, the southern half of the
Mid- and
South Atlantic regions, and a transitional Midland dialect area between the South and the North, comprising parts of
Oklahoma,
Kansas,
Missouri, southeastern
Nebraska,
southern Illinois,
southern Indiana, and
southern Ohio. These are the minimal necessary features that identify a speaker from the Southeastern super-region: • Fronting of and : The
gliding vowels (as in
cow or
ouch) and (as in
goat or
bone) both start considerably forward in the mouth, approximately and , respectively. may even end in a very forward position—something like . However, this fronting does not occur in younger speakers before (as in
goal or
colt) or before a
syllable break between two vowels (as in
going or
poet), in which remains back in the mouth as . • Lacking or transitioning
cot–
caught merger: The historical distinction between the two vowels sounds and , in words like
caught and
cot or
stalk and
stock is mainly preserved. In the South, this merger, or a transition towards this merger, is especially documented in central, northern, and (particularly) western Texas. This phenomenon, non-rhoticity, was considered prestigious across the nation before World War II, after which the social perception reversed. Rhoticity (sometimes called
r-fulness), in which all or most
r sounds are pronounced, historically found only in the Midland, Appalachia, and some other Southeastern regions, has now become dominant throughout almost the entire Southeastern super-region, as in most American English, and even more so among younger and female white Southerners; major exceptions are among Black or African American Southerners, whose modern
vernacular dialect continues to be mostly non-rhotic as well as most of southern Louisiana, where non-rhotic accents still dominate. The sound quality of the Southeastern
r is the distinctive "bunch-tongued
r", produced by strongly constricting the root and/or midsection of the tongue.
Midland A band of the United States from Pennsylvania west to the
Great Plains is what twentieth-century linguists identified as the "Midland" dialect region, though this dialect's same features are now reported in certain other pockets of the country too (for example, some major cities in Texas, all in Central and South Florida, and particular cities that are otherwise Southern). In older and traditional dialectological research, focused on lexicology (vocabulary) rather than phonology (accent), the Midland was divided into two discrete geographical subdivisions: the "North Midland" that begins north of the
Ohio River valley area and, south of that, the "South Midland" dialect area. The North Midland region stretches from east-to-west across central and southern
Ohio,
central Indiana,
central Illinois,
Iowa, and northern
Missouri, as well as
Nebraska and
Kansas where it begins to blend into the West. The South Midland dialect region follows the
Ohio River in a generally southwesterly direction, moving across from
Kentucky, southern Indiana, and southern Illinois to southern Missouri,
Arkansas, southeastern Kansas, and
Oklahoma, west of the
Mississippi River. The distinction between a "North" versus "South Midland" was discarded in the 2006
Atlas of North American English, in which the former "North Midland" is now simply called "the Midland" (and argued to have a "stronger claim" to a
General American accent than any other region) and the "South Midland" is considered merely as the upper portion of "the South"; this ANAE reevaluation is primarily on the basis of phonology. The Midland is characterized by having a distinctly fronter realization of the phoneme (as in
boat) than many other American accents, particularly those of the North; the phoneme is frequently realized with a central nucleus, approximating . Likewise, has a fronter nucleus than , approaching . Another feature distinguishing the Midland from the North is that the word
on contains the phoneme (as in
caught) rather than (as in
cot). For this reason, one of the names for the North-Midland boundary is the "
on line". However, since the twentieth century, this area is currently undergoing a vowel
merger of the "short o" (as in
cot) and 'aw' (as in
caught) phonemes, known as the
cot-caught merger. Many speakers show transitional forms of the merger. The phoneme (as in
cat) shows most commonly a so-called "
continuous" distribution: is raised and tensed toward before
nasal consonants, as in much of the country.
Midland outside the Midland Atlanta, Georgia has been characterized by a massive movement of non-Southerners into the area during the 1990s, leading the city to becoming hugely mixed in terms of dialect. Currently, is variably
monophthongized (as in the Southern U.S.); no complete
cot-
caught merger is reported; and the
pin–pen merger is variable.
Charleston, South Carolina is an area where, today, most speakers have clearly conformed to a Midland regional accent, rather than any Southern accent. Charleston was once home to its own very locally-unique accent that encompassed elements of older British English while resisting Southern regional accent trends, perhaps with additional linguistic influence from
French Huguenots,
Sephardi Jews, and, due to Charleston's high concentration of African-Americans that spoke the
Gullah language, Gullah African Americans. The most distinguishing feature of this now-dying accent is the way speakers pronounce the name of the city, to which a standard listener would hear "Chahlston", with a silent "r". Unlike Southern regional accents, Charlestonian speakers have never exhibited inglide long mid vowels, such as those found in typical Southern and .
Central and South Florida show no evidence of any type of glide deletion, Central Florida shows a
pin–
pen merger, and South Florida does not. Otherwise, Central and South Florida easily fit under the definition of the Midland dialect, including the
cot-
caught merger being transitional. In
South Florida, particularly in and around
Miami-Dade,
Broward, and
Monroe counties, a unique dialect, commonly called the "Miami accent", is widely spoken. The dialect first developed among second- or third-generation
Hispanics, including
Cuban-Americans, whose first language was English. Unlike the older
Florida Cracker dialect, "Miami accent" is
rhotic. It also incorporates a rhythm and pronunciation heavily influenced by Spanish (wherein rhythm is
syllable-timed).
Mid-Atlantic States The cities of the
Mid-Atlantic States around the
Delaware Valley (South Jersey, southeastern Pennsylvania, northern Delaware, and eastern Maryland) are typically classified together, their speakers most popularly labelled as having a
Philadelphia accent or a
Baltimore accent. While Labov et al. state that the dialect could potentially be included in the Midland super-region, the dialect is not included in Midland proper as a result of distinct phonological features defining the dialect. The Mid-Atlantic
split of into two separate phonemes, similar to but not exactly the same as New York City English, is one major defining feature of the dialect region, as is a resistance to the
Mary–marry–merry merger and
cot-caught merger (a raising and diphthongizing of the "caught" vowel), and a maintained distinction between historical short
o and long
o before intervocalic , so that, for example,
orange,
Florida, and
horrible have a different stressed vowel than
story and
chorus; all of these features are shared between Mid-Atlantic American and New York City English. Other features include that
water is sometimes pronounced , that is, with the vowel of
wood; the single word
on is pronounced not , so that, as in the South and Midland (and unlike New York and the North) it rhymes with
dawn rather than
don; the of
goat and
boat is fronted, so it is pronounced , as in the advanced accents of the Midland and South.
Canadian raising occurs for (
price) but not for (
mouth). According to linguist Barbara Johnstone, migration patterns and geography affected the Philadelphia dialect's development, which was especially influenced by immigrants from
Northern England,
Scotland, and
Northern Ireland.
South The Southern United States is often dialectally identified as "The South," as in ANAE. There is still great variation between sub-regions in the South (see
here for more information) and between older and younger generations. Southern American English as Americans popularly imagine began to take its current shape only after the beginning of the twentieth century. Some generalizations include: the conditional merger of and before nasal consonants, the
pin–pen merger; the diphthong becomes monophthongized to ; lax and tense vowels often merge before . The South Midland dialect (now considered the upper portion of the Southern U.S. dialect and often not distinguished phonologically) follows the
Ohio River in a generally southwesterly direction, moves across
Arkansas and some of
Oklahoma west of the
Mississippi, and peters out in
West Texas; it also includes some of North Florida, namely around Jacksonville. It most noticeably has the loss of the diphthong , which becomes . It also shows fronting of initial vowel of to (often lengthened and prolonged) yielding ; nasalization of vowels, esp. diphthongs, before ; raising of to ; ''can't
→ cain't
, etc.; fully rhoticity, unlike classical coastal varieties of older Southern American English, now mostly declined. In the Southern Vowel Shift of the early 1900s up to the present, moves to become a high front vowel, and to become a mid front unrounded vowel. In a parallel shift, the and relax and become less front; the back vowels in boon
and in code
shift considerably forward to and , respectively; and, the open back unrounded vowel in card
shifts upward towards as in board
, which in turn moves up towards the old location of in boon
. This particular shift probably does not occur for speakers with the cot
–caught
merger. The lowering movement of the Southern Vowel Shift is also accompanied by a raising and "drawling" movement of vowels. The term Southern drawl has been used to refer to the diphthongization/triphthongization of the traditional short front vowels, as in the words pat
, pet
, and pit''. these develop a glide up from their original starting position to , and then in some cases back down to
schwa; thus: → , → , and → .
