المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
المرجع الألكتروني للمعلوماتية

English Language
عدد المواضيع في هذا القسم 6095 موضوعاً
Grammar
Linguistics
Reading Comprehension

Untitled Document
أبحث عن شيء أخر
غزوة الحديبية والهدنة بين النبي وقريش
2024-11-01
بعد الحديبية افتروا على النبي « صلى الله عليه وآله » أنه سحر
2024-11-01
المستغفرون بالاسحار
2024-11-01
المرابطة في انتظار الفرج
2024-11-01
النضوج الجنسي للماشية sexual maturity
2024-11-01
المخرجون من ديارهم في سبيل الله
2024-11-01

مال الربا لا بركة فيه
13-9-2019
الشاهد.
15-3-2016
القياس
5-9-2016
intervocalic (adj.)
2023-09-26
سلمان في طـريقة نحو الإسـلام
18-9-2020
جرمان ، بول
18-8-2016

Montserrat  
  
492   11:06 صباحاً   date: 2024-04-10
Author : Michael Aceto
Book or Source : A Handbook Of Varieties Of English Phonology
Page and Part : 495-28


Read More
Date: 2024-07-05 336
Date: 2023-05-24 746
Date: 2024-06-27 363

Montserrat

Part of the local folk history in Montserrat is that Irish or Irish English has influenced the variety of English that emerged there. However, in Volume 3 Wells (1982: 586, 1983) reports there is no linguistic justification for this claim, even though Irish Catholics from nearby St. Kitts did settle the island in the early 17th century and several place names and surnames reflect Irish influence.

 

Montserrat English reveals short vowels in open syllables in segments that were long historically, e.g. tea [ti], play [ple], straw [stra]. However, in closed syllables there appears to be a contrast between long and short vowels, e.g. beat [bi:t] vs. bit [bit], pool [pu:l] vs. pull [pul]. In Volume 3, Wells (1982: 586) insists that this is not a difference in vowel quality but in length as presented above (however, two allophones of /o/ do reveal differences in quality, e.g. show [ʃo] and cut ). This issue of short vowels in open syllables in Montserrat English means that the short vowels of words like tea are linked phonemically with the /i/ of bit rather than the [i:] of beat. Likewise, the [u] of two is linked with /u/ of put rather than the /u:/ of boot. Furthermore, in closed syllables, Montserratians often reveal diphthongs for mid vowels reminiscent of those heard in Western Caribbean varieties like Jamaican, e.g. boat [buot] and bait [biet], but these diphthongs are not found in open syllables, e.g. bay [be], show [ʃo].

 

Montserrat English is non-rhotic. Consequently, long vowels are found in open syllables (as well as closed ones) where historical /r/ was once present, e.g. star [sta:], war [wa:], start [sta:t], farm [fa:m]. Other words with long vowels that revealed /r/ historically resulted in the emergence of new diphthongs, e.g. near [nia] and four [fuo].