Dorset is a medium-sized county in the South West of England which has a distinct accent and dialect. Some of the distinct features of the accent include:
H-dropping,
glottalization,
rhoticity and accentuated vowel sounds.
Consonants A prominent feature in the accent is the use of a
t-glottalization, commonly used when it is in the last syllable of a multi-syllable word. The sound is pronounced when it precedes an and sometimes on other occasions. The voiceless in words such as
think is replaced with the voiced sound as in
the. The voiced also replaces the 'double d', so
ladder becomes
la(th)er. The letters and , if the first or last letter of a word, are pronounced as and respectively. However, words that are not of
Germanic origin or have been adopted from other languages retain their original sound;
family,
figure,
factory,
scene,
sabbath for example, are not pronounced
vamily,
vigure,
vactory,
zene and
zabbath. The becomes a if it appears before an sound so
eleven sounds like 'elebn'. The 'z' and the 'v' in Dorset are used to distinguish words which, in standard English, sound the same:
sea and
see,
son and
sun,
foul and
fowl become
sea and
zee,
son and
zun, and
foul and
vowl for example. The liquid consonants and are treated differently in the Dorset dialect. When 'r' and 'l' come together, a 'd' or 'e' sound is put between them, so
curl and
twirl become curel and twirel or as often, curdl and twirdl. Although the accent has some
rhoticity, meaning the letter in words is pronounced, so for example, "hard" is pronounced and not ; the 'r' is omitted when it comes before some open and closed palate letters. Therefore words like
burst,
first,
force and
verse, are pronounced ''bu'st
, vu'st
, fwo'ss
and ve'ss
. Other consonants are left out when they immediately precede a hard consonant in the following word: bit of cheese
becomes bit o' cheese
but bit of an apple
often remains bit ov an apple''. This is not always the case though. Sometimes the labiodental fricative is also elided along with following sounds. For example, "all of it" is often spoken as "all o't" and "all of 'em" becomes "all o'm". Similarly "let us" becomes "le's" and "better than that" becomes "better 'n 'at". The sound is also often transposed. Words such as
clasp and
crisp, becoming
claps and
crips in the dialect. Other examples of this type of the pronunciation include
ax for
ask, and the use of the word
wopsy for a wasp. When starts a word, it is sometimes given an sound. Examples of this include,
eet for
yet, and
eesterday for
yesterday. The letter is often dropped from words, so "hello" becomes "ello" but is also added where none would be in standard English. This usually occurs when the
Friesic equivalent root word begins with an aspirated . So the words "kwing", meaning quick, and "kring", meaning bend, from which the English words "wing" and "ring" are derived, are voiced as "hwing" and "hring" respectively .
Vowels The sound in some words, such as
bean,
clean,
lean and
mead, is voiced as a , but this is not always the case;
bead,
meat,
read keep the monophthong but use the short sound. The words
head and
lead, pronounced and in standard English, also use this sound. Words in the lexical set are generally spoken with the diphthong, such as in
bake,
cake,
late and
lane. The standard English in words such as
beg,
leg,
peg, are given the short . So
egg thus becomes
agg which gives rise to the Dorset dialect word for egg collecting,
aggy. In a few words where precedes , as in
arm,
charm and
garden, the vowel sound is pronounced as or . The short sound in words such as
dust,
crust and
rut is usually pronounced in the Dorset dialect as an diphthong to make
dowst,
crowst and
rowt. Vowels sounds are sometimes preceded by a sound, particularly the sound in words such as boil, spoil and point, and the English long . Barnes' book,
Poems of Rural Life in the Dorset Dialect, contains the poem
Woak were Good Enough Woonce which begins: Ees; now mahogany’s the goo, An’ good wold English woak won’t do. I wish vo’k always mid auvord Hot meals upon a woakèn bwoard, As good as think that took my cup An’ trencher all my growèn up. == Grammar ==