Miami accent The
Miami accent is a
regional accent of the
American English dialect spoken in South Florida, particularly in
Miami-Dade,
Broward,
Palm Beach, and
Monroe counties. The accent was born in central
Miami, but has expanded to the rest of South Florida in the decades since the 1960s. The Miami accent is most prevalent in American-born South Floridian youth. The Miami accent is based on a fairly
standard American accent but with some changes very similar to dialects in the
Mid-Atlantic (especially the
New York area dialect,
Northern New Jersey English, and
New York Latino English.) Unlike Virginia Piedmont, Coastal Southern American, and Northeast American dialects, the "Miami accent" is
rhotic; it also incorporates a rhythm and pronunciation heavily influenced by Spanish (wherein rhythm is
syllable-timed).
Politics , a lighthouse constructed in 1825 on
Cape Florida at the south end of
Key Biscayne Lamme and Oldakowski identify several demographic, political, and cultural elements that characterize South Florida and distinguish it from other areas of the state. Many of its differences appear to be driven by its proportionately higher level of migration from the northern U.S. states and from the
Caribbean and
Latin America, particularly in the densely populated Miami area. Politically, South Florida is more
liberal than the rest of the state, but in more recent times it has become more
conservative. While less than 10% of people in either North or Central Florida felt their area was liberal, over a third of South Floridians described their region as such. 38% characterized the area as conservative; 26% as moderate. The economy in South Florida is very similar to that in Central Florida. Compared to the more diversified economy in North Florida,
tourism is by far the most significant industry in South and Central Florida, with a much smaller but vibrant agricultural industry.
Cuisine Lamme and Oldakowski's survey also found some cultural indicators distinguishing South Florida. South Florida is the only region of the state where ethnic foods are as popular as general
American cuisine.
Floribbean cuisine is a
fusion cuisine which developed in South Florida, drawing influence from Floridian, Caribbean, Asian and Latin American cuisines. Additionally, while there was little geographical variation for most styles of music, there was regional variation for both
country and
Latin music. Country was significantly less popular in South Florida than in North or Central Florida, while Latin was more popular than in the other regions. ==Partition proposals==