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Manchester English

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Manchester English. / Baranowski, Maciej ; Turton, Danielle.
Researching Northern English. ed. / Raymond Hickey. John Benjamins, 2015. p. 293-316 (Varieties of English Around the World; Vol. 55).

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter (peer-reviewed)peer-review

Harvard

Baranowski, M & Turton, D 2015, Manchester English. in R Hickey (ed.), Researching Northern English. Varieties of English Around the World, vol. 55, John Benjamins, pp. 293-316. https://doi.org/10.1075/veaw.g55.13bar

APA

Baranowski, M., & Turton, D. (2015). Manchester English. In R. Hickey (Ed.), Researching Northern English (pp. 293-316). (Varieties of English Around the World; Vol. 55). John Benjamins. https://doi.org/10.1075/veaw.g55.13bar

Vancouver

Baranowski M, Turton D. Manchester English. In Hickey R, editor, Researching Northern English. John Benjamins. 2015. p. 293-316. (Varieties of English Around the World). doi: 10.1075/veaw.g55.13bar

Author

Baranowski, Maciej ; Turton, Danielle. / Manchester English. Researching Northern English. editor / Raymond Hickey. John Benjamins, 2015. pp. 293-316 (Varieties of English Around the World).

Bibtex

@inbook{dd57feb13703487a98f0ea59e1333fbc,
title = "Manchester English",
abstract = "This chapter provides an overview of Mancunian English, focusing on consonantal changes in progress in the dialect. It begins with a description of the most distinctive features of Manchester{\textquoteright}s vowels and consonants. This is followed by a quantitative exploration of the linguistic and social constraints on variation in T-glottalling, TH-fronting, and H-dropping, on the basis of a sample of 86 speakers stratified by age, gender and socio-economic status. H-dropping is a case of stable sociolinguistic variation, with working-class males showing the highest rates; there is a strong effect of grammatical category, with preceding and following segments also playing a role. T-glottalling in word-final position is a change nearing completion, initially led by working class males, with the youngest generation of Mancunians in all social groups showing high and comparable rates. Intervocalic T-glottalling is less advanced and shows more social differentiation; working class males are still leading it, but other social groups are catching up in the youngest generation. Both T-glottalling and TH-fronting appear to be male-led changes in Manchester. Internal factors, such as position in the word, following segment, and voicing, are shown to play a role as well.",
keywords = "location and extent of Manchester, T-glottalling, THfronting, H-dropping, data collection",
author = "Maciej Baranowski and Danielle Turton",
year = "2015",
month = dec,
day = "15",
doi = "10.1075/veaw.g55.13bar",
language = "English",
isbn = "9789027249159",
series = "Varieties of English Around the World",
publisher = "John Benjamins",
pages = "293--316",
editor = "Raymond Hickey",
booktitle = "Researching Northern English",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Manchester English

AU - Baranowski, Maciej

AU - Turton, Danielle

PY - 2015/12/15

Y1 - 2015/12/15

N2 - This chapter provides an overview of Mancunian English, focusing on consonantal changes in progress in the dialect. It begins with a description of the most distinctive features of Manchester’s vowels and consonants. This is followed by a quantitative exploration of the linguistic and social constraints on variation in T-glottalling, TH-fronting, and H-dropping, on the basis of a sample of 86 speakers stratified by age, gender and socio-economic status. H-dropping is a case of stable sociolinguistic variation, with working-class males showing the highest rates; there is a strong effect of grammatical category, with preceding and following segments also playing a role. T-glottalling in word-final position is a change nearing completion, initially led by working class males, with the youngest generation of Mancunians in all social groups showing high and comparable rates. Intervocalic T-glottalling is less advanced and shows more social differentiation; working class males are still leading it, but other social groups are catching up in the youngest generation. Both T-glottalling and TH-fronting appear to be male-led changes in Manchester. Internal factors, such as position in the word, following segment, and voicing, are shown to play a role as well.

AB - This chapter provides an overview of Mancunian English, focusing on consonantal changes in progress in the dialect. It begins with a description of the most distinctive features of Manchester’s vowels and consonants. This is followed by a quantitative exploration of the linguistic and social constraints on variation in T-glottalling, TH-fronting, and H-dropping, on the basis of a sample of 86 speakers stratified by age, gender and socio-economic status. H-dropping is a case of stable sociolinguistic variation, with working-class males showing the highest rates; there is a strong effect of grammatical category, with preceding and following segments also playing a role. T-glottalling in word-final position is a change nearing completion, initially led by working class males, with the youngest generation of Mancunians in all social groups showing high and comparable rates. Intervocalic T-glottalling is less advanced and shows more social differentiation; working class males are still leading it, but other social groups are catching up in the youngest generation. Both T-glottalling and TH-fronting appear to be male-led changes in Manchester. Internal factors, such as position in the word, following segment, and voicing, are shown to play a role as well.

KW - location and extent of Manchester

KW - T-glottalling

KW - THfronting

KW - H-dropping

KW - data collection

U2 - 10.1075/veaw.g55.13bar

DO - 10.1075/veaw.g55.13bar

M3 - Chapter (peer-reviewed)

SN - 9789027249159

T3 - Varieties of English Around the World

SP - 293

EP - 316

BT - Researching Northern English

A2 - Hickey, Raymond

PB - John Benjamins

ER -