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New York-New Jersey English

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The variety of the English language spoken in the New York City and North Jersey region is often considered to be one of the most recognizable accents within American English.

Table of contents
1 Macrosocial Extensions
2 Linguistic Features
3 History
4 Internal Geographic Variation
5 The Jersey Shore and Cape May Accent
6 Related topics

Macrosocial Extensions

The dialect is closely confined to the geographically small, but densely populated New York City Dialect Region, which consists of the city's five Boroughs, western and central Long Island, and certain neighboring New Jersey areas like Newark, Jersey City, Bayonne, Hoboken, and Fort Lee. However, the terms “New York English” and “New York dialect” are strictly speaking misnomers. The classic New York dialect is centered on middle and working class European Americans, and this racial group now accounts for less than half of the city’s population.

African American New Yorkers often speak African American English (AAE), though with some New York Dialect features, as do most children of Black Caribbean immigrants. Many Latinos speak another distinct ethnolect, New York Latino English, characterized by a varying mix of traditional New York dialect and AAE, features along with features of Spanish origin. Many East Asian American New Yorkers may also speak a recognizable variety.

Moreover, not even all European American New Yorkers use this variety. Upper-middle class European American New Yorkers from educated backgrounds often speak with less conspicuous accents; in particular, they use rhotic pronunciations instead of the less prestigious non-rhotic pronunciations, although they often maintain at least some of less stigmatized features.

Similarly, the children of professional white migrants from other parts of the US frequently do not have many New York dialect features, and as these two populations come to dominate the southern half of Manhattan and neighboring parts of Brooklyn, the dialect is retreating from their neighborhoods. Many teens attending expensive private prep schools are barely linguistically recognizable as New Yorkers. Many others though, particularly those of Southern and Eastern European descent from the middle- and working-class, do tend to have varying degrees of what has been coined New Yorkese or Brooklynese, within their daily regular speech.

Within the context of the city, therefore the classic New York dialect marks a particular European American identity, one associated with individuals of working to middle class origins. Only, in the context of European American English generally, is “New York English” a geographic dialect.

Linguistic Features

Pronunciation

See the article International Phonetic Alphabet for explanations of the phonetic symbols used, as indicated between square brackets. These represent actual pronunciations. The symbols in curved parentheses () are variables, in this case historical word classes that have different realizations between and within dialects. This system was developed by William Labov.

New York-New Jersey English is predominantly characterized by the following sounds and speech patterns:

Vowels

Consonants

Syntax

Lexicon

There are numerous words used mainly in New York, mostly associated with immigrant languages. A few examples include:

History

Many people are curious about the origins of the dialect. In fact, they are diverse, and the source of many features is probably not recoverable. Labov has pointed out that the short a splitis found in southern England as mentioned above. Other features, such as the dental d's and t's may come from contact with languages such as Italian and Yiddish.

Internal Geographic Variation

It is often claimed that the dialect varies by neighborhood or borough, or that Lawn Guylanders speak in a particular manner. This may be true, although no published study has found any feature that varies in this way beyond local names. Impressions that the dialect changes may be a byproduct of class and/or ethnic variation.

The New Jersey accent

Generally, the so-called Jersey accent or North Jersey accent spoken in northern New Jersey is somewhat closer to General American than the speech of New Yorkers, but still shares enough features with it that two can be considered together as a single dialect group for sociolinguistic purposes. Most colloquial greetings and expressions used in New York are also said by New Jerseyans and with the same frequency. However, aside from the areas immediately closest to New York, north Jersey speech is free of certain New York City features which are heavily stigmatized: the Jersey accent is usually rhotic and æ-tensing is less pronounced than in New York.

This accent is found in the northeast quarter of New Jersey, and is basically the part of the state which is in New York City's metropolitan area but not the dialect region. It includes cities such as Rutherford and Rahway.

Contrary to popular belief, no one in any part of New Jersey ever refers to their state as Joisey. This word is, in fact, a mistaken attempt by non-New Jersey residents to speak with a Jersey accent.

The Jersey Shore and Cape May Accent

The present accent of the Jersey Shore is heavily influenced by that of North Jersey, from which it was principally settled. However, prior to the influence of the tourism industry on the area, the situation was different.

It was first a Dutch town, which is still reflected in the Dutch names of some local businesses and streets. The only road to Cape May was from Philadelphia, so Philadelphia English mixed in with the Dutch. The Cape May accent is fading away now; people are moving away from Cape May and businesses are closing. New people are moving in with ordinary northern New Jersey accents. Within years the accent will disappear.

Related topics

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