Anniversary Speeches
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Anniversary Speeches in the news

ILLIAM DHONE REMEMBERED 

Isle Of Man Online - Jan 02 8:46 AM
ALMOST 100 people braved the cold at Hango Hill today (Tuesday) to mark the anniversary of Illiam Dhone's execution.
Celebrating your £100m to charity 
Coventry Evening Telegraph - Jan 01 8:34 PM
A CHARITY which has spent £100 million on aid to war zones is launching a huge fundraising drive to celebrate its 40th anniversary.

Day Two: Spitzer Aide Turns Lobbyist 
The New York Sun - 2 hours, 9 minutes ago
On Day Two, a top campaign manager to the new governor joined a lobbying firm that may extend its reach to Albany. The lobbying firm is that of Suri Kasirer, New York City's widely respected top-earning lobbyist, who is considering expanding her business into Albany. Patrick Jenkins, a political operative from Queens who was paid about $5,400 a month to be Mr. Spitzer's deputy campaign manager, ...

Back Where It All Began 
Port Folio Weekly - 1 hour, 59 minutes ago
The Jamestown 400 hoopla won’t begin here for a few more months. But in England recently, the festivities got a jump-start.

- Anniverary Speeches

Here is an article on Anniversary Speeches.

Estuary English is a name given to the form(s) of English widely spoken in South East Anniversay Speeches England and the East of England; especially along the Anniverssary Speeches River Thames and its estuary, which is where the two regions meet. Estuary English is commonly described as a hybrid of Received Pronunciation (RP) and South Eastern Accents, particularly from the London, Kent and Essex area — i.e., the area around the Thames Estuary. The variety first came to public prominence in an article by David Rosewarne in the Times Education Supplement in October 1984. [1] Rosewarne argued that it may eventually replace RP as the Standard English pronunciation. Studies have indicated that Estuary English is not a single coherent form of English; rather, the reality behind the construct consists of some (but not all) phonetic features of working-class London speech spreading at various rates socially into middle-class speech and geographically into other accents of south-eastern England [2] [3].

Contents

  • 1 Features
  • 2 Use of Estuary English
  • 3 References
  • 4 See also
  • 5 External links

Features

Estuary English shares the following features with Cockney pronunciation:

  • Use of intrusive R.
  • A broad A in words such as bath, grass, laugh, etc. This is often seen as the litmus test of a South-East accent, but it has only spread to rural areas of the south-east in the last forty years.
  • T-glottalisation, i.e., using some glottal stops: that is, "t" is sounded as a glottal occlusion instead of being fully pronounced when it occurs before a consonant or at the end of words, as in "eight" or "McCartney" and it can also occur between vowels, as in Cockney or southern dialects e.g. "water" (pronounced as [wɔːʔə]).
  • Yod-coalescence, i.e., the use of the affricates /ʤ/ and /ʧ/ instead of the clusters /dj/ and /tj/ in words like "dune" and "tune".
  • Diphthong shifts, e.g., the diphthong in words like "I" becomes [ɑɪ], the diphthong in words like "brown" becomes [æʊ], and the diphthong in words like "face" becomes [ɛɪ], [ɐɪ], [ʌɪ], or [æɪ].
  • L-vocalisation, i.e., the use of [o] where RP uses [ɫ] in the final positions or in a final consonant cluster.

But the following characteristics of Cockney pronunciation are generally not considered to be present in Estuary English [1] [4] [5]:

  • Th-fronting, i.e., replacement of [θ, ð] with [f, v] (e.g. [fɪŋk] for think)
  • H-dropping, i.e., Dropping [h] in stressed words (e.g. [æʔ] for hat)

However, it should be noted that the boundary between Estuary English and Cockney is far from clear-cut [6] [7], hence even these features of Cockney might occur occasionally in Estuary English. In particular, it has been suggested that th-fronting is "currently making its way" into Estuary English,[5] e.g. those from Isle of Thanet often refer to Thanet as "Plannit Fannit" (Planet Thanet).

Use of Estuary English

Estuary English is widely encountered throughout the south and south-east of England, particularly among the young. Many consider it to be a working-class accent, though it is by no means limited to the working class. Some people adopt the accent as a means of "blending in", appearing to be more working class, or in an attempt to appear to be "a common man" — sometimes this affectation of the accent is derisively referred to as "Mockney". For example, Tony Blair, the British Prime Minister, has been heard to adopt the accent at times in TV interviews, etc. Diana, Princess of Wales (born 1961) was sometimes said to use elements of Estuary English, though they were quite mild in her case. By contrast the Queen's granddaughter Zara Phillips (born 1981) speaks with a pronounced Estuary English accent. As some Australian scientists have found out researching the Queen's anniversary speeches, even she has shifted her accent slightly towards what is called Estuary. [8] [9]

References

  1. ^ a b Rosewarne, David (1984). Estuary English. Times Educational Supplement, 19 (October 1984)
  2. ^ A handout by John C. Wells, one of the first to write a serious description of the would-be variety. Also summarized by him here.
  3. ^ Altendorf, Ulrike. "Estuary English" revisited
  4. ^ Wells, John (1994). Transcribing Estuary English - a discussion document. Speech Hearing and Language: UCL Work in Progress, volume 8, 1994, pages 259-267
  5. ^ a b Altendorf, Ulrike (1999). Estuary English: is English going Cockney? In: Moderna Språk, XCIII, 1, 1-11
  6. ^ Maidment, J. A. (1994) Estuary English: Hybrid or Hype? Paper presented at the 4th New Zealand Conference on Language & Society, Lincoln University, Christchurch, New Zealand, August 1994.
  7. ^ Haenni, Rudi (1999). The case of Estuary English: supposed evidence and a perceptual approach. University of Basel dissertation.
  8. ^ Queen's speech 'less posh' - BBC News
  9. ^ The Queen's English of today: My 'usband and I ... - The Guardian

See also

  • Regional accents of English speakers
  • List of dialects of the English language

External links

  • University College London: Estuary English
Search Term: "Estuary_English"