Broad and general accents

The distinction between broad and general accents is a socio-culturo-economic contrast commonly made between different accents of the same language, typically spoken in a single geographical location:

Sometimes a third category is also distinguished: a cultivated accent that is considered particularly cultured, stylish, affluent, or even contrived, associated with the educated upper class of a given region. All three distinctions are well studied varieties within South African, New Zealand, and Australian English phonology.

Broad and general are not definitively established terms in phonology and phonetics, and thus other terms are commonly used to make the same basic distinction. Irish linguist Raymond Hickey, for example, has classified the broad, traditional accent of Dublin as "local" and the city's collective general accents as collectively "non-local." He has also referred to a particular general, non-local accent common throughout Ireland as "supraregional."[2] The capitalized term "broad" before a location is common in the United Kingdom for local, traditional, linguistically conservative English accents, such as "Broad Lancashire" or "Broad Yorkshire".[3] The alleged mainstream English accent of the United States has been called "General American" since the early-mid 20th century.

References

  1. "Broad." Def. 5. Oxford Dictionaries. © 2015 Oxford University Press.
  2. Hickey, Raymond. A Sound Atlas of Irish English, Volume 1. Walter de Gruyter: 2004.
  3. Keane, Peter. "Tyke: It's all the Vikings' fault (sort of)". BBC Bradford and West Yorkshire. BBC. Retrieved 16 April 2008.
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