SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 34
The Completion of a Sound Change in California English Lauren Hall-Lew University of Edinburgh Lauren.Hall-Lew@ed.ac.uk *Travel support provided by:
Overview Analysis of the fronting of /u/ a.k.a.goose,boot, /u:/, or (uw) Analysis with respect to speaker age, gender, & ethnicity: Asian American vs. European American
/u/-fronting in English A widely documented sound change: United Kingdom(Cruttenden 2001; Gimson 1962; Harrington, Kleber & Reubold 2008; Hawkins & Midgley 2005; Schneider 2004) Southern Hemisphere(Lanham 1978; Lass 1995; Mesthrie 2010; Schneider 2004) North America(Fridland & Bartlett 2006; Hall-Lew 2005; Ohala 1981; Labov, Ash & Boberg 2006; Labov, Yaeger & Steiner 1972; Thomas 2001) & specifically, in California(Fought 1999; Godinez & Maddieson 1985; Hagiwara 1997; Hinton et al. 1987)
/u/-fronting in California English No documentation (in urban environments) prior to 1987(no mention of it inDeCamp1953) As in most varieties, /u/-fronting first appeared in the environment following anterior coronals (see Flemming 2003). In earlier studies, /u/-fronting among older Californians only occurred after coronals.
Labov, Ash & Boberg (2006) The Atlas of North American English Post-coronal /u/,  	or too, is fronted across most of the United States. Non-post-coronal /u/, or koo, is mainly fronted across the Southern U.S., but is also found in the Midwest & West.
/u/-fronting in California English /u/-fronting generally occurs within the vowel nucleus, not the vowel off-glide. Off-glides remain backed, resulting in increased diphthongization. Fronting is inhibited by a following /l/ 	(The single lexical exception, cool, appears limited to the informal, non-temperature evaluative adjective & social uses, such as taking particular stances. More on this later…)
post-coronal /u/ San Francisco, Irish American, Female, 65yrs
elsewhere /u/ San Francisco, Irish American, Female, 65yrs
pre-liquid /u/ San Francisco, Irish American, Female, 65yrs
/u/-fronting & Ethnicity in California Mexican Americans in Los Angeles, CA produce /u/ further back than European Americans (Godinez & Maddieson 1985). Mexican Americans in Los Angeles, CA produce a wide range of /u/ realizations, with frontedness varying more with network, gender, and social class (Fought 1999).
/u/-fronting & Gender in California Hinton et al. (1987) found that /u/-fronting was a feature of a gendered ‘mock California’ persona, e.g. ‘Valley Girl’. Today’s analysis: this indexical association is weakening the correlation with gender is also weakening the change is nearing completion
Fieldwork Spring & Summer 2008 Guided spontaneous speech from sociolinguistic & ethnographic interviews San Francisco’s largest residential neighborhood, the Sunset District: roughly all ‘middle class’ approximately 50% Asian American,  	45% Euro American, 5% Other
Speakers Analyzed 16 Asian Americans & 14 European Americans 17 females, 13 males Ages 16–76 The Asian Americans: (12) Chinese (1) Filipino (1) Japanese (2) ‘Mixed’
Speakers Analyzed All dominant English speakers since at least age 5. Asian Americans’ heritage language self-reports: (11) Cantonese (1) Shanghainese (1) Northern Mandarin (1) Taiwanese Mandarin Asian Americans’ bilingualism self-reports: (3) active, (3) intermediate, (3) passive (7) monolingual English ,[object Object]
 (1) Tagalog
 (1) Ilokano,[object Object]
Measuring Fronting F1 & F2 values obtained automatically by a script written for the AkustykPraat add-on (Plichta 2006). 18% of the data checked by hand. Measurements were taken at: the temporal midpoint the off-glide (near a boundary placed two glottal pulses from the end of regular voicing)
Measuring Fronting Fronting, for each speaker, was calculated as the average distance in F2 between /u/ and /i/. NB: Since the onset is most influenced by the place of the preceding consonant, the midpoint data underestimate the full extent of fronting.
Normalization & Statistics Conversion & Normalization All data was Bark-converted (Syrdal & Gopal 1986) and Lobanov normalized, using NORM(Lobanov 1971; Thomas & Kendall 2007). Mixed-effect Model (word & speaker as random) independent social factors: speaker age (continuous) speaker ethnicity (binary: Asian / European) speaker gender (binary: M / F)
Results Nothing new here: The midpoint of post-coronal /u/ (too) is significantly further front than /u/ in other environments (koo). The midpoint of both too & koo are significantly further front than /u/ before /l/ (cool).
Results *Some New Stuff: Differences between three phonological contrasts also obtain for off-glides. Impressionistic percept of off-glide ‘backness’ may be due to rounding (to be tested in future work). too & koo are not significantly different with respect to F1, but both are significantly higher than cool. Not due to raising, but rather mergers-in-progress among pre-/l/ back vowels. * = not in the ICPhS Proceedings Paper
San Francisco, Chinese American, Female, 16yrs 22
Results: Social factors Midpoint data, for all /u/ combined: Significant correlation between fronting and speaker age (F[1,29]=6.9, p<0.05) Slight trend effect of gender (F[1,9]=3.3, p=0.081); females > males No effect of ethnicity No interaction effects No qualitative patterning with heritage language and/or level of bilingualism
Results: Social factors For just too: No correlation of speaker age. For just koo: Main effect of speaker age (F[1,29]=8.7, p<0.01)
age:  p < 0.01 age:  n.s.
Results: Social factors For just too: Actually, no correlations for any social factor. For just koo: Trend effect of gender (F[1,29]=3.2, p=0.089) females > males Trend effect of ethnicity (F[1,29]=3.3, p=0.085) Asian Americans > European Americans
Gender & fronting of koo
Ethnicity & fronting of koo
Ethnicity & fronting of koo NB: The finding that a non-European ethnic group is not lagging with respect to a sound change in progress is unusual in U.S. English (cf. Labov 2001:506). Here, not only are Asian Americans not lagging, but the speakers with the highestkoo-midpoint F2 values are all Asian American (specifically, Cantonese American).
Discussion Age is still a significant correlate of /u/-fronting in California English. There is still a change in progress. However, the change is nearing completion. Age is no longer significant for /u/-fronting in post-coronal environments – the environment where the sound change initially began. All speakers of all ages front /u/ after coronals. The sound change is limited to elsewhere contexts.
Discussion Even in non-coronal contexts, /u/-fronting no longer significantly correlates with gender. Full participation by Asian Americans also suggests community-wide entrenchment (cf. Fought 1999 for Mexican Americans in Los Angeles).
Discussion Indexical associations between /u/-fronting and ‘Valley Girl’ personae also appear (impressionistically) to be fading. *Interestingly, apparent exceptions seem to be: occurrences in particularly rare phonological environments, like cool. occurrences in potentially newer aspects of the change, such as off-glide fronting (shoes as /ʃɪz/, cf. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wCF3ywukQYA).
Implications *As a sound change proceeds: the socio-indexical meanings that were attached to earlier phonological environments fade, and similar or related socio-indexical meanings become (re)assigned to the newer phonological environments where the sound change is still progressing.

