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Trap–bath split

The TRAPBATH split is a vowel split that occurs mainly in Southern England English (including Received Pronunciation), Australian English, New Zealand English, Indian English, South African English and to a lesser extent in some Welsh English as well as older Northeastern New England English by which the Early Modern English phoneme /æ/ was lengthened in certain environments and ultimately merged with the long /ɑː/ of PALM.[1] In that context, the lengthened vowel in words such as bath, laugh, grass and chance in accents affected by the split is referred to as a broad A (also called in Britain long A). Phonetically, the vowel is [ɑː] in Received Pronunciation (RP), Cockney and Estuary English; in some other accents, including Australian and New Zealand accents, it is a more fronted vowel ([ɐː] or [] ) and tends to be a rounded and shortened [ɒ~ɔ] in Broad South African English. A trapbath split also occurs in the accents of the Middle Atlantic United States (New York City, Baltimore, and Philadelphia accents), but it results in very different vowel qualities to the aforementioned British-type split. To avoid confusion, the Middle Atlantic American split is usually referred to in American linguistics as a 'short-a split'.

In accents unaffected by the split, words like bath and laugh usually have the same vowel as words like cat, trap and man: the short A or flat A. Similar changes took place in words with ⟨o⟩ in the lot–cloth split.

The sound change originally occurred in Southern England and ultimately changed the sound of /æ/ to /ɑː/ in some words in which the former sound appeared before /f, s, θ, ns, nt, ntʃ, mpəl/. That led to RP /pɑːθ/ for path, /ˈsɑːmpəl/ for sample etc. The sound change did not occur before other consonants and so accents affected by the split preserve /æ/ in words like cat. (See the section below for more details on the words affected.) The lengthening of the bath vowel began in the 17th century but was "stigmatised as a Cockneyism until well into the 19th century".[2]: 122  However, since the late 19th century, it has been embraced as a feature of upper-class Received Pronunciation.

British accents edit

The presence or absence of this split is one of the most noticeable differences between different accents of England. An isogloss runs across the Midlands from the Wash to the Welsh border, passing to the south of the cities of Birmingham and Leicester. North of the isogloss, the vowel in most of the affected words is usually the same short-a as in cat; south of the isogloss, the vowel in the affected words is generally long.[3]

There is some variation close to the isogloss; for example in the dialect of Birmingham (the so-called 'Brummie') most of the affected words have a short-a, but aunt and laugh usually have long vowels. Additionally, some words which have /æ/ in most forms of American English, including half, calf, rather, can't and shan't, are usually found with long vowels in the Midlands and Northern England. The split is also variable in Welsh English, often correlated with social status. In some varieties, such as Cardiff English, words like ask, bath, laugh, master and rather are usually pronounced with /ɑː/ while words like answer, castle, dance and nasty are normally pronounced with /æ/. On the other hand, the split may be completely absent in other varieties like Abercraf English.[4]

In northern English dialects, the short A is phonetically [a~a̠], while the broad A varies from [ɑː] to [aː]; for some speakers, the two vowels may be identical in quality, differing only in length ([a] vs [aː]).[5] John Wells has claimed that Northerners who have high social status may have a trapbath split[6] and has posted on his blog that he grew up with the split in Upholland, Lancashire.[7] AF Gupta's study of students at the University of Leeds found that (on splitting the country in two halves) 93% of northerners used [a] in the word 'bath' and 96% of southerners used [ɑː].[8] However, there are areas of the Midlands where the two variants co-exist and, once these are excluded, there were very few individuals in the north who had a trapbath split (or in the south who did not have the split). Gupta writes, 'There is no justification for the claims by Wells and Mugglestone that this is a sociolinguistic variable in the north, though it is a sociolinguistic variable on the areas on the border [the isogloss between north and south]'.[9]

In some West Country accents of English English in which the vowel in trap is realised as [a] rather than [æ], the vowel in the bath words was lengthened to [aː] and did not merge with the /ɑː/ of father. In those accents, trap, bath, and father all have distinct vowels /a/, /aː/, and /ɑː/.[10]

In Cornwall, Bristol and its nearby towns, and many forms of Scottish English, there is no distinction corresponding to the RP distinction between /æ/ and /ɑː/.

