Hi.From: Peter Constable <petercon at microsoft.com> Date: Wed, 15 Jul 2009 18:55:38 -0700
Hmm, yes, fine with me, but even pinpointing the centers gets tough; see the following dialect map of U.S. English: http://www4.uwm.edu/FLL/linguistics/dialect/maps.html You'll see more dots (and hence more density) between NYC and Boston for almost every single pronunciation, I think, even for the pronunciations "you all" and "y'all" (the exception is the pronunciation of "aunt" like "ain't" which seems to be distinctly Southern). (The excessive dots in the NE are probably the result of the large number of people living in the New York/Northeast area.) Still I think most U.S. speakers recognize "y'all" and "you all" as Southern, even if the use of these is now more frequent near NYC and the surrounding area. Of course, many of us actually speak a varied dialect (my aunt and mother from Massachusetts use Southern English most of the time as they live now in the South--but then when you introduce a little-used word such as "saw horse," they'll finally figure out that you mean a "sar hoss" [a pronuncation typical of Fitchburg, MA]). In any case, I like building on our existing BP-47 system for now, with its geographic subtags for now (though we can consider geographic variants too). I'm not against the assignment of systematic variants, but I like Doug's proposal for "written" and "spoken"--it's worth considering (Jack Goody, 1987, "The Interface Between the Written and the Oral," would like it). These my thoughts for now on this. Best, C. E. Whitehead cewcathar at hotmail.com |
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