Upper South
for
South Midland
and
Lower North
for
North Midland
.
28
Ellen Johnson, while supportive of
Kurath’s
Midland,
prefers the term
Appalachian
for that dialect, and for Kurath’s
South
the term
Deep South
.
29
These and other differences among dialectologists are partly
matters of nomenclature, though not merely that, because it is nomenclature linked to
culture and history; the differences also result from the indeterminacy of the concept
dialect
itself. Unlike state and county boundaries, which can be found demarcated on the
land, dialect boundaries are abstractions of linguists, artifices that are built on empirical
28
American Regional Dialects
, p. 181.
29
“Yet Again: The Midland Dialect,”
American Speech,
69 (1994), 419–30.
A history of the english language 356
observations but that depend on the diagnostic features chosen. We shall use the terms
“Upper North,” “Lower North,” “Upper South,” and “Lower South,” and we shall
recognize Eastern New England as a distinctive enough subregion within Upper North to
merit separate description.
The boundary marking the main North-South division begins in central Delaware, runs
westward near the old Mason-Dixon Line and continues approximately along the Ohio
River, eventually extending south into Oklahoma and Texas.
30
The line separating the
Upper North (Kurath’s Northern) from the Lower North (North Midland) runs northwest
across New Jersey and eastern Pennsylvania and then in a fairly regular westward
progression across the northern parts of Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois. As the
boundary approaches the Mississippi in northwestern Illinois it turns north and, to the
extent that it can be traced as a boundary at all, continues that general course across the
upper Midwest. The division between the Upper South (South Midland) and the Lower
South (Southern) begins at the Atlantic Ocean at a midpoint on the Delmarva peninsula,
describes a northward arc through Maryland, and turns southwest, skirting the eastern
edge of the Blue Ridge Mountains in Virginia and North Carolina and turning west just
north of Atlanta. To the east lie the Piedmont and the coastal plain. To the west the
Midland-Southern boundary continues through northern Georgia and Alabama, then turns
north into western Tennessee. West of the Mississippi the boundary becomes predictably
more diffuse, but it can still be traced through Arkansas and east Texas.
At least six regional dialects in the eastern half of the country are prominent enough to
warrant individual characterization, and three additional dialects of considerable
importance extend over several regions:
1.
Eastern New England.
This includes the whole or parts of states that lie to the east of the Connecticut River in
Massachusetts and Connecticut and east of the Green Mountains in Vermont. Although
not all features of the dialect are uniform in their distribution, we may recognize as
characteristic the retention of a rounded vowel in words like
hot
and
top,
which the rest
of the country has unrounded to a shortened form of the
a
in
father;
the use of the broad
a
in
fast, path, grass,
etc.; and, as we have seen, the loss of the
r
in
car, hard,
and the like
except before vowels
(carry, Tory)
. Boston is its focal area.
31
30
The boundaries (especially the broken lines) on the accompanying map are approximations that
are crossed by individual features, lexical and phonological. The Norfolk, Virginia, region, for
example, is included in the Virginia area but has largely escaped the Piedmont influence and is
more closely related to the adjacent part of North Carolina.
31
A focal area is one that because of its political, commercial, cultural, or other importance (e.g.,
social) has influenced the speech of surrounding areas.
Tonic
(soft drink), for instance, has spread
apparently only to communities served by distributors whose headquarters are in Boston.
The english language in america 357
2.
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |