Phonological characteristics 5 Grammar and syntax 5 1 Pronouns 6 Vocabulary 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further readingDefinition EditThe varieties of English spoken across Great Britain form a dialect continuum and there is no universally agreed definition of which varieties are Northern 2 The most restrictive definition of the linguistic North includes only those dialects spoken north of the River Tees Other linguists such as John C Wells describe these as the dialects of the Far North and treat them as a subset of all Northern English dialects Conversely Wells uses a very broad definition of the linguistic North comprising all dialects that have not undergone the TRAP BATH and FOOT STRUT splits Using this definition the isogloss between North and South runs from the River Severn to the Wash this definition covers not just the entire North of England which Wells divides into Far North and Middle North but also most of the Midlands including the distinctive Brummie Birmingham and Black Country dialects 3 In historical linguistics the dividing line between North and the North midlands an area of mixed northumbrian mercian dialects including the lancashire the west riding and the peak district dialects runs from the River Ribble or River Lune on the west coast to the River Humber on the east coast The dialects of this region are descended from the Northumbrian dialect of Old English rather than Mercian or other Anglo Saxon dialects In a very early study of English dialects Alexander J Ellis defined the border between the north and the midlands as that where the word house is pronounced with u to the north as also in Scots 4 Although well suited to historical analysis this line does not reflect contemporary language this line divides Lancashire and Yorkshire in half and few would today consider Manchester or Leeds both located south of the line as part of the Midlands 3 An alternative approach is to define the linguistic North as equivalent to the cultural area of Northern England approximately the seven historic counties of Cheshire Cumberland County Durham Lancashire Northumberland Westmorland and Yorkshire or the three modern statistical regions of North East England North West England and Yorkshire and the Humber 5 This approach is taken by the Survey of English Dialects SED which uses the historic counties minus Cheshire as the basis of study The SED also groups Manx English with Northern dialects although this is a distinct variety of English and the Isle of Man is not part of England 6 Under Wells scheme this definition includes Far North and Middle North dialects but excludes the Midlands dialects 3 Scottish English is always considered distinct from Northern England English although the two have interacted and influenced each other 7 The Scots language and the Northumbrian and Cumrbrian dialects of English descend from the Old English of Northumbria diverging in the Middle English period and are still very similar to each other 8 History EditMany northern dialects reflect the influence of the Old Norse language strongly compared with other varieties of English spoken in England citation needed In addition to previous contact with Vikings during the 9th and 10th centuries most of northern and eastern England was part of either the Danelaw or the Danish controlled Kingdom of Northumbria with the exception of much of present day Cumbria which was part of the Kingdom of Strathclyde Consequently Yorkshire dialects in particular are considered to have been influenced heavily by Old West Norse and Old East Norse the ancestor language of modern Norwegian Swedish and Danish citation needed However Northumbrian Anglo Saxon and Old West Norse from which modern Norwegian is descended have arguably had a greater impact over a longer period on most northern dialects than Old East Norse While authoritative quantification is not available some estimates have suggested as many as 7 of West Cumbrian dialect words are Norse in origin or derived from it citation needed During the mid and late 19th century there was large scale migration from Ireland which affected the speech of parts of Northern England This is most apparent in the dialects along the west coast such as Liverpool Birkenhead Barrow in Furness and Whitehaven The east coast town of Middlesbrough also has a significant Irish influence on its dialect as it grew during the period of mass migration There was also some influence on speech in Manchester but relatively little on Yorkshire beyond Middlesbrough citation needed Varieties EditNorthern English contains Cheshire dialect Cumbrian dialect Geordie spoken in the Newcastle Tyneside area which includes southern parts of Northumberland Lancashire dialect and accent Mackem spoken in Sunderland Wearside Mancunian spoken in Manchester Salford various other areas of Greater Manchester parts of Lancashire and eastern Cheshire Northumbrian dialect Pitmatic two variations one spoken in the former mining communities of County Durham and the other in Northumberland Scouse spoken in the Liverpool Merseyside area