More Related Content

What's hot

Labov study
Labov studyLabov study
Labov studySuet Yet
 
Ch 6 corpus linguistics
Ch 6   corpus linguisticsCh 6   corpus linguistics
Ch 6 corpus linguisticsNaveed Khokher
 
Language Change Part 3: UK Studies
Language Change Part 3: UK StudiesLanguage Change Part 3: UK Studies
Language Change Part 3: UK Studiessuasenglish
 
Language change
Language changeLanguage change
Language changeAnie01
 
Genre research - heavy metal
Genre research - heavy metalGenre research - heavy metal
Genre research - heavy metalWhynotzoidberggg
 
Meeting 9 real time and apparent time
Meeting 9 real time and apparent timeMeeting 9 real time and apparent time
Meeting 9 real time and apparent timeSchool
 
Genre research heavy metal
Genre research   heavy metalGenre research   heavy metal
Genre research heavy metalWhynotzoidberggg
 
Task 6 research and planning - Nicole Hickman
Task 6 research and planning - Nicole HickmanTask 6 research and planning - Nicole Hickman
Task 6 research and planning - Nicole Hickmanasmediac15
 

What's hot (9)

Labov study
Labov studyLabov study
Labov study
 
Ch 6 corpus linguistics
Ch 6   corpus linguisticsCh 6   corpus linguistics
Ch 6 corpus linguistics
 
Language Change Part 3: UK Studies
Language Change Part 3: UK StudiesLanguage Change Part 3: UK Studies
Language Change Part 3: UK Studies
 
Language change
Language changeLanguage change
Language change
 
Metal songs
Metal songsMetal songs
Metal songs
 
Genre research - heavy metal
Genre research - heavy metalGenre research - heavy metal
Genre research - heavy metal
 
Meeting 9 real time and apparent time
Meeting 9 real time and apparent timeMeeting 9 real time and apparent time
Meeting 9 real time and apparent time
 
Genre research heavy metal
Genre research   heavy metalGenre research   heavy metal
Genre research heavy metal
 
Task 6 research and planning - Nicole Hickman
Task 6 research and planning - Nicole HickmanTask 6 research and planning - Nicole Hickman
Task 6 research and planning - Nicole Hickman
 