In Multicultural London English, /θ/ sometimes merges with /t/ but the preceding vowel remains unchanged. That leads to the homophony between bath and path on the one hand and Bart and part on the other. Both pairs are thus pronounced [ˈbɑːt] and [ˈpɑːt], respectively, which is not common in other non-rhotic accents of English that differentiate /ɑː/ from /æ/. That is not categorical, and th-fronting may occur instead and so bath and path can be [ˈbɑːf] and [ˈpɑːf] instead, as in Cockney.

In Received Pronunciation edit

In Received Pronunciation (RP), the trapbath split did not happen in all eligible words. It is hard to find a clear rule for the ones that changed. Roughly, the more common a word, the more likely that its vowel changed from flat /æ/ to broad /ɑː/. It also looks as if monosyllables were more likely to change than polysyllables. The change very rarely took place in open syllables except if they were closely derived from another word with /ɑː/. Thus, for example, passing is closely derived from pass and so has broad A /ˈpɑːsɪŋ/, while passage is not so closely derived and so has flat A /ˈpæsɪd͡ʒ/. Here is the set of words that underwent transition and counterexamples with the same environment:

      RP sets for the trapbath split 
Set Flat /æ/ Broad /ɑː/
/-ðər/ blather, gather, slather father, lather, rather
/-f/ Aphrodite, chiffchaff, Daphne, gaff(e), graphic, mafia, scaffold(ing), staph calf, chaff, giraffe, half, laugh, staff
/-ft/ kaftan, Taft abaft, aft, after, craft, daft, draft/draught, graft, haft, laughter, raft, rafter, shaft
Word-final
/-θ/
hath, math(s), polymath bath, lath, path
Word-final
/-s/
alas, ass, bass (fish), crass, gas, harass,[a] lass, mass, morass, sass brass, class, glass, grass, pass
/-sk/ Alaska, ascot, Asquith, casque, gasket, mascot, masculine, Nebraska ask, bask, basket, cask, casket, flask, mask, masque, rascal, task
Word-final
/-sp/
asp clasp, gasp, grasp, hasp, rasp
Word-final
/-st/
bast, iconoclast, p(a)ederast, hast aghast, avast, Belfast, blast, cast, caste, contrast, fast, last, mast, past, repast, vast
Miscellaneous
/-st/
Aston, astronaut, castigate, chastity, drastic, elastic, fantastic, pastel, pasta, pasty (type of pastry), plastic, raster caster, castor, disaster, ghastly, master, nasty, pastime, pastor, pastoral, pasture, plaster
Word-final
/-l/
all other words in this set chorale, corral, Internationale, locale, morale, musicale, pastorale, rale, rationale
/-mpəl/ ample, trample example, sample
/-nd/ all other words in this set Alexander/Alexandra/Sanders/Sandra, chandler, command, countermand, demand, Flanders, remand, reprimand, slander
/-nt/ ant, antler, banter, cant, fantasy, mantle, pant(s), pedantic, phantom, rant, scant (ad)vantage, aunt, can't, chant, Grant, grant, plant, shan't, slant
Word-final
/-ntʃ/
franchise, revanchist all other words in this set (avalanche, blanch, Blanche, branch, planchet, ranch, rancho, stanch, stanchion)
/-ns/ Anson, cancer, expanse, fancy, finance, handsome, rancid, ransom, romance advance, answer, chance, chancellor, dance, enhance, France, glance, lance, lancet, prance, trance
Miscellaneous
/-s/
ambassador, asinine, assassin, asset, basalt, classic(al), classify, hassle, lasso, massacre, massage, massive, passage, passive, tassel castle, fasten
/-ʃ/ all other words in this set m(o)ustache
Word-final
/-v/
chav, have calve, halve, salve,[b] Slav
/-z/ all other words in this set Glasgow, raspberry

The split created a handful of minimal pairs, such as ant–aunt, caff–calf, cant–can't, have–halve, and staph-staff. There also are some near-minimal pairs, such as ample–sample. In accents with th-fronting (such as cockney), there are additional minimal pairs such as baff–bath and hath–half, and, in accents with th-stopping (which occurs variably in Multicultural London English), there are other minimal pairs such as bat–bath, lat–lath (with lat meaning 'latitude') and pat–path. In addition, the h-dropping in cockney creates more minimal pairs such as aff–half (with aff meaning affirmative) and asp–hasp.