with variations in west Cheshire and southern Lancashire Teesside spoken in Middlesbrough Stockton on Tees and their surrounding areas Yorkshire dialectIn some areas it can be noticed that dialects and phrases can vary greatly within regions too For example the Lancashire dialect has many sub dialects and varies noticeably from West to East and even from town to town Within as little as 5 miles there can be an identifiable change in accent Phonological characteristics Edit Red areas are where English dialects of the late 20th century were rhotic in the North only some of Lancashire is included Pronunciation of ŋg in the word tongue throughout England the major Northern counties with this trait are located where the North West and West Midlands meet There are several speech features that unite most of the accents of Northern England and distinguish them from Southern England and Scottish accents 9 The accents of Northern England generally do not have the trap bath split observed in Southern England English so that the vowel in bath ask and cast is the short TRAP vowel a ba8 ask kast rather than ɑː found in the south There are a few words in the BATH set like can t shan t half calf rather which are pronounced with ɑː in many Northern English accents as opposed to ae in Northern American accents The ae vowel of cat trap is normally pronounced a rather than the ae found in traditional Received Pronunciation or General American while ɑː as in the words palm cart start tomato may not be differentiated from ae by quality but by length being pronounced as a longer aː The foot strut split is absent in Northern English so that for example cut and put rhyme and are both pronounced with ʊ words like love up tough judge etc also use this vowel sound This has led to Northern England being described Oop North ʊp nɔː8 by some in the south of England Some words with ʊ in RP even have uː book is pronounced buːk in some Northern accents particularly in Lancashire eastern parts of Merseyside where the Lancashire accent is still prevalent and Greater Manchester while conservative accents also pronounce look as luːk The Received Pronunciation phonemes eɪ as in face and eʊ as in goat are often pronounced as monophthongs such as eː and oː or as older diphthongs such as ɪe and ʊe However the quality of these vowels varies considerably across the region and this is considered a greater indicator of a speaker s social class than the less stigmatised aspects listed above The most common R sound when pronounced in Northern England is the typical English postalveolar approximant however an alveolar tap is also widespread particularly following a consonant or between vowels 10 This tap predominates most fully in the Scouse accent The North like most of the South is largely and increasingly non rhotic meaning that R is pronounced only before a vowel or between vowels but not after a vowel for instance in words like car fear and lurk However regions that are rhotic pronouncing all R sounds or somewhat rhotic are possible particularly amongst older speakers Lancashire and Greater Manchester areas north of the city of Manchester may residually be rhotic or pre consonantally rhotic pronouncing R before a consonant but not in word final position for example in Accrington and Rochdale 10 Lincolnshire may weakly retain word final but not pre consonantal rhoticity 10 Uvular rhoticity in which the same R sound as in French and German is used has been described as the traditional burr of rural northern Northumberland possible as well though also rare in County Durham 10 The vowel in dress test pet etc is slightly more open transcribed by Wells with ɛ rather than e used in transcriptions of RP In most areas the letter y on the end of words as in happy or city is pronounced ɪ like the i in bit and not i This was considered RP until the 1990s The tenser i is found in the far north and in the Merseyside and Teesside areas The North does not have a clear distinction between the clear L and dark L of most other accents in England in other words most Northern accents pronounce all L sounds with some moderate amount of velarization Exceptions to this are in Tyneside Wearside and Northumberland which universally use only the clear L 11 and in Lancashire and Manchester which universally use only the dark L 12 13 Some northern English speakers have noticeable rises in their intonation even to the extent that to other speakers of English they may sound perpetually surprised or sarcastic 14 Major distinctive sounds of Northern English 15 16 17 English diaphoneme Example words Manchester Mancunian Lancashire Yorkshire Cumbria Northumberland Pitmatic Merseyside Scouse Tyneside Geordie ae bath dance trap ae a a listen ɑː bra calm father aː aː listen ɒː listen aɪ fight ride try aɪ aɪ listenGeordie and Northumberland when not final or before a voiced fricative ɛɪ eɪ listen aʊ brown mouth aʊ aeʊ aʊ aeʊ ɐʊ aeʊ ɐʊ u listen eɪ lame rein stain ɛɪ e ɪ listen e ː listenLancashire Cumbria and Yorkshire in a word spelt ght eɪ ɛɪ eɪ listen ɪe eː ɜːr first learn word ɜː ɛː listenrhotic