London and Scottish Accents in British Phonetics

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Topics in Phonetics &
Phonology
John Corbett: USP-CAPES International Fellow
Session 6: British accents – London & Scotland
Course
structure
1.
Introduction: Review of IPA & lexical sets
2.
Review: Transcribing connected speech
3.
Accents of English 1: Reference accents (RP and
GenAm)
4.
Revisiting English as a lingua franca
5.
Accents of English 2: American accents
6.
Accents of English 3: British Accents
7.
Accents of English 4: Accents of World English
8.
Accents of English 5: Brazilian English accents
Course
structure
9.
Acoustic phonetics: Using WASP
10.
Rhythms of English: Poetic metre
11.
Rhythms of English: Rhythm in speech
12.
Discourse intonation 1
13.
Discourse intonation 2
14.
Course review
This session
London and Scottish accents:
What is their history?
What are their indexical features?
Can you distinguish an English from a Scottish speaker?
Can you switch from English to Scottish?
What is the
London
accent?
‘Cockney’ is the name given to the broad, working class variety of
English associated with the East End of London.
Diffused South of the River Thames and across much of SE
England. Adopted by younger middle class (‘Mockney’).
Merged into more recent Multicultural London English (MLE).
Example of
Cockney
accent
https://www.bl.uk/collection-items/cockney-accent-freddie-ridley-road-
market
British Library Sound Archive
Freddie, a street-market trader (born 1951; recorded 1999)
Cockney:
Indexical
features
Consonantal features:
TH-fronting /
θ
, ð/ > /f, v/     
th
ings
, 
bro
th
er
T-glottaling /t/ > /ʔ/ medially and finally
 
bu
tt
er, wan
t
L-vocalisation  /l/ > /ʊ/  
fee
l
, rea
l
, wi
l
d, litt
l
e
H-dropping 
h
ave, 
H
arrods, 
h
andkerchief, 
h
old
Hypercorrection 
h
adjective, 
h
and (conjunction), 
h
about
Listen to Freddie again. Not all of these features will necessarily be
present in his speech.
Example of
Cockney
accent
https://www.bl.uk/collection-items/cockney-accent-freddie-ridley-road-
market
Freddie: About 
hundred
 years, roughly. They didn't put any value on it in
the past, so there, there's not any pr, 
real
 proper records before nineteen-
twenty
-six. But, uhm, my 
eldest
 relative, my aunt Lil', who's 
still
 alive -
she's ninety-
something 
- uhm, says that the 
market
 started in the
 
High
Street, uhm, much in the same way as a 
Third
 World 
market
 would
 
start
:
people 
brought their spare vegetables and 
whatever
 they had to spare to
the 
market 
and traded them and 
sold
 
that
. Uh, but when the trams
started
, it was too dangerous to have the 
market 
in the 
High Street 
and
they 
brought it
 round here into Ridley Road.
Example of
Cockney
accent:
consonants
Freddie: About 
hundred
 years, roughly. They didn't put any value on it in the
past, so there, there's not any pr, 
real
 proper records before nineteen-
twenty
-six. But, uhm, my 
eldest
 relative, my aunt Lil', who's 
still
 alive - she's
ninety-
something 
- uhm, says that the 
market
 started in the
 
High
 
Street,
uhm, much in the same way as a 
Third
 World 
market
 would
 
start
: 
people
brought their spare 
vegetables
 and 
whatever
 they 
had
 to spare to the
market 
and traded them and 
sold
 
that
. Uh, but when the trams 
started
, it
was too dangerous to have the 
market 
in the 
High Street 
and they 
brought
it
 round 
here
 into Ridley Road.
h
undred, 
h
ad, 
h
ere
     
H-dropping
rea
l
, e
l
dest, Li
l
, sti
ll
, peop
l
e, vegetables, so
l
d, Wor
l
d
 
L-vocalisation
some
th
ing, 
Th
ird (later, clo
th
ing)
    
