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Ayuh, Linguistically Speaking
By Laura Knoy on Thursday, March 9, 2006.
Despite our ever increasing mass-media society, one University of Pennsylvania linguist says that regional speech patterns are becoming more, not less, pronounced. We'll look at the research and talk with a local linguist about that and the very distinct accents here in New England...from Boston, Massachusetts to Bar Harbor, Maine. Laura's guests are William Labov, Professor of Linguistics at the University of Pennsylvania and author of "The Atlas of North American English", and Naomi Nagy, Director of the UNH Linguistics Lab and Coordinator of the UNH Linguistics Program. David Alan Stern, Professor of Dramatic Arts in Voice, Speech, and Dialect at the University of Connecticut. David is also President and Founder of “Dialect Accent Specialists†in Lyndonville, Vermont that teaches everyone from Hollywood Stars to Business Executive how to speak or loose accents. Web resources:
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interesting topic on regional accents! my wife and i are located in Nashua and recently started a new business (Boston Accents Co.) leveraging our design and marketing skills to create a branded line of apparel that carries the Boston/New England accent. alhtough each shirt currently says 'boston' beneath the saying, we plan on expanding to cover each of the new england states.
thanks, and have a wicked pissah day!
Janine and Brian Page
Ownahs and proud New Englandahs
I've always wondered why, no matter the accent, singers have a much more standard pronunciation. The Beatles are a great example. You hardly ever hear their British accent in their songs. Talking they sound very different