For the words in the last row, subsequent sound changes have altered the conditions initially responsible for lengthening.

There are some words in which both pronunciations are heard among southern speakers:

  • the words Basque, bastard, chaff, dastard, Glasgow, graph, lather, masquerade, pasteurise, plaque, (circum)stance
  • Greek elements as in telegraph, blastocyst, chloroplast
  • words with the prefix trans-

While graph, telegraph, photograph can have either form (in Received Pronunciation, they now have broad A), graphic and permutations always have a flat A.

Broad A fluctuates in dialects that include it; before s it is a more common alternative when in its common voiceless variant (/s/ rather than /z/) (in transfer [tɹɑːnsˈfɜː], transport [tɹɑːnˈspɔːt] and variants) than when it is voiced (thus translate [tɹænzˈleɪt], trans-Atlantic [tɹænzətlæntɪk]).

Social attitudes edit

Some research has concluded that many people in Northern England dislike the /ɑː/ vowel in bath words. AF Gupta writes, 'Many of the northerners were noticeably hostile to /ɡrɑːs/, describing it as "comical", "snobbish", "pompous" or even "for morons"'.[9] Writing on a Labovian study of speech in West Yorkshire, K. M. Petyt stated in 1985 that several respondents 'positively said that they did not prefer the long-vowel form or that they really detested it or even that it was incorrect'.[11] However, Joan Beal said in a 1989 review of Petyt's work that those who disliked the pronunciation still associated it with the BBC and with the sort of professional positions to which they would aspire.[12]

Southern Hemisphere accents edit

Evidence for the date of the shift comes from the Southern Hemisphere accents in Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa.

In Australian English, there is generally agreement with Southern England in words like path, laugh, class. However, with the exception of South Australian English and in the specific words aunt, can't, shan't in any Australian English, other words with the vowel appearing before /n/ or /m/, such as dance, plant, example, use the flat A. Phonetically, the broad A is [äː]. In Australia, there is variation in the word castle, both pronunciations being commonly heard. For more information, see the table at Variation in Australian English. In South Australian English, the broad A is usually used.

South African English and New Zealand English have a sound distribution similar to that of Received Pronunciation.

North American accents edit

Most accents of American English and Canadian English are unaffected by the split. The main exceptions are in extinct or older accents of eastern New England (including the early-20th-century Boston accent)[13] and possibly the Plantation South, particularly Tidewater Virginia, where the broad sound was used in some of the same words, though usually a smaller number, as in Southern England, such as aunt, ask, bath. (Aunt alone still commonly uses the PALM vowel in New England and Virginia.) By the early 1980s, the broad /a/ was in decline in New England.[13]

Related but distinct phenomena include the following:

In North American English, the non-front realization of continental ⟨a⟩ in loanwords such as pasta /ˈpɑstə/ (U.S. only; cf. British and Canadian /ˈpæstə/) is not an example of the trap-bath split because the vast majority of North American English accents do not feature the split in native words. Furthermore, the /ɑ/ realization occurs regardless of the phonetic environment, even in those environments where the lengthening did not take place in the south of England, such as before a bare final /n/ in the German surname Mann /ˈmɑn/ (cf. British /ˈmæn/, homophonous with the native word man).