Viewers also liked

over view of pizza hut in bangladesh
over view of pizza hut in bangladeshover view of pizza hut in bangladesh
over view of pizza hut in bangladeshMohammad Al Amin Khan
 
Sounds of language: Phonetics and Applied Linguistics
Sounds of language: Phonetics and Applied LinguisticsSounds of language: Phonetics and Applied Linguistics
Sounds of language: Phonetics and Applied LinguisticsDea Timbreza
 
3 phonology slides
3 phonology slides3 phonology slides
3 phonology slidesJasmine Wong
 

Viewers also liked (8)

over view of pizza hut in bangladesh
over view of pizza hut in bangladeshover view of pizza hut in bangladesh
over view of pizza hut in bangladesh
 
Articulatory process
Articulatory processArticulatory process
Articulatory process
 
Flexible Antennas
Flexible AntennasFlexible Antennas
Flexible Antennas
 
Historical Linguistics
Historical LinguisticsHistorical Linguistics
Historical Linguistics
 
Historical Linguistics
Historical LinguisticsHistorical Linguistics
Historical Linguistics
 
Hstorical Linguistics
Hstorical LinguisticsHstorical Linguistics
Hstorical Linguistics
 
Sounds of language: Phonetics and Applied Linguistics
Sounds of language: Phonetics and Applied LinguisticsSounds of language: Phonetics and Applied Linguistics
Sounds of language: Phonetics and Applied Linguistics
 
3 phonology slides
3 phonology slides3 phonology slides
3 phonology slides
 

Similar to The Completion of /u/-Fronting in California English

Ethnicity and Phonetic Variation in a San Francisco Neighborhood
Ethnicity and Phonetic Variation in a San Francisco NeighborhoodEthnicity and Phonetic Variation in a San Francisco Neighborhood
Ethnicity and Phonetic Variation in a San Francisco NeighborhoodLauren Hall-Lew
 
Black Widget.jpgButtercup Gizmo.jpgGlow in the Dark Widg.docx
Black Widget.jpgButtercup Gizmo.jpgGlow in the Dark Widg.docxBlack Widget.jpgButtercup Gizmo.jpgGlow in the Dark Widg.docx
Black Widget.jpgButtercup Gizmo.jpgGlow in the Dark Widg.docxAASTHA76
 
Social Change & Sound Change
Social Change & Sound ChangeSocial Change & Sound Change
Social Change & Sound ChangeLauren Hall-Lew
 
Sociophonetics & Translation: the social meaning of loanword pronunciati
Sociophonetics & Translation: the social meaning of loanword pronunciatiSociophonetics & Translation: the social meaning of loanword pronunciati
Sociophonetics & Translation: the social meaning of loanword pronunciatiguest3e66256
 
Language Changes, Shift, and Death
Language Changes, Shift, and DeathLanguage Changes, Shift, and Death
Language Changes, Shift, and DeathFlipped Channel
 
Ling 505 tayao's lectal description of phil eng (presentation)
Ling 505  tayao's lectal description of phil eng (presentation)Ling 505  tayao's lectal description of phil eng (presentation)
Ling 505 tayao's lectal description of phil eng (presentation)Bernard Paderes
 
Condi Rice - American Dialect Society
Condi Rice - American Dialect SocietyCondi Rice - American Dialect Society
Condi Rice - American Dialect SocietyLauren Hall-Lew
 
The Production of Mandarin Voiceless Sibilant Fricatives by Late Cantonese-M...
 The Production of Mandarin Voiceless Sibilant Fricatives by Late Cantonese-M... The Production of Mandarin Voiceless Sibilant Fricatives by Late Cantonese-M...
The Production of Mandarin Voiceless Sibilant Fricatives by Late Cantonese-M...English Literature and Language Review ELLR
 
Dialects & Accents
Dialects & Accents Dialects & Accents
Dialects & Accents A Faiz
 
William labov: Language Variation and Change
William labov: Language Variation and ChangeWilliam labov: Language Variation and Change
William labov: Language Variation and ChangeShang Genon-Sieras
 
Australian English Pronunciation Into The 21St Century
Australian English Pronunciation Into The 21St CenturyAustralian English Pronunciation Into The 21St Century
Australian English Pronunciation Into The 21St CenturyGina Rizzo
 
Language variation-presentation slide-louth and kosal( edited)
Language variation-presentation slide-louth and kosal( edited)Language variation-presentation slide-louth and kosal( edited)
Language variation-presentation slide-louth and kosal( edited)Sran Louth
 
Phonemic categorizations of English stops among native speaking/EFL/ESL students
Phonemic categorizations of English stops among native speaking/EFL/ESL studentsPhonemic categorizations of English stops among native speaking/EFL/ESL students
Phonemic categorizations of English stops among native speaking/EFL/ESL studentsguest5763f0
 