Lancashire eɹː eː listen oː ʊː listen er doctor martyr smaller e ɜ ɛ listenrhotic Lancashire and Northumberland eɹ ɜɹ also Geordie ɛ ɐ iː beam marine fleece ɪi i listen iː ɨ i iː ei i city honey parties ɪ e listenalso North Yorkshire i ɪi i i ɔː all bought saw ɒː ɔː oʊ goal shown toe ɔʊ ɔo oː ɔː listenWest Yorkshire more commonly ɔː ɔu ɜu ɛʉ ʊe oː ʌ bus flood put ʊ listen no foot strut split Northumberland less rounded ʌ in Scouse Manchester South Yorkshire and to an extent Teesside the word one is uniquely pronounced with the vowel ɒ and this is also possible for once among none and nothing ʊ uː food glue lose ʏː listen ʊu North Yorkshire ʉ ʉː listen yː ʉː listen ʉu ʊu ɵʊ ɒ lot wasp ɒ ɛ bed egg ɛ intervocalic amp postvocalic k racquet joker luck k or k x k listen k x listen or k c listen k kˀ initial h hand head home or h h l lie mill salad l ɫ l is often somewhat dark meaning velarised ɫ listen throughout northern England but it is particularly dark in Manchester and Lancashire l listenstressed syllable ŋ bang singer wrong ŋg ŋ ŋ predominates in the northern half of historical Lancashire ŋ ŋg predominates only in South Yorkshire s Sheffield ŋg ŋ ŋ post consonantal amp intervocalic r current three pray ɹ or conservatively ɹ ɾ ʁ in Lindisfarne and traditional rural northern Northumberland ɾ ɹ ɾ intervocalic final amp pre consonantal t attic bat fitness ʔ or t ʰ 8 listen or ʔ Grammar and syntax EditThe grammatical patterns of Northern England English are similar to those of British English in general However there are several unique characteristics that mark out Northern syntax from neighbouring dialects Under the Northern subject rule NSR the suffix s which in Standard English grammar only appears in the third person singular present is attached to verbs in many present and past tense forms leading to for example the birds sings More generally third person singular forms of irregular verbs such as to be may be used with plurals and other grammatical persons for instance the lambs is out In modern dialects the most obvious manifestation is a levelling of the past tense verb forms was and were Either form may dominate depending on the region and individual speech patterns so some Northern speakers may say I was and You was while others prefer I were and You were and in many dialects especially in the far North weren t is treated as the negation of was 18 The epistemic mustn t where mustn t is used to mark deductions such as This mustn t be true is largely restricted within the British Isles to Northern England although it is more widely accepted in American English and is likely inherited from Scottish English A few other Scottish traits are also found in far Northern dialects such as double modal verbs might could instead of might be able to but these are restricted in their distribution and are mostly dying out 19 Pronouns Edit While standard English now only has a single second person pronoun you many Northern dialects have additional pronouns either retained from earlier forms or introduced from other variants of English The pronouns thou and thee have survived in many rural Northern dialects In some case these allow the distinction between formality and familiarity to be maintained while in others thou is a generic second person singular and you or ye is restricted to the plural Even when thou has died out second person plural pronouns are common In the more rural dialects and those of the far North this is typically ye while in cities and areas of the North West with historical Irish communities this is more likely to be yous 20 Conversely the process of pronoun exchange means that many first person pronouns can be replaced by the first person objective plural us or more rarely we or wor in standard constructions These include me so give me becomes give us we so we Geordies becomes us Geordies and our so our cars becomes us cars The latter especially is a distinctively Northern trait 21 Almost all British vernaculars have regularised reflexive pronouns but the resulting form of the pronouns varies from region to region In Yorkshire and the North East hisself and theirselves are preferred to himself and themselves Other areas of the North have regularised the pronouns in the opposite direction with meself used instead of myself This appears to be a trait inherited from Irish English and like Irish speakers many Northern speakers use reflexive pronouns in non reflexive situations for emphasis Depending on the region reflexive pronouns can be pronounced and often written as if they ended sen sel or self even in plural pronouns or ignoring the suffix entirely 20 Vocabulary EditIn addition to Standard English terms the Northern English lexis includes many words derived from Norse languages as well as words from Middle English that disappeared in other regions Some of these are now shared with Scottish English and the Scots language with terms such as bairn child bonny beautiful gang or gan go gone going and kirk church found on both sides of the Anglo Scottish border 22 Very few terms from Brythonic languages have survived with