Notes edit

  1. ^ when not pronounced /ˈhærəs/
  2. ^ when not pronounced /ˈsælv/

References edit

  1. ^ Wells, John C. (1982), Accents of English, Vol. 1: An Introduction (pp. i–xx, 1–278), Vol. 2: The British Isles (pp. i–xx, 279–466), Vol. 3: Beyond the British Isles (pp. i–xx, 467–674), Cambridge University Press, pp. 100–1, 134, 232–33, ISBN 0-52129719-2 , 0-52128540-2 , 0-52128541-0 
  2. ^ Kortmann, Bernd; Schneider, Edgar W; Burridge, Kate, eds. (2004). A handbook of varieties of English a multimedia reference tool. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-019718-1.
  3. ^ Gupta, Anthea Fraser (2005). "Baths and becks". English Today. 21 (1): 21–27. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.607.9671. doi:10.1017/S0266078405001069. ISSN 1474-0567. S2CID 54620954.
  4. ^ Wells (1982), p. 387.
  5. ^ Wells (1982), pp. 356, 360.
  6. ^ Wells (1982), p. 134.
  7. ^ English Places, John Wells's phonetic blog, post of Friday, 16 March 2012
  8. ^ Gupta (2005), p. 23.
  9. ^ a b Gupta (2005), p. 25.
  10. ^ Wells (1982), pp. 346–47.
  11. ^ Petyt, K. M. (1985). Dialect and Accent in Industrial West Yorkshire. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing. p. 286. ISBN 90-272-4864-8.
  12. ^ Beal, Joan C. (1989). "K. M. Petyt, Dialect and accent in industrial West Yorkshire. (Varieties of English around the World. General Series, 6.) Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 1985. Pp. 401". Language in Society. 18 (3): 443–448. doi:10.1017/S0047404500013798. JSTOR 4168067.
  13. ^ a b Wells (1982), pp. 522–3.

