New England English
New England English is, collectively, the various distinct dialects and varieties of American English originating in the New England area. Most of eastern and central New England once spoke the "Yankee dialect", some of whose accent features still remain in Eastern New England today, such as "R-dropping". Accordingly, one linguistic division of New England is into Eastern versus Western New England English, as defined in the 1939 Linguistic Atlas of New England and the 2006 Atlas of North American English. The ANAE further argues for a division between Northern versus Southern New England English, especially on the basis of the cot–caught merger and fronting. The ANAE also categorizes the strongest differentiated New England accents into four combinations of the above dichotomies, simply defined as follows:
- Northeastern New England English shows non-rhoticity, the cot–caught merger, and strong fronting. It centers on Boston, Massachusetts, extending into New Hampshire and coastal Maine.
- Southeastern New England English shows non-rhoticity, no cot–caught merger, and no strong fronting. It centers on Providence, Rhode Island and the Narragansett Bay.
- Northwestern New England English shows rhoticity, the cot–caught merger, and strong fronting. It centers on Vermont.
- Southwestern New England English shows rhoticity, no cot–caught merger, and no strong fronting. It centers around the Hartford–Springfield area of Connecticut and western Massachusetts.
Overview
Phonology
Distinctions
New England English is not a single American dialect, but a collective term for a number of dialects and varieties that are close geographic neighbors within New England, but which differ on a spectrum that broadly divides New England English into a unique north versus south, as well as a unique east versus west. Regarding the former feature, all of northern New England historically merges the open and open-mid back rounded vowels, while southern coastal New England historically maintains a noticeable distinction between these two vowels. Regarding the second feature, all of Eastern New England is historically non-rhotic, while all of Western New England is historically rhotic. Therefore, four combinations of these two features are possible, and coincidentally all four exist among New England English speakers, largely correlated with the exact geographic quadrant in New England in which a speaker was raised.Commonalities
All of New England raises the tongue in the first element of the diphthong before voiceless consonants, so writer has a raised vowel, with this often being its only distinguishing feature versus rider. Eastern New England, specifically, also raises the first element of before voiceless consonants.The local dialects of New England are also known for commonly pronouncing the unstressed sequences and with a glottal. While this form of t-glottalization is found throughout the country, a realization with a full schwa vowel is also a variant sometimes observed particularly among New Englanders, with reportings for instance in New Hampshire, Vermont, Connecticut, and Massachusetts. It may, however, be a younger pronunciation variant nationwide.
The extent that speakers raise the tongue in the "short a" vowel, or vowel, varies in New England; however, across the board, New Englanders demonstrate a definite "nasal" short-a system, in which the vowel is always raised the absolute strongest whenever occurring before the nasal consonants and . In all of New England except Rhode Island, the short a may also be somewhat raised in many other environments, similar to the Great Lakes region.
The lack of the weak vowel merger is a feature of more traditional New England English, making Lenin distinct from Lennon, and rabbit fail to rhyme with abbott. Contrarily, in General American English, the first two words are homophonous as, whereas the latter two words are perfect rhymes:.
Certain words have a tendency to use distinct phonemes when compared against the rest of the country: for example, aunt as, the noun route as, and syrup as.
Vocabulary
The following terms originate from and are used commonly and nearly exclusively throughout New England:- ' for sub, a long, large sandwich
- ' as a largely older term for hamburger or hamburger meat
- ' or ' for liquor store
- ' for garage sale or yard sale
- ' for traffic circle or roundabout
- is used as an intensifier word, common before adjectives or adverbs.