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AUSTRALIAN ENGLISH:
PHONOLOGY Antía Varela Ávila
Group B2
20/ 11/ 2013
DIVISION OF THE WORK
Introduction
The vowel system of AusE:
the three perspectives
The social distribution of
Broad, General and
Cultivated varieties of AusE
Intonation: High Rising
Tone
Phonological change in
AusE
Outstanding issues
Introduction
RP ≠ AusE vowels
Consonants
Social Varieties
High Rising Tone
Personal Opinions
Article My Presentation
INTRODUCTION AusE = official language
and first language (of
the majority)
Some Australians speak
creaole languages:
Australian Kriol, Torres
Strait Creole and Norfuk
Varieties in AusE (Affect
vocabulary, accent,
pronunciation, register,
gramar and spelling)
Regional variations
(vocabulary and
phonology)
bathers
Cossies or
swimmers
togs
PHONOLOGICAL COMPARISON BETWEEN RP
AND AUSE
Receive Pronunciation Australian English
PHONOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES IN
VOWELS
AusE /ɪ/ /e/ /æ/ /ɜ:/ /ə/ /o:/ closer
than RP equivalents =
centering diphthongs /eɪ/, /aʊ/
/ɔɪ/
British accents /ɑː/ ≠ AusE/aː/
Division of vowels according to
lenght:
Tense = long (monophthongs
and diphthongs)
Lax = short monophthongs
http://clas.mq.edu.au/voices/re
gional-accents
Monophthongs
RP Australian Examples
/ɪ/ /ɪ/ bid, pit
/iː/ /iː/ bead, peat
/ɛ/ /e/ bed, pet
/æ/ /æ, æː/ pat, bad
/ɑː/ /aː, ɐː/ balm, father, pa
/ɒ/ /ɔ/ bod, pot, cot
/ɔː/ /oː/ bawd, paw, caught
/ʊ/ /ʊ/ good, foot, put
/uː/ /ʉː/ booed, food
/ʌ/ /a/ bud, putt
Diphthongs
/aɪ/ /ɑe/ buy, high, ride, write
/eɪ/ /æɪ/ bay, hey, fate
/aʊ/ /æɔ/ bough, how, pout
/oʊ/ /əʉ/ beau, hoe, poke
/ɔɪ/ /oɪ/ boy, hoy
/juː/ /jʉː/ beauty, hue, pew, new
PHONOLOGICAL CONSONANTS
Differs from one English variety to
another
Similar to non-rhotic varieties of
English “first”
Linking and intrusive /r/
car alarm = begins with a vowel so it
can occur
saw it = “sore it” words without <r> in
spelling
Some use glottal stop
/h/ deletion + Broad – Cultivated
Use of “dark L” = /miʊk/
And other changes
Vowels followed by <r>
/ɪr/ /ɪr/ mirror
/ɪər/ /ɪə/ beer, mere
/ɛr/ /er/ berry,
merry
/ɛər/ /eː/ bear, mare
/ær/ /ær/ barrow,
marry
/ɑr/ /aː/ bar, mar
/ɒr/ /ɔr/ moral,
forage
/ɔr/
/oː/
born, for
/ɔər/ boar, four,
more, moor
/ʊər/ /ʊə/ tour
/ʌr/ /ar/ hurry,
Murray
/ɜr/ (ɝ) /ɜː/ bird, herd,
furry
SOCIAL VARIETIES OF AUSE G
en
era
l •Most common
•Prominent urban Australia
•Standard language for Australian media
•Growth and dominance
Bro
ad
•Working class and men
•Recognisable and familiar to English speakers
•Common rural areas
•Dialect named Strine (Strayan) = Ocker
•Syllable assimilation and consonant elision
•Speak slowly
Cu
ltiv
ate
d
•Middle class and women
•Similarities with RP
•Fallen recent generations – almost extinct
•Past – social class indicator
HIGH RISING TONE
HRT “High Rising Terminal” or
AQI “Australian Question
Intonation”
Declarative clauses where no
question is intended
Equivalent to English yes/no
questions, “you know?”, “right?”or
“OK?”
Use depends on the complexity of
the text – check understanding
Characteristic of young people
(usually females)
Not only in Australian =
American
Positive and negative opinions
and connotations
HIGH RISING TONE
Negative Positive
Politeness
Seeks verification of comprehension
Friendly and attentive users
Evokes a response (verbal or not)
Lack of self-confidence
Uncertainity
Low status
Hesitancy
Couldn’t it mean
that men are less
approachable?
Easier since you avoid
“you know?”
Not a positive
characteristic if used in
every sentence
OPINIONS Shares phonological
features with Cockney
Why do you think that Cultivated English was more related to women?
Broad AusE may not have a negative connotation because it is related to men and working class ≠ HRT
How would you consider the HRT? Lack of knowledge or attempt of involvement?
SOURCES
http://www.cambridge.org/other_files/cms/PeterRoach/PeterRoach_Glossary.html
http://clas.mq.edu.au/phonetics/index.html
http://www.lexilogos.com/english/australian_english_dictionary.htm
http://www.linguisticsnet.com/home/index.php/resources/glossary
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_English
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_English_phonology
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Received_Pronunciation
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_rising_terminal
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Variation_in_Australian_English
Books
oGuy, Gregory and Julia Vonwiller. “The High Rising Tone in
Australian English”. Australian English: the Language of Society.
Australia: University of Queensland Press, 1989. 21 – 34. Print.
o Horvath, Barbara M. “Australian English: Phonology” A Handbook
of Varieties of English: a Multimedia Reference Tool. New York:
Mouton de Gruyter, 2004. 625 – 643. Print.
Web Pages
THANK YOU FOR THE
ATTENTION