The Evolution of African American Vernacular English (AAVE) Use in Hip Hop
The Evolution of African American Vernacular English (AAVE) Use in Hip HopThe Evolution of African American Vernacular English (AAVE) Use in Hip Hop
The Evolution of African American Vernacular English (AAVE) Use in Hip HopDaniel Eggleston
 
Chapter 17: Language history and change
Chapter 17: Language history and changeChapter 17: Language history and change
Chapter 17: Language history and changeErica Gisela Delgado
 

Similar to The Completion of /u/-Fronting in California English (20)

Ethnicity and Phonetic Variation in a San Francisco Neighborhood
Ethnicity and Phonetic Variation in a San Francisco NeighborhoodEthnicity and Phonetic Variation in a San Francisco Neighborhood
Ethnicity and Phonetic Variation in a San Francisco Neighborhood
 
Lvc & Ethnicity
Lvc & EthnicityLvc & Ethnicity
Lvc & Ethnicity
 
Black Widget.jpgButtercup Gizmo.jpgGlow in the Dark Widg.docx
Black Widget.jpgButtercup Gizmo.jpgGlow in the Dark Widg.docxBlack Widget.jpgButtercup Gizmo.jpgGlow in the Dark Widg.docx
Black Widget.jpgButtercup Gizmo.jpgGlow in the Dark Widg.docx
 
Social Change & Sound Change
Social Change & Sound ChangeSocial Change & Sound Change
Social Change & Sound Change
 
Sociophonetics & Translation: the social meaning of loanword pronunciati
Sociophonetics & Translation: the social meaning of loanword pronunciatiSociophonetics & Translation: the social meaning of loanword pronunciati
Sociophonetics & Translation: the social meaning of loanword pronunciati
 
Language Changes, Shift, and Death
Language Changes, Shift, and DeathLanguage Changes, Shift, and Death
Language Changes, Shift, and Death
 
Ling 505 tayao's lectal description of phil eng (presentation)
Ling 505  tayao's lectal description of phil eng (presentation)Ling 505  tayao's lectal description of phil eng (presentation)
Ling 505 tayao's lectal description of phil eng (presentation)
 
Condi Rice - American Dialect Society
Condi Rice - American Dialect SocietyCondi Rice - American Dialect Society
Condi Rice - American Dialect Society
 
The Production of Mandarin Voiceless Sibilant Fricatives by Late Cantonese-M...
 The Production of Mandarin Voiceless Sibilant Fricatives by Late Cantonese-M... The Production of Mandarin Voiceless Sibilant Fricatives by Late Cantonese-M...
The Production of Mandarin Voiceless Sibilant Fricatives by Late Cantonese-M...
 
Regional and social dalects
Regional and social dalectsRegional and social dalects
Regional and social dalects
 
Dialects & Accents
Dialects & Accents Dialects & Accents
Dialects & Accents
 
William labov: Language Variation and Change
William labov: Language Variation and ChangeWilliam labov: Language Variation and Change
William labov: Language Variation and Change
 
Australian English Pronunciation Into The 21St Century
Australian English Pronunciation Into The 21St CenturyAustralian English Pronunciation Into The 21St Century
Australian English Pronunciation Into The 21St Century
 
Language variation-presentation slide-louth and kosal( edited)
Language variation-presentation slide-louth and kosal( edited)Language variation-presentation slide-louth and kosal( edited)
Language variation-presentation slide-louth and kosal( edited)
 
London accents
London accentsLondon accents
London accents
 
Phonemic categorizations of English stops among native speaking/EFL/ESL students
Phonemic categorizations of English stops among native speaking/EFL/ESL studentsPhonemic categorizations of English stops among native speaking/EFL/ESL students
Phonemic categorizations of English stops among native speaking/EFL/ESL students
 
Carla um-nov12
Carla um-nov12Carla um-nov12
Carla um-nov12
 
The Evolution of African American Vernacular English (AAVE) Use in Hip Hop
The Evolution of African American Vernacular English (AAVE) Use in Hip HopThe Evolution of African American Vernacular English (AAVE) Use in Hip Hop
The Evolution of African American Vernacular English (AAVE) Use in Hip Hop
 
Ae&be
Ae&beAe&be
Ae&be
 
Chapter 17: Language history and change
Chapter 17: Language history and changeChapter 17: Language history and change
Chapter 17: Language history and change
 

Recently uploaded

MS4 level being good citizen -imperative- (1) (1).pdf
MS4 level   being good citizen -imperative- (1) (1).pdfMS4 level   being good citizen -imperative- (1) (1).pdf
MS4 level being good citizen -imperative- (1) (1).pdfMr Bounab Samir
 
Transaction Management in Database Management System
Transaction Management in Database Management SystemTransaction Management in Database Management System
Transaction Management in Database Management SystemChristalin Nelson
 