the exception of place name elements especially in Cumbrian toponymy and the Yan Tan Tethera counting system which largely fell out of use in the nineteenth century The Yan Tan Tethera system was traditionally used in counting stitches in knitting 23 as well as in children s nursery rhymes 23 counting out games 23 and was anecdotally connected to shepherding 23 This was most likely borrowed from a relatively modern form of the Welsh language rather than being a remnant of the Brythonic of what is now Northern England 23 24 The forms yan and yen used to mean one as in someyan someone that yan that one in some northern English dialects represents a regular development in Northern English in which the Old English long vowel ɑː lt a gt was broken into ie ia and so on This explains the shift to yan and ane from the Old English an which is itself derived from the Proto Germanic ainaz 25 26 A corpus study of Late Modern English texts from or set in Northern England found lad boy or young man and lass girl or young woman were the most widespread pan Northern dialect terms Other terms in the top ten included a set of three indefinite pronouns owt anything nowt naught or nothing and summat something the Anglo Scottish bairn bonny and gang and sel sen self and mun must Regional dialects within Northern England also had many unique terms and canny clever and nobbut nothing but were both common in the corpus despite being limited to the North East and to the North West and Yorkshire respectively 27 See also EditNorthern subject rule Scottish English West Germanic languagesNotes Edit Upton Clive Widdowson John David Allison 2006 An Atlas of English Dialects Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 869274 4 Hickey 2015 p 8 14 a b c Wells 1982 pp 349 351 On early English pronunciation with especial reference to Shakspere and Chaucer containing an investigation of the correspondence of writing with speech in England from the Anglosaxon period to the present day 1889 Alexander John Ellis page 19 Line 6 Hickey 2015 pp 1 8 Wales 2006 pp 13 14 Hickey 2015 p 2 Germanic and Other Languages Scots Language Centre Retrieved 10 October 2021 Wells 1982 section 4 4 a b c d Wells 1982 p 368 Beal Joan C Burbano Elizondo Lourdes Llamas Carmen 2012 Urban North eastern English Tyneside to Teesside Dialects of English Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press Beal 2004 130 Note that the source incorrectly transcribes the dark L with the symbol ɬ i e as if it were the voiceless alveolar lateral fricative Hughes Arthur Peter Trudgill and Dominic James Landon Watt English Accents amp Dialects an Introduction to Social and Regional Varieties of English in the British Isles 5th ed London Hodder Education 2012 p 116 Cruttenden Alan March 1981 Falls and Rises Meanings and Universals Journal of Linguistics Vol 17 No 1 Cambridge University Press p 83 T he rises of Belfast and some northern English cities may sound perpetually surprised or sarcastic to southern Englishmen the precise attitude imputed will depend on other factors like pitch height and the exact type of rise Heggarty Paul et al eds 2013 Accents of English from Around the World University of Edinburgh Collins Beverley Mees Inger M 2003 The Phonetics of English and Dutch Fifth Revised ed ISBN 9004103406 English Accents amp Dialects google com Pietsch 2005 pp 76 80 sfnp error no target CITEREFPietsch2005 help Beal 2010 pp 26 38 sfnp error no target CITEREFBeal2010 help a b Hickey 2015 pp 85 86 Hickey 2015 pp 84 85 Trudgill 2002 p 52 sfnp error no target CITEREFTrudgill2002 help a b c d e Roud Steve Simpson Jacqueline 2000 A Dictionary of English Folklore Oxford University Press p 324 ISBN 0 19 210019 X The Celtic Linguistic Influence Yorkshire Dialect Society Retrieved 11 July 2017 Leith Dick 1997 A Social History of English Routledge p 45 ISBN 0 415 09797 5 Alternate ISBN 978 0 415 09797 0 Griffiths Bill 2004 A Dictionary of North East Dialect Northumbria University Press p 191 ISBN 1 904794 16 5 Hickey 2015 pp 144 146 References EditBeal Joan 2004 English dialects in the North of England phonology In Schneider Edgar W Burridge Kate Kortmann Bernd Mesthrie Rajend Upton Clive eds A handbook of varieties of English Vol 1 Phonology Mouton de Gruyter pp 113 133 ISBN 3 11 017532 0 Hickey Raymond 2015 Researching Northern English John Benjamins ISBN 978 90 272 6767 2 Lodge Ken 2009 A Critical Introduction to Phonetics Continuum International Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 8264 8873 2 Wales Katie 2006 Northern English A Social and Cultural History Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 511 48707 1 Wells John C 1982 Accents of English Volume 2 The British Isles pp i xx 279 466 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 52128540 2 Further reading EditKatie Wales 2006 Northern English A Social and Cultural History Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 86107 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title English language in Northern England amp oldid 1133099802, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.