Dialects, Standards, and Vernaculars
3
up in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and the Eastern Shore of Maryland, respectively,
they didn’t necessarily realize that they spoke dialects;
they presumed they spoke
“normal” English and that dialects were spoken by people from other areas. Of course,
we came to realize that this perception could be a two‐way street when we attended
universities in different states, and classmates pointed out how different our dialects
were to them.
The perception that only other people speak dialects is obviously shaped by per-
sonal experience, as one group’s customary way of speaking often turns out to be
another group’s language peculiarity. Southerners’ use of
might could
in
sentences
such as
I might could do it
sounds strange to people from the North, but a sentence like
The house needs washed
sounds just as strange to people from the South even though it
is perfectly “normal” to people in Western Pennsylvania and Ohio. Most people are
surprised when they go to a different region and are
told that they speak a dialect,
since they take for granted that it is other people who speak dialects. But we all rou-
tinely speak dialects whether we recognize it or not. It is impossible, for example, to
say a word like
caught
or
bought
without choosing a vowel pronunciation associated
with some variety of English. Some people might pronounce the
thought
vowel in
caught
the same as the
lot
vowel in
cot
; others might use
a glided pronunciation like
cawt
closer to the
mouth
vowel, common in the rural South; and still others might use
more of a stereotypical New York City pronunciation, as in something like
cowt
for
caught
or
cowffee
for
coffee
. No matter what, it is impossible to pronounce this word
without selecting a vowel production associated with a dialect. Or, we may order a
soda,
pop,
coke,
co‐cola,
tonic,
or
soft drink
along with our
submarine sandwich,
sub,
hoagie,
grinder,
torpedo
, or
hero
, but we won’t eat or drink unless
we make a dialect choice in
ordering our sandwich and carbonated drink. Dialects are inevitable and natural, and
we all speak them.
In another common use, the term “dialect” refers to those varieties of English whose
features have, for one reason or another, become widely recognized – and usually stereo-
typed (“We speak a dialect”). In the United States – and beyond – people widely recognize
a “Southern drawl,” a “Boston accent,” or a “New York City accent.” If a
language variety
contains some features that are generally acknowledged and commented upon, then it
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