ClimART Action | eTwinning Project
ClimART Action    |    eTwinning ProjectClimART Action    |    eTwinning Project
ClimART Action | eTwinning Projectjordimapav
 
Narcotic and Non Narcotic Analgesic..pdf
Narcotic and Non Narcotic Analgesic..pdfNarcotic and Non Narcotic Analgesic..pdf
Narcotic and Non Narcotic Analgesic..pdfPrerana Jadhav
 
Using Grammatical Signals Suitable to Patterns of Idea Development
Using Grammatical Signals Suitable to Patterns of Idea DevelopmentUsing Grammatical Signals Suitable to Patterns of Idea Development
Using Grammatical Signals Suitable to Patterns of Idea Developmentchesterberbo7
 
Q-Factor General Quiz-7th April 2024, Quiz Club NITW
Q-Factor General Quiz-7th April 2024, Quiz Club NITWQ-Factor General Quiz-7th April 2024, Quiz Club NITW
Q-Factor General Quiz-7th April 2024, Quiz Club NITWQuiz Club NITW
 
Multi Domain Alias In the Odoo 17 ERP Module
Multi Domain Alias In the Odoo 17 ERP ModuleMulti Domain Alias In the Odoo 17 ERP Module
Multi Domain Alias In the Odoo 17 ERP ModuleCeline George
 
Oppenheimer Film Discussion for Philosophy and Film
Oppenheimer Film Discussion for Philosophy and FilmOppenheimer Film Discussion for Philosophy and Film
Oppenheimer Film Discussion for Philosophy and FilmStan Meyer
 
Mental Health Awareness - a toolkit for supporting young minds
Mental Health Awareness - a toolkit for supporting young mindsMental Health Awareness - a toolkit for supporting young minds
Mental Health Awareness - a toolkit for supporting young mindsPooky Knightsmith
 
Q4-PPT-Music9_Lesson-1-Romantic-Opera.pptx
Q4-PPT-Music9_Lesson-1-Romantic-Opera.pptxQ4-PPT-Music9_Lesson-1-Romantic-Opera.pptx
Q4-PPT-Music9_Lesson-1-Romantic-Opera.pptxlancelewisportillo
 
week 1 cookery 8 fourth - quarter .pptx
week 1 cookery 8  fourth  -  quarter .pptxweek 1 cookery 8  fourth  -  quarter .pptx
week 1 cookery 8 fourth - quarter .pptxJonalynLegaspi2
 
How to Fix XML SyntaxError in Odoo the 17
How to Fix XML SyntaxError in Odoo the 17How to Fix XML SyntaxError in Odoo the 17
How to Fix XML SyntaxError in Odoo the 17Celine George
 
ROLES IN A STAGE PRODUCTION in arts.pptx
ROLES IN A STAGE PRODUCTION in arts.pptxROLES IN A STAGE PRODUCTION in arts.pptx
ROLES IN A STAGE PRODUCTION in arts.pptxVanesaIglesias10
 
Grade Three -ELLNA-REVIEWER-ENGLISH.pptx
Grade Three -ELLNA-REVIEWER-ENGLISH.pptxGrade Three -ELLNA-REVIEWER-ENGLISH.pptx
Grade Three -ELLNA-REVIEWER-ENGLISH.pptxkarenfajardo43
 
Unraveling Hypertext_ Analyzing Postmodern Elements in Literature.pptx
Unraveling Hypertext_ Analyzing  Postmodern Elements in  Literature.pptxUnraveling Hypertext_ Analyzing  Postmodern Elements in  Literature.pptx
Unraveling Hypertext_ Analyzing Postmodern Elements in Literature.pptxDhatriParmar
 
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdf
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdfActive Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdf
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdfPatidar M
 
Congestive Cardiac Failure..presentation
Congestive Cardiac Failure..presentationCongestive Cardiac Failure..presentation
Congestive Cardiac Failure..presentationdeepaannamalai16
 

Recently uploaded (20)

MS4 level being good citizen -imperative- (1) (1).pdf
MS4 level   being good citizen -imperative- (1) (1).pdfMS4 level   being good citizen -imperative- (1) (1).pdf
MS4 level being good citizen -imperative- (1) (1).pdf
 
Transaction Management in Database Management System
Transaction Management in Database Management SystemTransaction Management in Database Management System
Transaction Management in Database Management System
 
ClimART Action | eTwinning Project
ClimART Action    |    eTwinning ProjectClimART Action    |    eTwinning Project
ClimART Action | eTwinning Project
 
Narcotic and Non Narcotic Analgesic..pdf
Narcotic and Non Narcotic Analgesic..pdfNarcotic and Non Narcotic Analgesic..pdf
Narcotic and Non Narcotic Analgesic..pdf
 