TH-fronting
twen
t
y, marke
t
, wha
t
ever, tha
t
, star
t
ed, brough
t
 i
t
   
 
T-glottalisating
Cockney:
Indexical
features: 5
dipthongs
  
Example of
Cockney
accent
https://www.bl.uk/collection-items/cockney-accent-freddie-ridley-road-
market
Freddie: About hundred years, roughly. They didn't put any value on it in
the past, so there, there's not any pr, real proper records before 
nineteen
-
twenty-six. But, uhm, my eldest relative, my aunt Lil', who's still 
alive
 -
she's 
ninety
-something - uhm, says that the market started in the 
High
Street
, uhm, much in the 
same
 
way
 as a Third World market would start:
people 
brought
 their 
spare
 vegetables and whatever they had to 
spare
 to
the market and 
traded 
them and 
sold
 that. Uh, but when the trams
started, it was too 
dangerous
 to have the market in the 
High Street 
and
they 
brought 
it round here into Ridley 
Road
.
Example of
Cockney
accent
Freddie: About hundred years, roughly. They didn't put any value on it in the
past, so there, there's not any pr, real proper records before 
nineteen
-twenty-
six. But, uhm, my eldest relative, my aunt Lil', who's still 
alive
 - she's 
ninety
-
something - uhm, says that the market started in the 
High
 
Street
, uhm, much
in the 
same
 
way
 as a Third World market would start: people 
brought
 their
spare
 vegetables and whatever they had to 
spare
 to the market and 
traded
them and 
sold
 that. Uh, but when the trams started, it was too 
dangerous
 to
have the market in the 
High Street 
and they 
brought 
it round here into Ridley
Road
.
iɪ ~ əi
  
nine
teen
, street,
æɪ ~ ʌɪ
  
same, way, spare, traded, 
dang
erous
o: ~ ɔə
  
brought
ʌʊ
  
sold, road
ɑɪ
  
nine
teen, alive, ninety, High
Can you speak
Cockney?
Freddie: About 
hundred 
years, roughly. They didn't put any value on it in the
past, so there, there's not any 
real
 proper records before 
nineteen
-twenty-
six. But, uhm, my 
eldest
 relative, my aunt 
Lil
', who's 
still
 
alive
 - she's 
ninety
-
something
 - uhm, says that the 
market
 
started
 in the 
High
 
Street
, uhm,
much in the 
same
 
way
 as a 
Third World market 
would start: 
people brought
their 
spare
 vegetables and 
whatever 
they had to 
spare
 to the market and
traded 
them and 
sold
 that. Uh, but when the trams 
started
, it was too
dangerous
 to 
have
 the market in the 
High Street 
and they 
brought it 
round
here
 into Ridley 
Road
.
iɪ ~ əi
  
nine
teen
, street,
æɪ ~ ʌɪ
  
same, way, spare, traded, 
dang
erous
o: ~ ɔə
  
brought
ʌʊ
  
sold, road
ɑɪ
  
nine
teen, alive, ninety, High
hundred
 
, had, here
     
H-dropping
real, eldest, Lil, still, people, vegetables, sold, World
  
L-vocalisation
something, Third 
     
TH-fronting
twenty, market, whatever, that, started, brought it   
  
T-glottalisating
Can you speak
London
English?
There are various YouTube and other vídeos online on London
accents (Cockney, Estuary, MLE). Listen to a few of them and try
them out!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LY8FjXN14ew
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_H8r2Izzo5k
Scottish
accents of
English
How many Scottish accents are there?
 Main differences from RP
 Examples from the SCOTS corpus
 Future developments
Why are there
different
accents?
Until 7
th
 Century: Celtic languages
7
th
 Century: Northumbrian OE in SE
Scotland.
c.1066: Northern OE speakers
pushed into SE Scotland by the
´Harrying of the North.’ Northern OE
develops into Scots and diffuses
through the lowlands.
Until 1100:
 
Northern OE
1100-1700:
 
Older Scots
1700-now:
 