Inland South and Texas South The ANAE identifies two important, especially advanced subsets of the South in terms of their leading the Southern Vowel Shift (detailed above): the "Inland South" located in the southern half of
Appalachia and the "Texas South," which only covers the north-central region of Texas (Dallas), Odessa, and Lubbock, but not Abilene, El Paso, or southern Texas (which have accents more like the Midland region). One Texan distinction from the rest of the South is that all Texan accents have been reported as showing a pure, non-gliding vowel, and the identified "Texas South" accent, specifically, is at a transitional stage of the
cot-
caught merger; the "Inland South" accent of Appalachia, however, firmly resists the merger. Pronunciations of the Southern dialect in Texas may also show notable influence derived from an early Spanish-speaking population or from German immigrants.
Marginal Southeast The following Southeastern super-regional locations fit cleanly into none of the aforementioned subsets of the Southeast, and may even be marginal-at-best members of the super-region itself:
Chesapeake and the Outer Banks (North Carolina) islands are enclaves of a traditional "
Hoi Toider" dialect, in which is typically backed and rounded. Many other features of phonological (and lexical) note exist here too; for example,
Ocracoke, North Carolina shows no
cot–
caught merger and its monophthongs are diphthongized (up-gliding) before /ʃ/ and /tʃ/ and
Smith Island, Maryland shows an that is diphthongized (like the South) and no
happy tensing.
New Orleans, Louisiana has been home to a type of accent with parallels to the New York City accent reported for over a century. This variety of
New Orleans English has been locally nicknamed "Yat" since at least the 1980s, from a traditional greeting "Where y'at" ("Where are you at?", meaning "How are you?"). The Yat/NYC parallels include the
split of the historic short-a class into tense and lax versions, as well as pronunciation of
cot and
caught as and . The stereotypical New York
coil–curl merger of "toity-toid street" (33rd Street) used to be a common New Orleans feature as well, though it has mostly receded today. One of the most detailed phonetic depictions of an extreme "yat" accent of the early 20th century is found in the speech of the character
Krazy Kat in the
comic strip of the same name by
George Herriman. Such extreme accents still be found in parts of Mid-City and the
9th ward,
Jefferson Parish, as well as in
St. Bernard Parish, just east of New Orleans. The novel
A Confederacy of Dunces by
John Kennedy Toole often employs the Yat accent.
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, according to the ANAE's research, is not quite a member of the Midland dialect region. Rather, its features seem to be a blend of the Western and Midland dialects. The overview of ANAE's studied features for Oklahoma City speakers include a conservative , conservative , transitional
cot-
caught merger, and variable
pin–
pen merger.
Savannah, Georgia once had a local accent that is now "giving way to regional patterns" of the Midland. St. Louis resists the
cot–
caught merger and middle-aged speakers show the most advanced stages of the NCS, while maintaining many of the other Midland features.
Western Pennsylvania The dialect of the
western half of Pennsylvania is like the Midland proper in many features, including the fronting of and . The chief distinguishing feature of Western Pennsylvania as a whole is that the
cot–caught merger is noticeably complete here, whereas it is still in progress in most of the Midland. The merger has also spread from Western Pennsylvania into adjacent
West Virginia, historically in the South Midland dialect region. The city of
Pittsburgh shows an especially advanced subset of Western Pennsylvania English, additionally characterized by a sound change that is unique in North America: the monophthongization of to . This is the source of the stereotypical Pittsburgh pronunciation of
downtown as "dahntahn". Pittsburgh also features an unusually
low allophone of (as in
cut); it approaches ( itself having moved out of the way and become a rounded vowel in its merger with ). ==See also==