Linguistic Atlas Project


The Linguistic Atlas Project was founded in 1929 at the behest of the American Dialect Society and remains the most thorough and expansive study of American English undertaken to date. The LAP consists of several sub-projects, divided by geographical region. Each project represents the collection of linguistic data in the form of dialect interviews, face-to-face interviews in which people were asked a series of targeted questions, such as "What do you call the piece of furniture that has drawers for you to keep your clothes in?". The 800+ targeted questions cover a range of topics, from the house and farm/ranch, to weather, flora and fauna, to food and cooking, and to community relationships. Fieldworkers wrote down the answers in International Phonetic Alphabet, a set of symbols that linguists use to capture pronunciation.
The first director of the LAP was Hans Kurath, an Austrian-American linguist, who oversaw the first of the LAP regional surveys. Over time, Kurath's students and other researchers branched out and started regional projects at universities across the U.S. To date, over 5,000 interviews have been conducted.
The concept behind the Linguistic Atlas has been to paint a comprehensive picture of American English, a picture that highlights variation and points to connections between language and various social, cultural and historical factors. The amount of linguistic data contained in the Atlas is unparalleled in American sociolinguistics; truly this project exemplifies the concept of "big data" in the social sciences.
While the project is still working on making all this data digitized and available to the public, there has been a great deal of research produced from what is currently available.

Project overviews

The project is currently held at the University of Kentucky and was previously housed at the University of Georgia.
NameFounding DirectorInterview DatesStatesNumber of SpeakersIf Audio Exisits
LANEHans Kurath1931-1933MA, NH, CT, VT, NY, RI, ME416Yes, partial interviews have been transcribed
LAMSASHans Kurath1933-1974NY, NJ, PA, WV, DE, MD, VA, NC, SC, GA, FL1162There are some audio recordings
LANCSAlbert Marchwardt1933-1978WI, MI, IL, IN, OH, KY542There are some audio recordings, and transcripts of full interviews are currently being transcribed
LAGSLee Pederson1968-1983FL, GA, TN, AL, MS, LA, AR, TX914There are audio files
LAOWilliam Van Riper1959-1963OK57There are audio files
LAPNWCarroll Reed, David CarlsonUnknownOR, WA, ID51Some audio files exist for the interviews
LAPCDavid Reed, Allen Metcalf1952-1959CA, NV300-
LAMRM. Madsen, L. Antieau1988-2003CO, WY, UT70Yes, and interviews have been fully transcribed
LAUMHarold Allen, M. Linn1949-1962MN, IA, ND, SD, NE203No
GDSLee Pederson1968-1972GA288Yes
LDSC.M. Wise1935-1951LA84No
LAHC.M. Wise1950HI8No
GullahLorenzo Dow Turner1933SC, GA21unsure
SKNPLee Pederson2003St. Kitts, Nevis23Yes
LASEG. Lowman1937-1938Southern England73No
HuVaJ. Hawkins1938-1940NY, NJ34No

This table is adapted from

Publications