New York accent


The sound system of New York City English is popularly known as a New York accent. The accent of the New York metropolitan area is one of the most recognizable in the United States, largely due to its popular stereotypes and portrayal in radio, film, and television. Several other common names exist based on more specific locations, such as Bronx accent, Brooklyn accent, Queens accent, Long Island accent, and North Jersey accent. Research supports the continued classification of all of these under a single label, despite some common assumptions among locals that they meaningfully differ. Accents elsewhere in New York State largely fall under the separate classification of Inland Northern U.S. accents.
The following is an overview of the phonological structures and variations within the accent.

Vowels

Consonants

While the following consonantal features are central to the common stereotype of a "New York City accent", they are not entirely ubiquitous in New York City. By contrast, the vocalic variations in pronunciation as described above are far more typical of New York City–area speakers than the consonantal features listed below, which carry a much greater stigma than do the dialect's vocalic variations:
  • Pronunciation of : The consonant, when pronounced, is usually postalveolar and is often strongly labialized in New York City English, particularly when it appears as the first consonant in a syllable.
  • *Non-rhoticity : The traditional metropolitan New York accent is non-rhotic; in other words, the sound does not appear at the end of a syllable or immediately before a consonant. Thus, there is no in words like here, butter, layer, or park . However, modern New York City English is variably rhotic for the most part; in fact, the New York accent can vary between pronounced and silenced in similar phonetic environments, even in the same word when repeated. Also, while a significant number drop r-coloring from the schwa and most other vowels at least some of the time, as in butter, most current speakers retain r-coloring in the sequence , as detailed in the previous section. Non-rhotic speakers usually exhibit a linking R and frequently an intrusive R as well, like speakers of most other non-rhotic dialects.
  • *Rhoticity : In more modern times, the post-vocalic has become more prominent, with many current New York City speakers using rhoticity to at least some degree. When Metro New Yorkers are more conscious of what they are saying, the typically becomes more evident in their speech. In terms of social stratification, the lower class of New York City tends to use rhoticity less than the middle and upper classes. Also, rhoticity is noticeably based on age since younger generations are more likely to pronounce in coda position.
  • Laminal alveolar consonants: The alveolar consonants,,, and may be articulated with the tongue blade rather than the tip. Wells indicates that this articulation may, in some cases, also involve affrication, producing and. Also, and are often pronounced with the tongue touching the teeth instead of the alveolar ridge as is typical in most varieties of English. Such an articulation may be used in the cluster /tr/, producing possible homophones such as three and tree, and may even appear intervocalically, including when or is pronounced as a tap, according to a report from the mid–twentieth century. As in other American dialects, may be elided or glottalized following in words like painting and fountain ; glottalization, in particular, is reported to sometimes appear in a wider range of contexts in New York City speech than in other American dialects, appearing, for example, before syllabic . At the same time, before a pause, a released final stop is often more common than a glottal stop in New York City accents than in General American ones; for example, bat as rather than.
  • *The universal usage of "dark L",, common throughout the U.S., is also typical of the New York City accent. Newman reports even in initial position to be relatively dark for all accents of the city except the accents of Latinos. However, in the mid–twentieth century, both dark and "not quite so 'dark variants of were reported. The latter occurred initially or in initial consonant clusters and was pronounced with the point or blade of the tongue against the alveolar ridge, though this variant was not as "clear" as in British Received Pronunciation.
  • *Also, is reported as commonly becoming postalveolar before, making a word like William for some speakers or even.
  • *Vocalization of : L-vocalization is common in New York City though it is perhaps not as pervasive as in some other dialects. Like its fellow liquid, it may be vocalized when it appears finally or before a consonant.
  • Th-stopping: As in many other dialects, the interdental fricatives and are often realized as dental or alveolar stop consonants, famously like and, or affricates and. Labov found this alternation to vary by class, with the non-fricative forms appearing more regularly in lower- and working-class speech. Unlike the reported changes with, the variation with and appears to be stable. Historical dialect documents suggest th-stopping probably originated from the massive influence of German, Italian, Irish, and Yiddish speakers who immigrated to the city starting in the mid–nineteenth century.
  • Pronunciation of : Some speakers might replace with the sequence categorically or at least use as an optional variant of, as stereotyped in the pronunciation spelling "Lawn Guyland" for "Long Island". This pronunciation occurs most strongly among Lubavitcher Jews but has also, at least in the past, been used in the speech of Italians, and it has become a stereotype of the New York City accent in general. Speakers with and without this feature may realize as in unstressed -ing endings.
  • Reduction of to : Metro New Yorkers typically do not allow to precede ; this gives pronunciations like yuman and yooge for human and huge.

