Accent boundaries and linguistic continua in the laryngeal subsystems of English Cover Image

Accent boundaries and linguistic continua in the laryngeal subsystems of English
Accent boundaries and linguistic continua in the laryngeal subsystems of English

Author(s): Katalin Balogné Bérces
Subject(s): Phonetics / Phonology
Published by: Wydawnictwo KUL
Keywords: laryngeal phonology; laryngeal typology; accents of English; laryngeal realism; voice assimilation;

Summary/Abstract: A parallel is drawn between the northernmost regions of England represented by Durham and Yorkshire and the transition zone Ouddeken (2016) identifies between voicing and aspiration languages in the Dutch-German dialect continuum. It is argued that, owing to historical changes and dialect contact, the Northern Englishes discussed exhibit hybrid laryngeal systems as a result of being geographically intermediate between Scots in Scotland, which is a voice language similar to Dutch, and mainstream varieties of English spoken more to the south in England (and in most of the rest of the English-speaking world), which are aspiration systems of the German type. We model the emergence of laryngeal systems as the setting of three parameters: (i) whether the laryngeally marked/specified obstruent series contains [voice] (L-system) or [asp] (H-system); (ii) whether the laryngeal prime is able to spread (right-to-left); and (iii) whether the system has pre-obstruent delaryngealisation (POD) (due to which in C1C2, C1 becomes unmarked/underspecified). While spreading L with POD derives voice languages and non-spreading H with no POD derives aspiration languages, two mixed combinations derive the intermediate categories of Durham and Yorkshire (spreading L & no POD and spreading H & no POD, respectively). We also show that all remaining combinations are attested cross-linguistically or else theoretically uninterpretable.

  • Issue Year: 8/2022
  • Issue No: 8
  • Page Range: 24-36
  • Page Count: 13
  • Language: English