Modern Scots
Language contact over time: Celtic,
OE, ON, Norman French, Dutch…
No pressure to standardise till 18
th
 C.
How many
accents are
there?
6 main accent groups:
 Central (E, W, SW)
 Southern
 North-East
 Northern
 Insular (Orkney &
Shetland)
 Northern Irish
(Ulster)
How many
accents are
there?
Focus on 4 areas
 Central (E, W,
SW)
 Southern
 North-East &
Northern
 Insular (Orkney &
Shetland)
Main
differences:
Broad scots &
SSE
Broad Scots: Regional and socially
differentiated
Scottish Standard English (SSE):
‘Educated/polite’ standard Scottish
accent, originating in 18
th
 C, modelled on
southern English
Some
distinctive
Scottish
consonants
Some distinctive
Scottish vowels
and diphthongs
Some
features of
broad
scots
articulatio
ns
/l/ elision in words like <all, fall, call, hall, wall>
Scottish vowel-length rule: lengthening of
vowels in stressed syllables, only in certain
contexts, eg before morpheme boundaries,
before other vowels and before /r, v, ð, z, ʒ/, so
‘brood/brewed’, ‘leaf/leave’.
Distinct diphthongs in ‘tide/tied’, ‘rice/rise’,
‘slide/sly’.
Exploring
Scottish
accents with
the SCOTS
corpus
 Go to
www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk
 Click on Advanced Search
 Click on Map to search
different accents
 Metadata about
writers/speakers is available
 
Four Scottish
accents: (1)
Ayrshire
Ayrshire (SW Central)
Me, my mother and my two aunts
(Margaret and Mary)
https://www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/document/?documentid=27
Four Scottish
accents: (2)
Hawick
Hawick (Southern)
Schoolfriends born in the 1920s
Interviewer born in the 1950s
https://www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/document/?
documentid=1430
Four Scottish
accents: (3)
Insular
Shetland
Two Shetlanders talking about building houses,
and the festival Up-Helly-Aa. One is a retired
teacher born in Perth (Central) in the 1940s and
the other, a mature student, was born in
Lerwick (Insular) in the 1950s.
https://www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/document/?documentid=1387
Four Scottish
accents: (4) NE
Scots
NE Scots comedy group ‘Scotland
the What?’
Phone call from a toy shop in
Ballater to Princess Diana, asking
what Prince Harry would like as a
Christmas present.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NzS3AdzZ0Nw
Future
developments
Accent levelling: movement towards SSE with
impact of education, fewer traditional Broad
Scots speakers
Continued language contact – f2f and media,
greater mobility
Identity formation – age, class, gender,
ethnicity…rise of ‘new’ accents like
‘Glaswasian’, ‘Jockney’
Continuing diversity
This week’s
moodle quiz
 Another Scottish accent...
Next week
Two World English accents
Slide Note
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This session delves into the history and distinctive features of London and Scottish accents, discussing their indexical attributes and the ability to differentiate between English and Scottish speakers. With a focus on Cockney and Multicultural London English, the session analyzes phonetic elements like TH-fronting, T-glottaling, and L-vocalization.

  • British Phonetics
  • London Accent
  • Scottish Accent
  • Cockney
  • Phonological Features

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  1. Topics in Phonetics & Phonology John Corbett: USP-CAPES International Fellow Session 6: British accents London & Scotland

  2. 1. Introduction: Review of IPA & lexical sets 2. Review: Transcribing connected speech 3. Accents of English 1: Reference accents (RP and GenAm) Course structure 4. Revisiting English as a lingua franca 5. Accents of English 2: American accents 6. Accents of English 3: British Accents 7. Accents of English 4: Accents of World English 8. Accents of English 5: Brazilian English accents

  3. 9. Acoustic phonetics: Using WASP 10. Rhythms of English: Poetic metre 11. Rhythms of English: Rhythm in speech Course structure 12. Discourse intonation 1 13. Discourse intonation 2 14. Course review

  4. London and Scottish accents: What is their history? This session What are their indexical features? Can you distinguish an English from a Scottish speaker? Can you switch from English to Scottish?

  5. Cockney is the name given to the broad, working class variety of English associated with the East End of London. Diffused South of the River Thames and across much of SE England. Adopted by younger middle class ( Mockney ). Merged into more recent Multicultural London English (MLE). What is the London accent?

