Port Talbot English

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Port Talbot English
Native toUnited Kingdom
RegionPort Talbot
Latin (English alphabet)
Language codes
ISO 639-3
GlottologNone
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Port Talbot English (PTE) is a variety of Welsh English spoken in Port Talbot, generally by the working class.[1]

Phonetics and phonology

Consonants

phonological
characteristics of consonants specific to PTE include:

Vowels

Monophthongs

Monophthongs of PTE[4]
Front Central Back
unrounded rounded
short long short long
Close ɪ ʊ
Close-mid øː
Open-mid ɛ ɛː ə
Open a ɒ ɒː
Length
Quality
  • The HAPPY vowel is tense, but unlike Received Pronunciation, it is long [iː], as in the FLEECE vowel (see
    Happy tensing).[5]
  • Vowels corresponding to unstressed /ɪ/ in RP are as follows:[5]
    • /ɪ/ in the inflectional suffixes -ed and -es;
    • /ə/ in the suffix -est;
    • /iː/ in prefixes like anti- and poly-.
  • There is no contrastive NEAR vowel. Depending on word, it is replaced by either FLEECE (in polysyllables), a disyllabic sequence of FLEECE and COMMA /iːə/ (in monosyllables) and a monosyllabic sequence /jøː/ when word initial (including hear and here, where the /h/ is generally dropped).[5]
  • As in many other southern Welsh accents, the NURSE vowel is rounded and fronted to [øː]. However, a small minority of speakers realise it rhotically as [əɾ ~ əɹ] as in many varieties of North American English.[6]
  • The horse–hoarse merger is absent in PTE, hence the words horse /ɒː/ and hoarse /oː/ are kept distinct. /oː/ is found in fortress and important, where the horse vowel may be found in other dialects that keep the distinction.[7]
  • /ə/ is open-mid [ɜ] in stressed positions. When unstressed, it may be slightly raised to mid [ə].[8]
  • The THOUGHT vowel is mainly /ɒː/. Exceptions are before /l/ and /st/, as in all or exhaust, as well as the word saucepan, where it is replaced by the LOT vowel /ɒ/. However long /ɒː/ does appear before the cluster /ld/ and the word palsy.[5]
  • The trap–bath split is nearly absent, although the word bath along with path, laugh and its derivatives, ghastly and last(ly) have a long PALM /aː/, yet just like in Northern England, the remainder of BATH words are short /a/.[5]
  • The TRAP words bad, bag and man are often found with long /aː/.[5]

Diphthongs

Diphthongs of PTE are /ɪʊ, eɪ, oʊ, ʌɪ, ʌʊ, ɒɪ/. PRICE words are mostly pronounced with /ʌɪ/, but there also exists a marginal /aɪ/ which appears in a small number of words, such as Dai and aye.[9]

PTE, like Welsh dialects such as Abercraf English, has preserved several diphthong–monophthong distinctions that other varieties have not. They include:

Elision and assimilation

  • /t, d/, at the end of a morpheme or word, are very commonly elided: not good and handbag /ˈhambaɡ/, the latter with the assimilation of the nasal with the b.[8]
  • The indefinite article an (before a vowel) may be reduced to a, as in a apple ˈapəl/.[1]
  • The schwa /ə/ is often elided although but it is also very common to retain it.[8]
  • The sequence co(-)op, like in the rest of South Wales, is characteristically pronounced like cop /kɒp/.[8]
  • Elisions in the phrases isn't it? /ˈɪn ɪt/, never mind /ˈnɛː ˈmʌɪn/ and there you are /ˈdɛː ˈwaː/ are very common.[8]
  • Why + negative do, such as why don't, why doesn't or why didn't is also very commonly elided to /ˈwʌɪn/.[8]

Phonemic incidence

  • Like in most of Northern England and the Midlands, tooth is pronounced with the FOOT vowel, as in /tʊθ/.[5]
  • Mauve is pronounced with./ɒː/, instead of /oː/ or /oʊ/.[5]
  • Motor is pronounced /ˈmoːtoː/, and the strong form of their is pronounced /ˈðeɪə/.[5]
  • In an address, girl and man are pronounced with the STRUT vowel /ə/.[5]

The following features apply for only some speakers:[8]

  • Daunt and jaunt may be pronounced with /a/.
  • Hose and whole may be pronounced with /uː/ and area with /eː/.
  • Want may be pronounced with /ə/, instead of /ɒ/.

Prosody

  • Intonation in PTE is similar to Abercraf English. One prominent pattern is that the main pitch movement is not necessarily confined to the stressed syllable but can be spread further, to the end of the word.[2]
  • Like in other Welsh accents, PTE tends to avoid having double stress patterns, making words such as Bridgend or icecream lose their secondary stress.[8]

Grammar

Vocabulary

  • ashman — bin man, dustman[12]
  • cam — a stride[11]
  • crachach — used everywhere in Wales; a derogatory term used to refer to members of the Establishment in the country.[13][14] It can simply refer to 'posh people'.[11]
  • lose — to miss (e.g. a bus)[11]
  • poin — to pester, to nag (from Welsh poeni)[11]
  • troughing — guttering[12]
  • venter — to bet (from Welsh fentro, a mutated form of mentro)[11]

Idioms

Examples of commonly-used idiomatic phrases in PTE:[12]

  • burnt to glory — burnt to the point of ashes[12]
  • gone home — said when a piece of clothing has worn out[12]
  • possible if — in PTE it specifically means 'surely it's not that case that...'[12]
  • sure to be — a phrase that represents 'certainly' or 'without a doubt'[12]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Connolly (1990), p. 121.
  2. ^ a b c d Connolly (1990), p. 126.
  3. ^ Wells (1982), p. 389.
  4. ^ Connolly (1990), pp. 122, 125.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Connolly (1990), p. 124.
  6. ^ Connolly (1990), pp. 121, 125.
  7. ^ Connolly (1990), p. 123.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Connolly (1990), p. 125.
  9. ^ a b c Connolly (1990), p. 122.
  10. ^ Connolly (1990), pp. 122–123.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i Connolly (1990), p. 127.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h Connolly (1990), p. 128.
  13. .
  14. ^ Hitt, Carolyn (1 March 2006). "Just who are 'the crachach'?". BBC News.

Bibliography