Inland Northern American English

From MedBib.com - Medicine & Nature

This map shows the approximate extent of the Northern Cities Vowel Shift, and thus the approximate area where the Inland North dialect predominates. Note that the region surrounding Erie, Pennsylvania, is excluded; the dialect spoken there more closely resembles that of Pittsburgh.

The Inland North dialect of American English is spoken in a region that includes the cities along the Erie Canal and in the Great Lakes region, as well as a corridor extending down across central Illinois from Chicago to St. Louis.[1]

This dialect used to be the "standard Midwestern" speech that is traditionally regarded as the basis for General American in the mid-20th century,[2] though it has been since modified by an innovative vowel shift known as the Northern Cities Shift, which has altered its character.[3]

Notable speakers of the Inland North Dialect include actors Jim Belushi, Dennis Farina, Dennis Franz, and Chris Farley; Secretary of State-designate Hillary Clinton; actresses Katie Holmes and Bonnie Hunt; filmmaker Michael Moore; and musician Bob Seger.[citation needed]

Contents

Distribution

The Inland North consists of western and central New York State (Syracuse, Rochester, Buffalo); northern Ohio (Akron, Cleveland, Toledo); Michigan's Lower Peninsula (Detroit, Grand Rapids); northwestern Indiana (Gary); northern Illinois (Chicago); and southeastern Wisconsin (Kenosha, Racine, Milwaukee).

A corridor of cities along Interstate 55 southwest of Chicago as far as St. Louis, Missouri, which historically belong to the Midland region, have also begun taking on features of the Inland North's Northern Cities Shift in recent decades. On the other hand, Erie, Pennsylvania was regarded as an Inland North city by researchers in the first half of the 20th century, but it never underwent the Northern Cities Shift and now shares many features with the rest of Western Pennsylvania.

Characteristics

Phonology

Many of the characteristics listed here are not unique to the region, but are found elsewhere in the United States, especially elsewhere in the Midwest.

Phonetics

Based on Labov et al.; averaged F1/F2 means for speakers from the Inland North. Note that /æ/ is higher and fronter than /ɛ/, while /ʌ/ is more retracted than /ɑ/.

This chain shift is found only in the Inland North—in fact, it is the feature that defines the Inland North, for modern dialectological purposes. It has been occurring in six stages:

  1. The first stage of the shift is the general raising and fronting of /æ/, which often comes to be realized as a centering diphthong of the type [eə] or [ɪə].
  2. The second stage is the fronting of /ɑ/ to [a], which occupies a place close to the former /æ/.
  3. In the third stage, /ɔ/ lowers towards [ɑ].
  4. The fourth stage is the backing and lowering of /ɛ/.
  5. During the fifth stage, /ʌ/ is backed towards [ɔ].
  6. In the sixth stage, /ɪ/ is lowered and backed, although it is kept distinct from /ɛ/ in all phonetic environments, so the pin-pen merger does not occur.

Note that this shift is in progress across the region, but that each subsequent stage is a result of the previous one(s), so that an individual speaker may not display all of these shifts, but no speaker will display the last without also showing the ones before it.

  1. Canadian raising of /aɪ/ is found in this region.[5] It occurs before some voiced consonants. For example, many speakers pronounce fire, tiger, and spider with the raised vowel.
  2. The starting point of /aʊ/ (for example, browse, down) is pronounced noticeably in the back of the mouth [bɻɑʊz], [dɑʊn], while /aɪ/ (size, dine) is much further front.
  3. Like /aʊ/, the nucleus of /oʊ/ (as in go and boat) remains a back vowel [oʊ], not undergoing the fronting that is common in some other regions.[6]
  4. /ɑr/ (as in bar) is fronted for many speakers in this region.

Vocabulary

Note that not all of these are specific to the region.

Individual cities and regions also have their own vocabularies. For example, in eastern and southern Wisconsin, drinking fountains are known as bubblers, in Chicago and surround suburbs, tennis shoes are often known as gym shoes, and in Cleveland the strip of grass between the sidewalk and the street is called a tree lawn.

References

  1. ^ Labov et al., pp. 119-122.
  2. ^ "Talking the Tawk", The New Yorker
  3. ^ Labov et al., p. 188.
  4. ^ Labov et al., Chapter 14, p. 189.
  5. ^ Labov et al. (2006), pp. 203-204.
  6. ^ Labov et al. (2006), p. 187

Sources

See also

External links