  6. https://www.bl.uk/collection-items/cockney-accent-freddie-ridley-road- market Exampleof Cockney accent British Library Sound Archive Freddie, a street-market trader (born 1951; recorded 1999)

  7. Consonantal features: TH-fronting/ , / > /f, v/ things, brother T-glottaling/t/ > / / medially andfinally butter, want L-vocalisation /l/ > / / feel, real, wild, little Cockney: Indexical features H-droppinghave, Harrods, handkerchief, hold Hypercorrectionhadjective, hand(conjunction), habout ListentoFreddie again. Notallofthese features willnecessarilybe presentin hisspeech.

  8. https://www.bl.uk/collection-items/cockney-accent-freddie-ridley-road- market Freddie: About hundred years, roughly. They didn't put any value on it in the past, so there, there's not any pr, realproper records before nineteen- twenty-six. But, uhm, my eldest relative, my aunt Lil', who's stillalive - she's ninety-something - uhm, says that the market started in theHigh Street, uhm, much in the same way as a ThirdWorld market wouldstart: people brought their spare vegetables and whateverthey had to spare to the market and traded them and soldthat. Uh, but when the trams started, it was too dangerous to have the market in the High Street and they brought it round here into Ridley Road. Exampleof Cockney accent

  9. Freddie: About hundred years, roughly. They didn't put any value on it in the past, so there, there's not any pr, realproper records before nineteen- twenty-six. But, uhm, my eldest relative, my aunt Lil', who's stillalive -she's ninety-something -uhm, says that the market started in theHighStreet, uhm, much in the same way as a ThirdWorld market wouldstart: people brought their spare vegetables and whatever they hadto spare to the market and traded them and soldthat. Uh, but when the trams started, it was too dangerous to have the market in the High Street and they brought itround here into Ridley Road. Exampleof Cockney accent: consonants hundred, had, here H-dropping real, eldest, Lil, still, people, vegetables, sold, World L-vocalisation something, Third (later, clothing) TH-fronting twenty, market, whatever, that, started, brought it T-glottalisating

  10. FLEECE London RP FACE London RP THOUGHT London i ~ i i closingdiphthongs long close front unrounded creep, speak, leave, feel, key, people ~ e closing diphthongs closing diphthong tape, cake, raid, veil, steak, day Cockney: Indexical features: 5 dipthongs o: ~ close-mid back unrounded ~ centring diphthong long open-mid back rounded taught, sauce, hawk, jaw, broad RP GOAT London RP PRICE London RP closing diphthong closing diphthong soap, joke, home, know, so, roll a closing diphthong closing dipthong ripe, write, arrive, high, try, buy

  11. https://www.bl.uk/collection-items/cockney-accent-freddie-ridley-road- market Freddie: About hundred years, roughly. They didn't put any value on it in the past, so there, there's not any pr, real proper records before nineteen- twenty-six. But, uhm, my eldest relative, my aunt Lil', who's still alive- she's ninety-something - uhm, says that the market started in the High Street, uhm, much in the samewayas a Third World market would start: people brought their sparevegetables and whatever they had to spareto the market and traded them and soldthat. Uh, but when the trams started, it was too dangerousto have the market in the High Street and they brought it round here into Ridley Road. Exampleof Cockney accent

  12. Freddie: About hundred years, roughly. They didn't put any value on it in the past, so there, there's not any pr, real proper records before nineteen-twenty- six. But, uhm, my eldest relative, my aunt Lil', who's still alive-she's ninety- something - uhm, says that the market started in the HighStreet, uhm, much in the sameway as a Third World market would start: people brought their spare vegetables and whatever they had to spare to the market and traded them and soldthat. Uh, but when the trams started, it was too dangerous to have the market in the High Street and they brought it round here into Ridley Road. Exampleof Cockney accent i ~ i ~ o: ~ nineteen, street, same, way, spare, traded, dangerous brought sold, road nineteen, alive, ninety, High