trap, bath, split, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 2018, le. 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 Trap bath split news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The TRAP BATH split is a vowel split that occurs mainly in Southern England English including Received Pronunciation Australian English New Zealand English Indian English South African English and to a lesser extent in some Welsh English as well as older Northeastern New England English by which the Early Modern English phoneme ae was lengthened in certain environments and ultimately merged with the long ɑː of PALM 1 In that context the lengthened vowel in words such as bath laugh grass and chance in accents affected by the split is referred to as a broad A also called in Britain long A Phonetically the vowel is ɑː in Received Pronunciation RP Cockney and Estuary English in some other accents including Australian and New Zealand accents it is a more fronted vowel ɐː or aː and tends to be a rounded and shortened ɒ ɔ in Broad South African English A trap bath split also occurs in the accents of the Middle Atlantic United States New York City Baltimore and Philadelphia accents but it results in very different vowel qualities to the aforementioned British type split To avoid confusion the Middle Atlantic American split is usually referred to in American linguistics as a short a split Trap bath split source source An example of the trap bath split Problems playing this file See media help In accents unaffected by the split words like bath and laugh usually have the same vowel as words like cat trap and man the short A or flat A Similar changes took place in words with o in the lot cloth split The sound change originally occurred in Southern England and ultimately changed the sound of ae to ɑː in some words in which the former sound appeared before f s 8 ns nt ntʃ mpel That led to RP pɑː8 for path ˈsɑːmpel for sample etc The sound change did not occur before other consonants and so accents affected by the split preserve ae in words like cat See the section below for more details on the words affected The lengthening of the bath vowel began in the 17th century but was stigmatised as a Cockneyism until well into the 19th century 2 122 However since the late 19th century it has been embraced as a feature of upper class Received Pronunciation Contents 1 British accents 1 1 In Received Pronunciation 1 2 Social attitudes 2 Southern Hemisphere accents 3 North American accents 4 Notes 5 ReferencesBritish accents editThe presence or absence of this split is one of the most noticeable differences between different accents of England An isogloss runs across the Midlands from the Wash to the Welsh border passing to the south of the cities of Birmingham and Leicester North of the isogloss the vowel in most of the affected words is usually the same short a as in cat south of the isogloss the vowel in the affected words is generally long 3 There is some variation close to the isogloss for example in the dialect of Birmingham the so called Brummie most of the affected words have a short a but aunt and laugh usually have long vowels Additionally some words which have ae in most forms of American English including half calf rather can t and shan t are usually found with long vowels in the Midlands and Northern England The split is also variable in Welsh English often correlated with social status In some varieties such as Cardiff English words like ask bath laugh master and rather are usually pronounced with ɑː while words like answer castle dance and nasty are normally pronounced with ae On the other hand the split may be completely absent in other varieties like Abercraf English 4 In northern English dialects the short A is phonetically a a while the broad A varies from ɑː to aː for some speakers the two vowels may be identical in quality differing only in length a vs aː 5 John Wells has claimed that Northerners who have high social status may have a trap bath split 6 and has posted on his blog that he grew up with the split in Upholland Lancashire 7 AF Gupta s study of students at the University of Leeds found that on splitting the country in two halves 93 of northerners used a in the word bath and 96 of southerners used ɑː 8 However there are areas of the Midlands where the two variants co exist and once these are excluded there were very few individuals in the north who had a trap bath split or in the south who did not have the split Gupta writes There is no justification for the claims by Wells and Mugglestone that this is a sociolinguistic variable in the north though it is a sociolinguistic variable on the areas on the border the isogloss between north and south 9 In some West Country accents of English English in which the vowel in trap is realised as a rather than ae the vowel in the bath words was lengthened to aː and did not merge with the ɑː of father In those accents trap bath and father all have distinct vowels a aː and ɑː 10 In Cornwall Bristol and its nearby towns and many forms of Scottish English there is no distinction corresponding to the RP distinction between ae and ɑː In Multicultural London English 8 sometimes merges with t but the preceding vowel remains unchanged That leads to the homophony between bath and path on the one hand and Bart and part on the other Both pairs are thus pronounced ˈbɑːt and ˈpɑːt respectively which is not common in other non rhotic accents of English that differentiate ɑː from ae That is not categorical and th fronting may occur instead and so bath and path can be ˈbɑːf and ˈpɑːf instead as in Cockney In Received Pronunciation edit In Received Pronunciation RP the trap bath split did not happen in all eligible words It is hard to find a clear rule for the ones that changed Roughly the more common a word the more likely that its vowel changed from flat ae to broad ɑː It also looks as if monosyllables were more likely to change than polysyllables The change very rarely took place in open syllables except if they were closely derived from another word with ɑː Thus for example passing is closely derived from pass and so has broad A ˈpɑːsɪŋ while passage is not so closely derived and so has flat A ˈpaesɪd ʒ Here is the set of words that underwent transition and counterexamples with the same environment RP sets for the trap bath split Set Flat ae Broad ɑː der blather gather slather father lather rather f Aphrodite chiffchaff Daphne gaff e graphic mafia scaffold ing staph calf chaff giraffe half laugh staff ft kaftan Taft abaft aft after craft daft draft draught graft haft laughter raft rafter shaftWord final 8 hath math s polymath bath lath pathWord final s alas ass bass fish crass gas harass a lass mass morass sass brass class glass grass pass sk Alaska ascot Asquith casque gasket mascot masculine Nebraska ask bask basket cask casket flask mask masque rascal taskWord final sp asp clasp gasp grasp hasp raspWord final st bast iconoclast p a ederast hast aghast avast Belfast blast cast caste contrast fast last mast past repast vastMiscellaneous st Aston astronaut castigate chastity drastic elastic