Using Grammatical Signals Suitable to Patterns of Idea Development
Using Grammatical Signals Suitable to Patterns of Idea DevelopmentUsing Grammatical Signals Suitable to Patterns of Idea Development
Using Grammatical Signals Suitable to Patterns of Idea Development
 
Q-Factor General Quiz-7th April 2024, Quiz Club NITW
Q-Factor General Quiz-7th April 2024, Quiz Club NITWQ-Factor General Quiz-7th April 2024, Quiz Club NITW
Q-Factor General Quiz-7th April 2024, Quiz Club NITW
 
Multi Domain Alias In the Odoo 17 ERP Module
Multi Domain Alias In the Odoo 17 ERP ModuleMulti Domain Alias In the Odoo 17 ERP Module
Multi Domain Alias In the Odoo 17 ERP Module
 
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: Large Language Models"
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: Large Language Models"Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: Large Language Models"
Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: Large Language Models"
 
Oppenheimer Film Discussion for Philosophy and Film
Oppenheimer Film Discussion for Philosophy and FilmOppenheimer Film Discussion for Philosophy and Film
Oppenheimer Film Discussion for Philosophy and Film
 
Faculty Profile prashantha K EEE dept Sri Sairam college of Engineering
Faculty Profile prashantha K EEE dept Sri Sairam college of EngineeringFaculty Profile prashantha K EEE dept Sri Sairam college of Engineering
Faculty Profile prashantha K EEE dept Sri Sairam college of Engineering
 
Mental Health Awareness - a toolkit for supporting young minds
Mental Health Awareness - a toolkit for supporting young mindsMental Health Awareness - a toolkit for supporting young minds
Mental Health Awareness - a toolkit for supporting young minds
 
Q4-PPT-Music9_Lesson-1-Romantic-Opera.pptx
Q4-PPT-Music9_Lesson-1-Romantic-Opera.pptxQ4-PPT-Music9_Lesson-1-Romantic-Opera.pptx
Q4-PPT-Music9_Lesson-1-Romantic-Opera.pptx
 
week 1 cookery 8 fourth - quarter .pptx
week 1 cookery 8  fourth  -  quarter .pptxweek 1 cookery 8  fourth  -  quarter .pptx
week 1 cookery 8 fourth - quarter .pptx
 
How to Fix XML SyntaxError in Odoo the 17
How to Fix XML SyntaxError in Odoo the 17How to Fix XML SyntaxError in Odoo the 17
How to Fix XML SyntaxError in Odoo the 17
 
ROLES IN A STAGE PRODUCTION in arts.pptx
ROLES IN A STAGE PRODUCTION in arts.pptxROLES IN A STAGE PRODUCTION in arts.pptx
ROLES IN A STAGE PRODUCTION in arts.pptx
 
Grade Three -ELLNA-REVIEWER-ENGLISH.pptx
Grade Three -ELLNA-REVIEWER-ENGLISH.pptxGrade Three -ELLNA-REVIEWER-ENGLISH.pptx
Grade Three -ELLNA-REVIEWER-ENGLISH.pptx
 
prashanth updated resume 2024 for Teaching Profession
prashanth updated resume 2024 for Teaching Professionprashanth updated resume 2024 for Teaching Profession
prashanth updated resume 2024 for Teaching Profession
 
Unraveling Hypertext_ Analyzing Postmodern Elements in Literature.pptx
Unraveling Hypertext_ Analyzing  Postmodern Elements in  Literature.pptxUnraveling Hypertext_ Analyzing  Postmodern Elements in  Literature.pptx
Unraveling Hypertext_ Analyzing Postmodern Elements in Literature.pptx
 
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdf
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdfActive Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdf
Active Learning Strategies (in short ALS).pdf
 
Congestive Cardiac Failure..presentation
Congestive Cardiac Failure..presentationCongestive Cardiac Failure..presentation
Congestive Cardiac Failure..presentation
 