    Variability

Social and geographic variation

Despite common references to a "Bronx accent", "Brooklyn accent", "Long Island accent", etc., which reflect a popular belief that different boroughs or neighborhoods of the New York metropolitan area have different accents, linguistic research fails to reveal any features that vary internally within the dialect due to specific geographic differences. Impressions that the dialect varies geographically are likely a byproduct of class or ethnic variation, and even some of these assumptions are losing credibility in light of accent convergences among the current younger generations of various ethnic backgrounds. Speakers from Queens born in the 1990s and later are showing a cot–caught merger more than in other boroughs, though this too is likely class- or ethnic-based rather than location-based. The increasing extent of the cot–caught merger among these Queens natives has also appeared to be correlated with their majority foreign parentage. A lowering of New York City's traditionally raised caught vowel is similarly taking place among younger residents of Manhattan's Lower East Side. This is seen most intensely among Western European New Yorkers, fairly intensely among Latino and Asian New Yorkers, but not among African-American New Yorkers. Therefore, this reverses the trend that was documented among Western European Lower East Siders in the twentieth century.

In New Jersey

Though geographic differences are not a primary factor in the internal variation of features within the dialect, the prevalence of the dialect's features as a whole does vary within the metropolitan area based on distance from the city proper, notably in northeastern New Jersey. East of the Passaic and Hackensack Rivers and in Newark, the short-a split system is identical to that used in the city itself. West of the Hackensack but east of the Passaic, the New York City system's function word constraint is lost before nasal codas, and the open syllable constraint begins to vary in usage. West of both rivers, a completely different short-a system is found. Furthermore, New York City's closest New Jersey neighbors, like Newark and Jersey City, may be non-rhotic like the city itself. Outside of these cities, however, the New York metropolitan speech of New Jersey is nowadays fully rhotic, so the phrase "over there" might be pronounced "ovah deah" by a native of Newark but "over dare" by a native of Elizabeth.

Ethnic variation

The classic New York City dialect is centered on middle- and working-class European Americans, and this ethnic cluster now accounts for less than half of the city's population, within which there are degrees of ethnic variation. The variations of New York City English are a result of the waves of immigrants that have settled in the city, from the earliest settlement by the Dutch and English followed in the nineteenth century by the Irish and Western Europeans settling. Over time, these collective influences combined to give New York City its distinctive traditional accent; William Labov argued that Irish New Yorkers, in particular, contributed the accent's most stigmatized features.
The many Eastern European Jewish and Italian immigrants who came, for the most part, until the immigration acts of 1921 and 1924 restricted Southern and Eastern European immigration further influenced the city's speech. Ongoing sociolinguistic research suggests that some differentiation between these last groups' speech may exist. For example, Labov found that Jewish-American New Yorkers were more likely than other groups to use the closest variants of and perhaps fully released final stops, while Italian-American New Yorkers were more likely than other groups to use the closest variants of . Still, Labov argues that these differences are relatively minor, more of degree than kind. All noted Euro-American groups share the relevant features.
One area revealing robustly unique patterns is New York City English among Orthodox Jews, overlapping with Yeshiva English, which can also exist outside of the New York City metropolitan area. Such patterns include certain Yiddish grammatical contact features, such as topicalizations of direct objects, and the general replacement of with. There is also substantial use of Yiddish and particularly Hebrew words.
African-American New Yorkers typically speak a New York variant of African-American Vernacular English that shares the New York accent's raised vowel. Many Latino New Yorkers speak a distinctly local ethnolect, New York Latino English, characterized by a varying mix of New York City English and AAVE features, along with some Spanish contact features. Euro-American New Yorkers alone, particularly Anglo-Americans, have been traditionally documented as using a phonetic split of as follows: before voiceless consonants but elsewhere. Asian-American New Yorkers are not shown by studies to have any phonetic features that are overwhelmingly distinct.