  13. Freddie: About hundred years, roughly. They didn't put any value on it in the past, so there, there's not any realproper records before nineteen-twenty- six. But, uhm, my eldest relative, my aunt Lil', who's stillalive- she's ninety- something-uhm, says that the market started in the HighStreet, uhm, much in the samewayas a Third World market would start: people brought their sparevegetables and whatever they had to spareto the market and traded them and soldthat. Uh, but when the trams started, it was too dangerousto havethe market in the High Street and they brought it round here into Ridley Road. Canyouspeak Cockney? i ~ i ~ o: ~ nineteen, street, same, way, spare, traded, dangerous brought sold, road nineteen, alive, ninety, High hundred, had, here real, eldest, Lil, still, people, vegetables, sold, World something, Third twenty, market, whatever, that, started, brought it H-dropping L-vocalisation TH-fronting T-glottalisating

  14. There are variousYouTube andothervdeos online onLondon accents(Cockney, Estuary, MLE). Listentoa few ofthem andtry them out! Can you speak London English? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LY8FjXN14ew https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_H8r2Izzo5k

  15. How many Scottish accents are there? Main differences from RP Examples from the SCOTS corpus Future developments Scottish accents of English

  16. Until 7thCentury: Celtic languages 7thCentury: Northumbrian OE in SE Scotland. c.1066: Northern OE speakers pushed into SE Scotland by the Harrying of the North. Northern OE develops into Scots and diffuses through the lowlands. Why are there different accents? Until 1100: Northern OE 1100-1700: Older Scots 1700-now: Modern Scots Language contact over time: Celtic, OE, ON, Norman French, Dutch No pressure to standardise till 18thC.

  17. 6 main accent groups: Central (E, W, SW) Southern North-East Northern Insular (Orkney & Shetland) Northern Irish (Ulster) How many accents are there?

  18. Focus on 4 areas Central (E, W, SW) Southern North-East & Northern Insular (Orkney & Shetland) How many accents are there?

  19. Broad Scots: Regional and socially differentiated Main differences: Broad scots & SSE Scottish Standard English (SSE): Educated/polite standard Scottish accent, originating in 18thC, modelled on southern English

  20. SSE Central Southern Northern Insular Example RP , h, f , f , t think x x x x, x k loch Some distinctive Scottish consonants f w what r (rhotic) r r r, vr r, wr (non- rhotic) write

  21. SSE Central Southern Northern Insular Example RP i i i, e, i i i i, i me Some distinctive Scottish vowels and diphthongs o , i o, e, o, e, , e head o, i, o, i, home u , ji, u ai i i i i i kind house au u u, u u, u u, u u, u

  22. /l/ elision in words like <all, fall, call, hall, wall> Some features of broad scots articulatio ns Scottish vowel-length rule: lengthening of vowels in stressed syllables, only in certain contexts, eg before morpheme boundaries, before other vowels and before /r, v, , z, /, so brood/brewed , leaf/leave . Distinct diphthongs in tide/tied , rice/rise , slide/sly .

  23. Go to www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk Click on Advanced Search Click on Map to search different accents Metadata about writers/speakers is available Exploring Scottish accents with the SCOTS corpus

  24. Ayrshire (SW Central) Me, my mother and my two aunts (Margaret and Mary) Four Scottish accents: (1) Ayrshire https://www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/document/?documentid=27

  25. Hawick (Southern) Schoolfriends born in the 1920s Interviewer born in the 1950s Four Scottish accents: (2) Hawick https://www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/document/? documentid=1430

  26. Shetland Two Shetlanders talking about building houses, and the festival Up-Helly-Aa. One is a retired teacher born in Perth (Central) in the 1940s and the other, a mature student, was born in Lerwick (Insular) in the 1950s. Four Scottish accents: (3) Insular https://www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/document/?documentid=1387

  27. NE Scots comedy group Scotland the What? Phone call from a toy shop in Ballater to Princess Diana, asking what Prince Harry would like as a Christmas present. Four Scottish accents: (4) NE Scots https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NzS3AdzZ0Nw

  28. Accent levelling: movement towards SSE with impact of education, fewer traditional Broad Scots speakers Continued language contact f2f and media, greater mobility Identity formation age, class, gender, ethnicity rise of new accents like Glaswasian , Jockney Continuing diversity Future developments

  29. Thisweeks moodlequiz AnotherScottishaccent...

  30. Two World English accents Next week

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