Perceptual Dialectology: Northerners and Southerners’ View of Different American Dialects
Keywords:
Perceptual dialectology, dialects, American English
Abstract
American English, also known as US English, is a set of dialects in the English language mostly used in the United States. It has considerable variations in terminology, phrasing and syntax. The differences are mostly on regional basis. The three major regional dialects are: Northern, Midland, and Southern. Generally, dialect varieties are acceptable in society; however, some of them are more stigmatized than others. The present study has been done to examine American English speakers‟ perceptions towards regional American varieties in terms of correctness, pleasantness, and difference from their own speech.Downloads
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Bucholtz, M., Bermudez, N., Fung, V., Vargas, R., &Edwards, L. (2007). Hella nor cal or totally so cal? The perceptual dialectology of California. Journal of English Linguistics, 35(4), 325-352.
Bucholtz, M., Bermudez, N., Fung, V., Vargas, R., &Edwards, L. (2008). The normative North and the stigmatized South: Ideology and methodlogy in the perceptual dialectology of California. Journal of English Linguistics, 36(1), 62-87.
Clopper, C. & Pisoni, D. (2003). Some acoustic cues for the perceptual categorization of American English regional dialects. Elsevier Science Ltd.
Clopper, C., Levi, S., & Pisoni, D. (2006). Perceptual similarity of regional dialects of American English. Acoustical Society of America, 119(1), 566-574.
Kuiper, L. (2005). La perception est la réalité: Les perceptions parisienne et provençale des variétés régionales de français (Perception of reality: Parisian and Provencal perceptions of regional varieties of French). Journal of Socio-linguistics, 9, 28-52.
Long, D. & Preston, D. (Eds.). (2002). Handbook of perceptual dialectology 2. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Co.
Pearce, M. (2009). A perceptual dialect map of North East England. Journal of Sociolinguistics, 37, 162-192.
Preston, D. (1989). Perceptual dialectology: non-linguists’ views of areal linguistics. USA: Foris Pubns.
Preston, D. (1999). Handbook of perceptual dialec-tology 1. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publish-ing Co.
Preston, D. (2000). Some plain facts about Americans and their language. American Speech, 75(4), 398-401.
Preston, D. (2003). Needed research in American dialects. Durham, NC: Duke University Press for the American Dialect Society.
Woehrling, C. & Boula de Mareüil, P. (2005). Identification of regional accents in French: perception and categorization. Interspeech, 1511-1514.
Wolfram, W. & Ward, B. (2006). American Voices: How dialects differ from coast to coast. Malden, MA & Oxford: Blackwell Publishing.
Published
2014-06-01
How to Cite
Yannuar, N., Azimova, K., & Nguyen, D. (2014). Perceptual Dialectology: Northerners and Southerners’ View of Different American Dialects. K@ta: A Biannual Publication on the Study of Languange and Literature, 16(1), 8-14. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.9744/kata.16.1.8-14
Section
Articles
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License