Published accounts of EE describe it mainly in terms of differences from contemporary RP and from Cockney. Wells (1994) states that "Estuary English (EE) is like RP, but unlike Cockney, in being associated with standard grammar and usage". Differences are found at phonemic and allophonic levels.
Features distinguishing EE from RP Wells identifies a small number of key features that may distinguish EE from RP; these features may be summarized as follows: •
/l/-vocalization •
/t/-glottalization • Diphthong shift •
Yod-coalescence Other distinguishing features have been suggested by other studies: •
Th-fronting • Other vowel differences
/l/-vocalization It has been widely observed that EE exhibits vocalization of preconsonantal/final /l/, perhaps with various vowel mergers before it (an informal example being "miwk bottoo" for "milk bottle"). Wells cites the specific case of allophony in GOAT (> [ɒʊ] before dark /l/ or its reflex), leading perhaps to a phonemic split ("wholly" vs. "holy"). This topic is usually referred to as
L-vocalization. There is said to be alternation between the vocalized , dark non-vocalized and clear non-vocalized , depending on the word. In all phonetic environments, male London speakers were at least twice as likely to vocalize the dark l as female London speakers. /l/-vocalization can lead to loss of distinctions between some vowels and diphthongs. Examples of
vowel mergers before historic found in EE are: • (as in ) merges with (as in ). /l/-vocalization appears to be spreading into RP (or GB, the similar accent referred to by some writers). Collins et al say "Traditional RP speakers tend to stigmatize this feature, which is nevertheless one of the most striking changes going on in present-day GB English".
/t/-glottalization The term
glottalization has several different meanings: the most important are
glottal reinforcement (or
pre-glottalization), where a glottal closure accompanies an oral closure, and
glottal replacement, where a glottal closure is substituted for an oral consonant. Although glottalization of /t/ has been singled out for attention in discussion of EE features, pre-glottalization of /p/, /k/ and /tʃ/ is also widespread in RP, particularly when another consonant follows. Examples are "popcorn" [ˈpɒʔpkɔːn], "electric" [ɪˈleʔktrɪk], "butcher" [ˈbʊʔtʃə]. Wells proposes that in transcribing EE, the glottal stop symbol [ʔ] could be used in contexts where the consonant in question is preceded by a vowel and followed by a consonant or the end of a word: examples are "bit" [bɪʔ], "football" [ˈfʊʔbɔo], "belt" [beoʔ], "Cheltenham" [ˈtʃeoʔnəm], "bent" [benʔ], "Bentley" [ˈbenʔli]. Pre-glottalization of /t/ therefore appears to be present both in RP and in EE. Glottal
replacement of /t/ may be found when /t/ occurs before another consonant. Examples from RP where /t/ is replaced by a glottal stop are: "that table" [ˌðæʔ ˈteɪbəl], "Scotland" [ˈskɒʔlənd], "witness" [ˈwɪʔnəs]. The most extreme case of glottal replacement is when a glottal stop takes the place of /t/ between vowels (normally when the preceding vowel is stressed). Examples are "not on" [ˌnɒʔ ˈɒn], "bottle" [ˈbɒʔo]. Wells says "glottalling word-internally before a vowel is well-known as a "rough" pronunciation variant: thus EE water ˈwɔːtə, but Cockney ˈwɔʊʔə". She also notes a fully rounded diphthong (found in some speakers from Essex), (phonetically or )
Yod-coalescence Yod-coalescence is found in EE: the use of the affricates and instead of the clusters and in words like
dune and
Tuesday results in the words sounding like
June and
choose day, respectively. Although at the time when most studies of EE were carried out, yod-coalescence was not common in RP, it has now become so widely accepted that RP-based pronunciation dictionaries include it. Thus the latest edition of the Cambridge
English Pronouncing Dictionary gives /dʒuːn/ and /tʃuːz.deɪ/ as the preferred pronunciations; the Longman Pronunciation Dictionary and the Oxford Dictionary of Pronunciation give /djuːn/ and /tjuːzdeɪ/ as their first preference, but give /dʒuːn/ and /tʃuːz.deɪ/ as second preference. It cannot be said that the presence of yod-coalescence distinguishes EE from RP.
th-fronting It has been suggested that
th-fronting is "currently making its way" into Estuary English, for example those from the
Isle of Thanet often refer to Thanet as "Plannit Fannit" (Planet Thanet). However, this feature was also present in the traditional dialect of Essex before the spread of Estuary English.
Other vowel differences • (as in ) can be realised as , or , Before the dark l, it is sometimes a center diphthong . Front pronunciations (, , and ) are more often encountered in female speakers. • (as in ), according to , can be pronounced in two different ways: diphthongal in closed syllables and or in open syllables
Features distinguishing EE from Cockney Wells suggests that EE differs from Cockney in a few key features: • EE differs from Cockney in usually not being characterized by
H-dropping before stressed vowels (informal example: and on 'eart" for "hand on heart") •
Th-fronting (e.g. "I fink" for "I think", but see
above) • Cockney may have monophthongal realization of the MOUTH vowel ("Sahfend" for "
Southend"). ==Use==