fantastic pastel pasta pasty type of pastry plastic raster caster castor disaster ghastly master nasty pastime pastor pastoral pasture plasterWord final l all other words in this set chorale corral Internationale locale morale musicale pastorale rale rationale mpel ample trample example sample nd all other words in this set Alexander Alexandra Sanders Sandra chandler command countermand demand Flanders remand reprimand slander nt ant antler banter cant fantasy mantle pant s pedantic phantom rant scant ad vantage aunt can t chant Grant grant plant shan t slantWord final ntʃ franchise revanchist all other words in this set avalanche blanch Blanche branch planchet ranch rancho stanch stanchion ns Anson cancer expanse fancy finance handsome rancid ransom romance advance answer chance chancellor dance enhance France glance lance lancet prance tranceMiscellaneous s ambassador asinine assassin asset basalt classic al classify hassle lasso massacre massage massive passage passive tassel castle fasten ʃ all other words in this set m o ustacheWord final v chav have calve halve salve b Slav z all other words in this set Glasgow raspberryThe split created a handful of minimal pairs such as ant aunt caff calf cant can t have halve and staph staff There also are some near minimal pairs such as ample sample In accents with th fronting such as cockney there are additional minimal pairs such as baff bath and hath half and in accents with th stopping which occurs variably in Multicultural London English there are other minimal pairs such as bat bath lat lath with lat meaning latitude and pat path In addition the h dropping in cockney creates more minimal pairs such as aff half with aff meaning affirmative and asp hasp For the words in the last row subsequent sound changes have altered the conditions initially responsible for lengthening There are some words in which both pronunciations are heard among southern speakers the words Basque bastard chaff dastard Glasgow graph lather masquerade pasteurise plaque circum stance Greek elements as in telegraph blastocyst chloroplast words with the prefix trans While graph telegraph photograph can have either form in Received Pronunciation they now have broad A graphic and permutations always have a flat A Broad A fluctuates in dialects that include it before s it is a more common alternative when in its common voiceless variant s rather than z in transfer tɹɑːnsˈfɜː transport tɹɑːnˈspɔːt and variants than when it is voiced thus translate tɹaenzˈleɪt trans Atlantic tɹaenzetlaentɪk Social attitudes edit Some research has concluded that many people in Northern England dislike the ɑː vowel in bath words AF Gupta writes Many of the northerners were noticeably hostile to ɡrɑːs describing it as comical snobbish pompous or even for morons 9 Writing on a Labovian study of speech in West Yorkshire K M Petyt stated in 1985 that several respondents positively said that they did not prefer the long vowel form or that they really detested it or even that it was incorrect 11 However Joan Beal said in a 1989 review of Petyt s work that those who disliked the pronunciation still associated it with the BBC and with the sort of professional positions to which they would aspire 12 Southern Hemisphere accents editEvidence for the date of the shift comes from the Southern Hemisphere accents in Australia New Zealand and South Africa In Australian English there is generally agreement with Southern England in words like path laugh class However with the exception of South Australian English and in the specific words aunt can t shan t in any Australian English other words with the vowel appearing before n or m such as dance plant example use the flat A Phonetically the broad A is aː In Australia there is variation in the word castle both pronunciations being commonly heard For more information see the table at Variation in Australian English In South Australian English the broad A is usually used South African English and New Zealand English have a sound distribution similar to that of Received Pronunciation North American accents editMost accents of American English and Canadian English are unaffected by the split The main exceptions are in extinct or older accents of eastern New England including the early 20th century Boston accent 13 and possibly the Plantation South particularly Tidewater Virginia where the broad sound was used in some of the same words though usually a smaller number as in Southern England such as aunt ask bath Aunt alone still commonly uses the PALM vowel in New England and Virginia By the early 1980s the broad a was in decline in New England 13 Related but distinct phenomena include the following The phonemic tensing of ae in the accents of New York English and particularly Philadelphia that occurs specifically before f s 8 n m in New York tensing occurs in more environments see ae tensing The drawled pronunciation ae aee in Southern accents many South Midland Appalachian English and inland Southern speakers also raise the ae in aunt dance plant to ɛ or e In North American English the non front realization of continental a in loanwords such as pasta ˈpɑste U S only cf British and Canadian ˈpaeste is not an example of the trap bath split because the vast majority of North American English accents do not feature the split in native words Furthermore the ɑ realization occurs regardless of the phonetic environment even in those environments where the lengthening did not take place in the south of England such as before a bare final n in the German surname Mann ˈmɑn cf British ˈmaen homophonous with the native word man Notes edit when not pronounced ˈ h ae r e s when not pronounced ˈ s ae l v References edit Wells John C 1982 Accents of English Vol 1 An Introduction pp i xx 1 278 Vol 2 The British Isles pp i xx 279 466 Vol 3 Beyond the British Isles pp i xx 467 674 Cambridge University Press pp 100 1 134 232 33 ISBN 0 52129719 2 0 52128540 2 0 52128541 0 Kortmann Bernd Schneider Edgar W Burridge Kate eds 2004 A handbook of varieties of English a multimedia reference tool Berlin Mouton de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 019718 1 Gupta Anthea Fraser 2005 Baths and becks English Today 21 1 21 27 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 607 9671 doi 10 1017 S0266078405001069 ISSN 1474 0567 S2CID 54620954 Wells 1982 p 387 Wells 1982 pp 356 360 Wells 1982 p 134 English Places John Wells s phonetic blog post of Friday 16 March 2012 Gupta 2005 p 23 a b Gupta 2005 p 25 Wells 1982 pp 346 47 Petyt K M 1985 Dialect and Accent in Industrial West Yorkshire Amsterdam John Benjamins Publishing p 286 ISBN 90 272 4864 8 Beal Joan C 1989 K M Petyt Dialect and accent in industrial West Yorkshire Varieties of English around the World General Series 6 Amsterdam and Philadelphia John Benjamins 1985 Pp 401 Language in Society 18 3 443 448 doi 10 1017 S0047404500013798 JSTOR 4168067 a b Wells 1982 pp 522 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trap bath split amp oldid 1196266131, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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