• Rhoticity: Midland speech is firmly
rhotic (or fully
r-pronouncing), like most North American English. •
Cot–caught merger in transition: The merger of the vowel sounds in and is consistently in a transitional phase throughout most of the Midland region, showing neither a full presence nor absence of the merger. This involves a vowel
merger of the "short o" (as in
cot or
stock) and "aw" (as in
caught or
stalk) phonemes. •
On boundary: A well-known phonological difference between Midland and Northern accents is that in the Midland, the single word
on contains the phoneme (as in
caught) rather than (as in
cot), as in the North. For this reason, one of the names for the boundary between the dialects of the Midland and the North is the "
on line". •
Epenthetic R: The phoneme sequence , as in
wash,
squash, and
Washington, traditionally receives an additional sound after the , thus with
Washington sounding like or . Likely inherited from Scots-Irish influence, this features ranges from D.C., Maryland, southern Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Kentucky, Arkansas, West Texas, and the Midland dialect regions within Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Kansas. Studied best of all in southern Pennsylvania, this feature may be declining. • The short-
a phoneme, , most commonly follows a
General American (
"continuous" and pre-nasal) distribution: is raised and tensed toward before
nasal consonants (such as
fan) but remains low in other contexts (such as
fact). An increasing number of speakers from central Ohio realize the vowel as open front . • Fronting of : the phoneme (as in
goat) is fronter than in many other American accents, particularly those of the North; the phoneme is frequently realized as a diphthong with a central nucleus, approximating . • Fronting of : the diphthong (as in
mouth) has a fronter nucleus than , approaching . • Lowering of : the diphthong (as in
face,
reign,
day, etc.) often has a lower nucleus than the Northern accents just above Midland region. • Phonologically, the South Midland remains slightly different from the North Midland (and more like the American South) in certain respects: its greater likelihood of a fronted , a
pin–pen merger, and a "glideless" vowel reminiscent of the
Southern U.S. accent, though monophthongization in the South Midland only tends to appear before
sonorant consonants: . For example,
fire may be pronounced something like
far. Southern Indiana is the northernmost extent of this accent, forming what dialectologists refer to as the "
Hoosier Apex" of the South Midland, with the accent locally known as the "Hoosier Twang". ==Grammar==