The linguist Graham Pointon, a native of the Potteries, has noted the following phonological differences between RP and the modern Potteries accent. • There is no phoneme , although occurs as an allophone of before , thus,
singer rhymes with
finger (so-called
ng-coalescence). • The three RP vowels are replaced by two, with different distributions. The
foot-strut split is absent like most dialects in the northern half of England, with most cases of RP being transcribed as , often phonetically realised as . This means that pairs such as
but-bought, pun-pawn, full-fall are distinguished by length alone. Some cases of also use , whereas other words (e.g. book) use a long vowel • As with most other dialects in the northern half of England, there is also no
trap-bath split. The phoneme is mostly restricted to stressed word-final position (e.g.
spa) and to words when an historic or has been elided (e.g.
palm, farm). •
H-dropping is common, and conversely any word beginning with a vowel may be emphasised with an initial . The traditional dialect differs much more from RP, but (as with all dialects in England) it is now confined to older residents. The Potteries dialect descends from the West Midlands dialect of Middle English (ME), whereas modern Standard English descends from the East Midlands dialect. • ME became in the West Midland area, so that
man is pronounced , and
cannot is . • ME has diphthongised in many cases to . This has been kept distinct from ME which has become a closer monophthongal vowel . Therefore,
see is pronounced whereas
say is pronounced . • ME has in many cases merged with ME –
wife ,
mice . Elsewhere it has undergone the general vowel shift to , and then simplified to and then to my wife is often called (= "my lady"). • ME has opened to : for example,
tell is pronounced . In final , the has
vocalized and the backed and risen to form a diphthong : therefore,
ball is pronounced . The traditional dialect also preserves older second person singular forms for modal verbs, such as for
can you? ==Lexicon==