United States Interactive map of American English
American English: •
Cultural and ethnic American English •
African American English •
African-American Vernacular English •
Cajun Vernacular English •
General American: the "standard" or "mainstream" spectrum of American English • Latino (Hispanic) Vernacular Englishes •
Chicano English (Mexican-American English) •
Miami English •
New York Latino English •
Pennsylvania Dutch English •
Yeshiva English •
American Indian English •
Lumbee English •
Regional and local American English •
Northern American English •
Inland Northern English:
Chicago,
Cleveland,
Detroit,
Milwaukee,
Western New York, the
Lower Peninsula of Michigan, and most of the U.S.
Great Lakes region •
New England English •
Eastern New England English (including
Boston and
Maine English) •
Rhode Island English •
Western New England English: Connecticut, Hudson Valley, western Massachusetts, and Vermont •
North-Central (Upper Midwestern) English: northern Wisconsin, northern Minnesota, North Dakota, Montana •
Metropolitan New York English • Southeast Super-Regional English •
Midland American English • North Midland English: Iowa City, Omaha, Lincoln, Columbia, Springfield, Muncie, Columbus, etc. • South Midland English: Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Topeka, Wichita, Kansas City, St. Louis (in transition), Decatur, Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Dayton, etc. •
High Tider English: traditional dialect of the Chesapeake Bay, Tangier, Ocracoke, the Outer Banks, Virginia Barrier Islands, etc. •
New Orleans English •
Philadelphia English •
Baltimore English •
Southern American English •
Southern Appalachian English: Linden, Birmingham, Chattanooga, Knoxville, Asheville, and Greenville •
Texan English: Lubbock, Odessa, and Dallas • Tennessean English: Nashville, Murfreesboro, Memphis •
Western American English •
California English •
Pacific Northwest English •
Western Pennsylvania (Pittsburgh) English •
Extinct or near-extinct American English •
Boontling • "
Good American Speech": Mid-Atlantic or Transatlantic English •
Elite Northeastern American English •
Older Southern American English •
American English-based hybrid languages (creoles or pidgins) •
Afro-Seminole Creole •
Gullah language/Sea Island Creole English, South-East US related to Bahamian creole •
Hawaiian Pidgin Canada Interactive map of Canadian English
Canadian English: •
Aboriginal English in Canada •
Bungi of the Canadian
Metis people of British descent •
Atlantic Canadian English •
Lunenburg English •
Newfoundland English •
Greater Toronto English •
Ottawa Valley English •
Quebec English •
Standard Canadian English •
Pacific Northwest English == Caribbean, Central, and South America ==