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Remnants of disappearing Southern dialect features: areas maintaining the distinction of four vs. for, dew vs. do, which vs. witch and vocalization of.

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Presentation on theme: "Remnants of disappearing Southern dialect features: areas maintaining the distinction of four vs. for, dew vs. do, which vs. witch and vocalization of."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Remnants of disappearing Southern dialect features: areas maintaining the distinction of four vs. for, dew vs. do, which vs. witch and vocalization of /r/

3 Project on Cross-Dialectal Comprehension: Gating Experiment 2 Word Phrase Sentence 1. _________ ________________ ___________________________ 2. _________ ________________ ___________________________ 3. _________ ________________ ___________________________ 4. _________ ________________ ___________________________ 5. _________ ________________ ___________________________ 6. _________ ________________ ___________________________ 7. _________ ________________ ___________________________ 8. _________ ________________ ___________________________ 9. _________ ________________ ___________________________ 10. ________ ________________ ___________________________

4 The Southern Shift sit set sat ate seat sight

5 The Southern Shift hit kids set bed Danny grade beatin’ Guy wipin’

6 The Southern Shift

7 The Southern Shift in the vowel system of Thelma M., 31, Birmingham, TS 341

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9 The Southern Shift in the vowel system of Lucy C., 35, Chattanooga, Tennessee, TS 612

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11 The Southern Shift beatin’ grade Guy wipin’ hit kids set bed Danny beatin’

12 Monophthongal /ay/ in five of Belle M., 67 [1995], Birmingham TS 340

13 Monophthongal /ay/ in five of Sheldon M, 31, [1996], Lubbock TX, TS 542

14 Monophthongal /ay/ in five of Matthew D., 45, [1996], Charlotte NC, TS 483

15 Map 18.2. The South defined by monophthongization of /ay/

16 Fig. 18.1. Percent monophthongization of /ay/

17 Map 18.4. Monophthongization of /ay/ in 1940s and 1990s

18 Map 18.6. Stages 2 and 3 of the Southern Shift

19 Fig. 18.2. Outer limits of stage 1 of the Southern Shift

20 Figure 18.2. The second stage of the Southern Shift

21 Stage 2 of the Southern Shift

22 Figure 18.4. The third stage of the Southern Shift

23 Fig. 18.9. The Southern Shift of /ay/, /ey/ and /iy/ highlighted in the normalized means of 402 Telsur speakers displayed by Plotnik Major

24 Fig. 18.6. Percent back upglide with /oh/

25 Figure 18.5. The Southern Shift and the low back upglide

26 Fig. 18.6. Percent back upglide with /oh/

27 The Southern Shift sit set sat ate seat sight Southern England, Australia, New Zealand, Outer Banks (U.S.) Southern U.S.

28 Southern Shift correlations

29 Areas of borderers settlement [Hackett 1989]

30 Settlement patterns of four regional cultures YankeeVirginiaQuaker Upland South SettlementTownsPlantations FarmIsolated villagesclusters House locationRoadsideSetbackCorner-Creek clusters& spring Internal LowModerateHighVery high migration Persistence75-96%50-75%40-60%25-40% David Hackett Fisher, Albion’s Seed, p. 814

31 Slave and free states

32 Confederate States of America [light green: claimed but no formal control

33 The Midland and South re-defined on the basis of phonology


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