LIST OF DIALECTS OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE


This is a 'list of varieties of the English language.' Dialects are varieties differing in pronunciation, vocabulary and grammar from each other and from Standard English (which may itself be considered a dialect). British linguists distinguish dialect from accent, which refers only to pronunciation. Thus, any educated English person can use the vocabulary and grammar of Standard English, but different speakers
are said to speak it using their own regional accent, or, in the case of Britain, with the class-based accent known as Received Pronunciation. American linguists, however, include pronunciation differences as part of the definition of regional or social dialects (better called varieties).

Contents
International classifications
Europe
North America
Caribbean
Asia
Africa
Oceania
Constructed
Manual encodings of English
The "Lishes"
See also
References
External links

International classifications



International English ''or'' World English

Native American English

North American English

Mid-Atlantic English

South Asian English

East Asian English

Europe



European English

British English (BrE)


England (English English (EngEng))



Northern English




Geordie (spoken in Tyneside)




Mackem (spoken in Sunderland)




Pitmatic (spoken in the Northumberland coalfield)




Durham




Cumbrian




Tyke (Yorkshire). Often subdivided into North, West and East Ridings.




Lancashire




Mancunian (spoken in Manchester)




Scouse (spoken in Liverpool and Merseyside)



East Midlands English









Derbyshire




Nottinghamshire




Lincolnshire




Leicestershire



West Midlands English




Black Country (Yam Yam)




Brummie (spoken in Birmingham)




Potteries (North Staffordshire)




Herefordshire




Warwickshire




Worcestershire



East Anglian English




Norfolk dialect (Broad Norfolk)




Suffolk dialect



South East England




Estuary English




Cockney (London)



West Country dialects




Somerset




Devon




Cornwall




Wiltshire




Dorset


Scotland



Scottish English



Highland English



Glaswegian



Buchan Doric


Wales



Welsh English



North East English a toned down Scouse/Manchester accent due to English population



Pembrokeshire dialect

Ireland


Republic of Ireland



Hiberno-English



Yola dialect


Northern Ireland



Mid Ulster English



Ulster Scots English

Isle of Man


Manx English

Channel Islands


Guernsey English

Gibraltar


Llanito

North America



American English (AmE)


★ Cultural



African-American Vernacular English (AAVE)



Appalachian English



General American



Chicano English



Native American English (Amerindian English) (see also subtypes below)



Pennsylvania Dutchified English



Yinglish


★ Regional



★ Northeastern dialects




Baltimorese




Boston English




Northeast Pennsylvania English (Scranton, Pennsylvania-area)




Hudson Valley English (Albany, New York-area)




Maine-New Hampshire English




Philadelphia-area English




Pittsburgh English




Providence-area English




New York-New Jersey English




Nuyorican English




Vermont English



★ Mid-Atlantic dialects




Tidewater accent




Virginia Piedmont




Virginia Tidewater [1]



★ Midwest




Inland North American (Lower peninsula of Michigan, northern Ohio and Indiana, Chicago, part of eastern Wisconsin and upstate New York)




North Central American English (includes Minnesota, North Dakota and some of South Dakota, Wisconsin, Michigan and Iowa)





Yooper dialect (the variety of North Central American English spoken in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and in some neighboring areas)




North Midlands English (thin swath from Nebraska to Ohio)




St. Louis-area English




Wisconsin-Illinois dialect



Southern English




Appalachian English




Coastal Southeastern (Charleston, South Carolina, Savannah, Georgia area)




Cajun English




Harkers Island English (North Carolina)




Ozark Southern English




Southern Highland English




South Midlands English (thin swath from Oklahoma to Pennsylvania)




Tampanian English




Texan




Yat (New Orleans)



Western English




California English




Boontling




Hawaiian English (Hawaiian Pidgin)




Utah English




Pacific Northwest English

Bermudian English

★ Canada


Canadian English (CaE)



★ Native American English (Amerindian English)



★ Quebec




Quebec English



★ Maritimes




Maritimer English




Cape Breton accent




Lunenburg English



West/Central Canadian English




Toronto English




Northern Ontario English




Eastern Ontario English





Ottawa Valley Twang



Newfoundland English

Native American English (Amerindian English)


Mojave English


Isletan English


Tsimshian English


Lumbee English


Tohono O'odham English


Inupiaq English

Caribbean



Caribbean English


Anguillan English


Jamaican English


Trinidadian English

Asia



Burmese English

Hong Kong English

Indian English


Punjabi/Delhi English


U.P/Bihari English


Bengali/Assamese English


Gujarati English


Maharashtrian English


Kannadiga English


Telugu English


Tamil English


Malayalee English

Malaysian English (MyE)

Philippine English

Singapore English

Sri Lankan English (SLE)

Africa



Liberian English

Malawian English

South African English

Oceania



Australian English (AuE)


South Australian English


Western Australian English


Australian Aboriginal English


Torres Strait English

Fijian English

New Zealand English

Constructed



Basic English

E-Prime

European English

Globish

Newspeak

Special English

Manual encodings of English


Main articles: Manually Coded English


British Signed English

★ US Signed Exact English (SEE)

Australasian Signed English
These encoding systems should not be confused with sign languages
such as British Sign Language and American Sign Language.

The "Lishes"


The following are portmanteaus devised to describe certain local
variants of English. Although similarly named, they are actually quite
different in nature, with some being genuine mixed languages, some
being instances of heavy code-switching between English and another
language, some being genuine local dialects of English used by
first-language English speakers, and some being non-native
pronunciations of English. A few portmanteaus (such as Greeklish
and Pinglish) are transliteration methods rather than any kind
of spoken variant of English.
Benglish (Bengali English)

Chinglish (Chinese English)

Czenglish (Czech English)

Danglish (Danish English)

Dunglish (Dutch English)

Engrish (Japanese English)

Finglish (Finnish English)

Franglais (French English)

Denglisch/Genglish/Ginglish/Germish/Pseudo-Anglicism
(German English)

Hinglish (Hindi English)

Hunglish (Hungarian English)

Italish (Italian English)

Japlish (Japanese English)

Konglish (South Korean English)

★ Manglish/Malaysian Colloquial English (Malaysian English)

Poglish (Polish English)

Rominglish/Romglish (Romanian English)

Runglish (Russian English)

Serblish (Serbian English)

Singlish (Singaporean English)

Spanglish (Spanish English)

Swenglish (Swedish English)

Taglish (Tagalog English)

Tanglish (Tamil English)

Tinglish/Thailish (Thai English)

Vinish (Vietnamese English)

Wenglish (Welsh English)

Yeshivish (Yeshiva English)

Yinglish (Yiddish English)

See also



Survey of English Dialects

Regional accents of English speakers

History of the English language


Old English


Middle English


Early Modern English


Modern English

macaronic

References


External links



Sounds Familiar? — Listen
to examples of regional accents and dialects from across the UK on the
British Library's 'Sounds Familiar' website

English
Accents and Dialects
— a browsable collection of recordings
by the British Library.

American class=wikiexternal target=_blank>Dialects

BBC sound archive of accents in the
British Isles


International
Dialects of English Archive


Runglish

Regional Accents for the
Non-Expert


Speech Accent
Archive


|Dialect Poetry from the
English regions


This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves