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T-tapping in Standard Southern British English: An ‘elite’ sociolinguistic variant?

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T-tapping in Standard Southern British English: An ‘elite’ sociolinguistic variant? / Alderton, R.
In: Journal of Sociolinguistics, Vol. 26, No. 2, 30.04.2022, p. 287-298.

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Alderton R. T-tapping in Standard Southern British English: An ‘elite’ sociolinguistic variant? Journal of Sociolinguistics. 2022 Apr 30;26(2):287-298. Epub 2021 Dec 27. doi: 10.1111/josl.12541

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Alderton, R. / T-tapping in Standard Southern British English : An ‘elite’ sociolinguistic variant?. In: Journal of Sociolinguistics. 2022 ; Vol. 26, No. 2. pp. 287-298.

Bibtex

@article{9d7d1a575e584d5eb0290b8f80e92c36,
title = "T-tapping in Standard Southern British English: An {\textquoteleft}elite{\textquoteright} sociolinguistic variant?",
abstract = "Social class is one of the key axes of sociolinguistic variation, but the speech of those at the top of the class spectrum—the elite—is rarely studied. While T-glottalling has spread widely across British English accents, a competing variant—T-tapping—has attracted little scholarly attention in the United Kingdom. This article presents a study of elite speech by examining sociolinguistic variation in T-tapping among adolescent speakers of Standard Southern British English. Data were collected from interviews with teenagers aged 16–19 at two schools in Hampshire, UK. T-tapping is led by those who previously attended private school and is used more by boys than girls in formal speech. The findings suggest that T-tapping may be used to index a combination of authority and informality, which is invoked by elite speakers to assert themselves from a position of privilege while maintaining an image of openness and approachability.  ",
keywords = "elites, social class, social meaning, Standard Southern British English, T-tapping",
author = "R. Alderton",
year = "2022",
month = apr,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1111/josl.12541",
language = "English",
volume = "26",
pages = "287--298",
journal = "Journal of Sociolinguistics",
issn = "1360-6441",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - T-tapping in Standard Southern British English

T2 - An ‘elite’ sociolinguistic variant?

AU - Alderton, R.

PY - 2022/4/30

Y1 - 2022/4/30

N2 - Social class is one of the key axes of sociolinguistic variation, but the speech of those at the top of the class spectrum—the elite—is rarely studied. While T-glottalling has spread widely across British English accents, a competing variant—T-tapping—has attracted little scholarly attention in the United Kingdom. This article presents a study of elite speech by examining sociolinguistic variation in T-tapping among adolescent speakers of Standard Southern British English. Data were collected from interviews with teenagers aged 16–19 at two schools in Hampshire, UK. T-tapping is led by those who previously attended private school and is used more by boys than girls in formal speech. The findings suggest that T-tapping may be used to index a combination of authority and informality, which is invoked by elite speakers to assert themselves from a position of privilege while maintaining an image of openness and approachability.  

AB - Social class is one of the key axes of sociolinguistic variation, but the speech of those at the top of the class spectrum—the elite—is rarely studied. While T-glottalling has spread widely across British English accents, a competing variant—T-tapping—has attracted little scholarly attention in the United Kingdom. This article presents a study of elite speech by examining sociolinguistic variation in T-tapping among adolescent speakers of Standard Southern British English. Data were collected from interviews with teenagers aged 16–19 at two schools in Hampshire, UK. T-tapping is led by those who previously attended private school and is used more by boys than girls in formal speech. The findings suggest that T-tapping may be used to index a combination of authority and informality, which is invoked by elite speakers to assert themselves from a position of privilege while maintaining an image of openness and approachability.  

KW - elites

KW - social class

KW - social meaning

KW - Standard Southern British English

KW - T-tapping

U2 - 10.1111/josl.12541

DO - 10.1111/josl.12541

M3 - Journal article

VL - 26

SP - 287

EP - 298

JO - Journal of Sociolinguistics

JF - Journal of Sociolinguistics

SN - 1360-6441

IS - 2

ER -