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NORTHERN CITIES VOWEL SHIFT

(Redirected from Northern Cities Vowel Shift)
Three isoglosses identifying the NCVS. In the brown areas is more retracted than . The blue line encloses areas in which is backed. The red line encloses areas in which is diphthongized to even before oral consonants. The areas enclosed by all three lines may be considered the "core" of the NCVS; it is most consistently present in Syracuse, Rochester, Buffalo, Detroit, and Chicago. From Labov et al. 2006: 204. See: Inland Northern American English.

The 'Northern cities vowel shift' is a chain shift in the sounds of some vowels in the dialect region of American English known as the Inland North. It is called ''northern cities'' because it is taking place mostly in a broad swath of the United States around the Great Lakes, beginning some 50 miles west of Albany and extending west through Syracuse, Rochester, Buffalo, Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago, Madison, and north to Green Bay (Labov et al. 187–208).
In this shift, the vowels in the words ''cat'', ''cot'', ''caught'', ''cut'', and ''ket'' have shifted from IPA toward , and, in addition, the vowel in ''kit'' (IPA ) becomes more mid-centralized. Like most chain shifts, it is not complete in all areas at the same time: some but not all aspects of the shift can be found further afield. For example, the backing of is found as far south as St. Louis and as far west as Cedar Rapids, and the diphthongization of before oral consonants is found in parts of Minnesota (St. James, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Brainerd). Accents in which is more retracted than (whether by backing of , fronting of , or both) are encountered as far east as Providence, as far south as St. Louis, as far north as Bemidji, and as far west as Aberdeen (Labov et al. 204).
The trigger of this shift is the diphthongization of into (æ-tensing), a change identified as early as the 1960s. Then, is pulled forward toward , occupying a position very close to the position of former , and in some very advanced speakers an identical position. The third stage is another pull, namely the lowering of toward . The fourth stage is the backing of , a phonetic shift seen in some other accents, although less markedly and in fewer contexts; this is a push stage, because former and fronted sound similar, especially when is not fully raised to but only to . The fifth stage is the backing of , pulled by and at the same time pushed by . Finally, is lowered and backed, although it is still distinct from in all contexts. The shift is in progress throughout the Great Lakes cities, so some speakers might only have, for instance, the first two stages only, but none have, say, only the last stage.
The shift is found in mainly white speakers. Speakers of African American Vernacular English show little to no evidence of adopting the Northern Cities Shift. The shift has also not been adopted by Canadian speakers, despite the geographic proximity of millions of Canadians living near the United States border in the Great Lakes region and along the St. Lawrence. Because of this, a Canadian living in Ontario along the United States border is likely to sound more like a speaker thousands of miles away in California than an American speaker who resides just across the border.

Contents
See also
External links
References

See also



Great Vowel Shift

External links



Northern Cities Shift

A National Map of The Regional Dialects of American English

PBS resource from the show "Do you Speak American?"

Detroit Area Vowels (bottom part of page) Sound files at Penelope Eckert's website

The Guide to Buffalo English

NPR interview with Professor William Labov about the shift

References



★ Boberg, Charles (2000). "Geolinguistic Diffusion and the U.S.-Canada Border". ''Language Variation and Change'' 12:1–24

★ Dinkin, Aaron (2007) and William Labov (2007). "Bridging the Gap: Dialect Boundaries and Regional Allegiance in Upstate New York". Paper presented at Penn Linguistics Colloquium 31.

Small-town Values and Big-city Vowels: A Study of the Northern Cities Shift in Michigan, Gordon, Matthew J., , , Duke University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-8223-6478-6

The Atlas of North American English, Labov, William, Sharon Ash, and Charles Boberg, , , Mouton-de Gruyter, 2006, ISBN 3-11-016746-8

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