The Completion of /u/-Fronting in California English

  • 1. The Completion of a Sound Change in California English Lauren Hall-Lew University of Edinburgh Lauren.Hall-Lew@ed.ac.uk *Travel support provided by:
  • 2. Overview Analysis of the fronting of /u/ a.k.a.goose,boot, /u:/, or (uw) Analysis with respect to speaker age, gender, & ethnicity: Asian American vs. European American
  • 3. /u/-fronting in English A widely documented sound change: United Kingdom(Cruttenden 2001; Gimson 1962; Harrington, Kleber & Reubold 2008; Hawkins & Midgley 2005; Schneider 2004) Southern Hemisphere(Lanham 1978; Lass 1995; Mesthrie 2010; Schneider 2004) North America(Fridland & Bartlett 2006; Hall-Lew 2005; Ohala 1981; Labov, Ash & Boberg 2006; Labov, Yaeger & Steiner 1972; Thomas 2001) & specifically, in California(Fought 1999; Godinez & Maddieson 1985; Hagiwara 1997; Hinton et al. 1987)
  • 4. /u/-fronting in California English No documentation (in urban environments) prior to 1987(no mention of it inDeCamp1953) As in most varieties, /u/-fronting first appeared in the environment following anterior coronals (see Flemming 2003). In earlier studies, /u/-fronting among older Californians only occurred after coronals.
  • 5. Labov, Ash & Boberg (2006) The Atlas of North American English Post-coronal /u/, or too, is fronted across most of the United States. Non-post-coronal /u/, or koo, is mainly fronted across the Southern U.S., but is also found in the Midwest & West.
  • 6. /u/-fronting in California English /u/-fronting generally occurs within the vowel nucleus, not the vowel off-glide. Off-glides remain backed, resulting in increased diphthongization. Fronting is inhibited by a following /l/ (The single lexical exception, cool, appears limited to the informal, non-temperature evaluative adjective & social uses, such as taking particular stances. More on this later…)
  • 7. post-coronal /u/ San Francisco, Irish American, Female, 65yrs
  • 8. elsewhere /u/ San Francisco, Irish American, Female, 65yrs
  • 9. pre-liquid /u/ San Francisco, Irish American, Female, 65yrs
  • 10. /u/-fronting & Ethnicity in California Mexican Americans in Los Angeles, CA produce /u/ further back than European Americans (Godinez & Maddieson 1985). Mexican Americans in Los Angeles, CA produce a wide range of /u/ realizations, with frontedness varying more with network, gender, and social class (Fought 1999).
  • 11. /u/-fronting & Gender in California Hinton et al. (1987) found that /u/-fronting was a feature of a gendered ‘mock California’ persona, e.g. ‘Valley Girl’. Today’s analysis: this indexical association is weakening the correlation with gender is also weakening the change is nearing completion
  • 12. Fieldwork Spring & Summer 2008 Guided spontaneous speech from sociolinguistic & ethnographic interviews San Francisco’s largest residential neighborhood, the Sunset District: roughly all ‘middle class’ approximately 50% Asian American, 45% Euro American, 5% Other
  • 13. Speakers Analyzed 16 Asian Americans & 14 European Americans 17 females, 13 males Ages 16–76 The Asian Americans: (12) Chinese (1) Filipino (1) Japanese (2) ‘Mixed’
  • 14.
  • 16.
  • 17. Measuring Fronting F1 & F2 values obtained automatically by a script written for the AkustykPraat add-on (Plichta 2006). 18% of the data checked by hand. Measurements were taken at: the temporal midpoint the off-glide (near a boundary placed two glottal pulses from the end of regular voicing)
  • 18. Measuring Fronting Fronting, for each speaker, was calculated as the average distance in F2 between /u/ and /i/. NB: Since the onset is most influenced by the place of the preceding consonant, the midpoint data underestimate the full extent of fronting.
  • 19. Normalization & Statistics Conversion & Normalization All data was Bark-converted (Syrdal & Gopal 1986) and Lobanov normalized, using NORM(Lobanov 1971; Thomas & Kendall 2007). Mixed-effect Model (word & speaker as random) independent social factors: speaker age (continuous) speaker ethnicity (binary: Asian / European) speaker gender (binary: M / F)
  • 20. Results Nothing new here: The midpoint of post-coronal /u/ (too) is significantly further front than /u/ in other environments (koo). The midpoint of both too & koo are significantly further front than /u/ before /l/ (cool).
  • 21.
  • 22. Results *Some New Stuff: Differences between three phonological contrasts also obtain for off-glides. Impressionistic percept of off-glide ‘backness’ may be due to rounding (to be tested in future work). too & koo are not significantly different with respect to F1, but both are significantly higher than cool. Not due to raising, but rather mergers-in-progress among pre-/l/ back vowels. * = not in the ICPhS Proceedings Paper
  • 23. San Francisco, Chinese American, Female, 16yrs 22
  • 24. Results: Social factors Midpoint data, for all /u/ combined: Significant correlation between fronting and speaker age (F[1,29]=6.9, p<0.05) Slight trend effect of gender (F[1,9]=3.3, p=0.081); females > males No effect of ethnicity No interaction effects No qualitative patterning with heritage language and/or level of bilingualism
  • 25. Results: Social factors For just too: No correlation of speaker age. For just koo: Main effect of speaker age (F[1,29]=8.7, p<0.01)
  • 26. age: p < 0.01 age: n.s.
  • 27. Results: Social factors For just too: Actually, no correlations for any social factor. For just koo: Trend effect of gender (F[1,29]=3.2, p=0.089) females > males Trend effect of ethnicity (F[1,29]=3.3, p=0.085) Asian Americans > European Americans
  • 30. Ethnicity & fronting of koo NB: The finding that a non-European ethnic group is not lagging with respect to a sound change in progress is unusual in U.S. English (cf. Labov 2001:506). Here, not only are Asian Americans not lagging, but the speakers with the highestkoo-midpoint F2 values are all Asian American (specifically, Cantonese American).
  • 31. Discussion Age is still a significant correlate of /u/-fronting in California English. There is still a change in progress. However, the change is nearing completion. Age is no longer significant for /u/-fronting in post-coronal environments – the environment where the sound change initially began. All speakers of all ages front /u/ after coronals. The sound change is limited to elsewhere contexts.
  • 32. Discussion Even in non-coronal contexts, /u/-fronting no longer significantly correlates with gender. Full participation by Asian Americans also suggests community-wide entrenchment (cf. Fought 1999 for Mexican Americans in Los Angeles).
  • 33. Discussion Indexical associations between /u/-fronting and ‘Valley Girl’ personae also appear (impressionistically) to be fading. *Interestingly, apparent exceptions seem to be: occurrences in particularly rare phonological environments, like cool. occurrences in potentially newer aspects of the change, such as off-glide fronting (shoes as /ʃɪz/, cf. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wCF3ywukQYA).
  • 34. Implications *As a sound change proceeds: the socio-indexical meanings that were attached to earlier phonological environments fade, and similar or related socio-indexical meanings become (re)assigned to the newer phonological environments where the sound change is still progressing.
  • 35. Selected References Flemming, E. 2003. The relationship between coronal place and vowel backness. Phonology, 335–373. Fought, C. 1999. A majority sound change in a minority community: /u/-fronting in Chicano English. Journal of Sociolinguistics, 3: 5–23. Fridland, V. & K. Bartlett. 2006. The social and linguistic conditioning of back vowel fronting across ethnic groups in Memphis, Tennessee. English Lng. & Ling., 10: 1–22. GodinezM,Jr, & M Maddieson. 1985. Vowel differences between Chicano and General Californian English. Int’l Jrnl of Soc. & Lang. 43–58. Hagiwara, R. 1997. Dialect Variation and formant frequency: The American English vowels revisited. JASA, 102: 655–658. Hall-Lew, L. 2005. One shift, two groups: When fronting alone is not enough. PWPL, 10.2: 105–116. Hall-Lew, L. 2010. Ethnicity and Sociolinguistic Variation in San Francisco. Lng. & Ling. Compass. 4(7): 458-472. Hall-Lew, L & R. L. Starr. 2010. Beyond the 2nd Generation: English use among Chinese Americans in the SF Bay Area. Eng. Today, 26(3):12-19 Harrington, J., F. Kleber, & U. Reubold. 2008. Compensation for coarticulation, /u/-fronting, and sound change in standard southern British: An acoustic and perceptual study. JASA, 123(5): 2825–2835. Hawkins, S. & J. Midgley. 2005. Formant frequencies of RP monophthongs in four age groups of speakers. Jrnl of the IPA, 35: 183-199 Hinton, L., S. Bremner, H. Corcoran, J. Learner, H. Luthin, B. Moonwomon, & M. Van Clay. 1987. It’s not just Valley Girls: A study of California English. BLS Proceedings. 13.117–127. Labov, W. 2001. Principles of Linguistic Change: Social Factors (Vol 2). Malden, MA: Blackwell. (p506) Labov, W., S. Ash & C. Boberg. 2006. Atlas of North American English: Phonetics, phonology, & sound change. New York: Mouton de Gruyter. Lobanov, B. M. 1971. Classification of Russian vowels spoken by different speakers. JASA, 49: 606–608. Mesthrie, R. 2010. Socio-phonetics and social change: Deracialisation of the GOOSE vowel in South African English. J. of Socioling., 14(1): 3-33. Ohala, J. 1981. The listener as a source of sound change. In C.S. Masek, R.A. Hendrick, & M.F. Miller (eds.), Papers from the parasession on language and behavior. Chicago: Chicago Linguistics Society. 178–203. Reed, D., & A. A. Metcalf. 1979 [1952-1959]. Linguistic Atlas of the Pacific Coast. Berkeley, CA. Stevens, K. H. & A. S. House. 1963. Perturbation of vowel articulations by consonantal context: an acoustical study. JSHR, 6:111–28. Syrdal, A.K. & H.S. Gopal. 1986. A Perceptual Model of Vowel Recognition Based on the Auditory Representation of American English Vowels. JASA, 79: 1086–1100. Thomas, E.R., & T. Kendall, 2007. NORM: The Vowel Normalization and Plotting Suite: An online tool for sociophonetic vowel normalization. Wells, J.C. 1982. Accents of English 1 – an Introduction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.