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What is Scottish English? Providing a definition of Scottish English is an uneasy task because the terminology used by various sources is incoherent. Most authors concord that Scottish English is Standard English spoken with a Scottish Accent. McArthur (1979) defines Scottish English as a bipolar linguistic continuum, with broad Scots at one end and Scottish Standard English at the other.
Mc Arthur (1979) adds a definition of Standard Scottish English; he sees it as a more or less homogeneous range of nationally acceptable norms of spelling, grammar, vocabulary and pronunciation, which is in turn one variety of World Standard English (while World Standard English is defined analogically as a more or less homogeneous range of internationally acceptable norms).
Scotland is an area with a unique linguistic tradition. Today, there are three indigenous languages spoken in Scotland: Scottish Gaelic, Scots and (Scottish) English. All are spoken throughout Scotland with the majority of Scots and Gaelic speakers also being bilingual with English.
Scotlands Languages
Scots English Scottish Gaelic Scots Standard English
Early history of Gaelic, Scots and English in Scotland
Gaelic remained the main language over a greater geographical area than Scots and was spoken by the majority of the population until Reformation. Until the fifteenth century, there was certain ambiguity in naming the languages of Scotland. Term Inglis was used to refer to the vernacular language of Lowland Scotland and of England, but the speakers were not English as it might suggest, but Scotsmen. However, by the time Scots became used as the official language of the Kingdom of Scotland, it was renamed to Scottis, and Inglis was used exclusively in connection to the English language. From the same time also come the first records of using the term Irische, a term similarly implying the Irish nationality, for the language of Scottish Highlands.
Scottish English
The process of adopting the English was even accelerated a hundred years later, when Scotland was formally united to England by the Act of Union in 1707. English came to be the official written language of the whole country and Scots became definitely downgraded to a domestic dialect. By the late eighteenth century, English was considered to be the most appropriate form of speaking on distinguished occasions. The Scottish English arose as an amalgam of English and Scots as the two dialects co-existed together. As Wells (1986) puts it, Scottish English is simply Standard English spoken with Scottish accent and retaining a few Scotticisms in vocabulary. This fact can also be ascribed to the long coexistence of these two languages. Even though Scotsmen of higher social classes gave up Scots in favour of English, they still lived in the same environment as before and were in contact with more conservative middle- and lower-classes, which neither had much opportunity to travel that far nor paid so much attention to their speech; which might miss the Scripts in Scots and whose literacy relied upon books published predominantly in English, but their day-to-day chores did include much more spoken communication and thus talking in Scots. There were no proper means of reproduction of the pronunciation of English except for those speaking Standard English as their mother tongue or those who had been in English-speaking territories for time long enough to acquire its authentic pronunciation. The fact, that it is possible to hear of Scottish Members of the British Parliament taking lessons in elocution so that the English might understand them better (Wells, 1986, p. 394) bespeaks the insufficient means of adopting the authentic pronunciation of English. The influence of Scots-speaking environment and the absence of native speakers of Standard English were so strong that the acquisition of English underwent an influential period of spelling pronunciation, interdialectal forms and hypercorrections (The Origins and Spread of Scots section).
1.1.3. Anglicisation
As it was mentioned above, Gaelic was superseded (sustituido) by Scots in Scottish Lowlands by the 11th century. From the 16th century onwards, Gaelic was receding under the pressure of English. During the 18th and 19th centuries, Gaelic was being forced out of the settlements, focused on forestry (silvicultura) and whiskey trading, along the Highland Line. In the Highlands of Scotland, this process proceeded much faster due to the population clearances (espacio libre, liquidacin) and emigration which followed the unsuccessful
rebellion of 1745. Entire communities were relocated to other parts of Scotland or sent overseas to the colonies and for those who remained in Highlands and Western Islands, the education became compulsory and transmitted through English. Thus English was established as the medium of education and advancement. Subsequently, the number of Gaelic speakers declined sharply; data from census of 1891 and 1991 show that the number of Gaelic speakers dropped from 250,000 to 66,000. Similar measures were employed in non-Gaelic speaking areas. English was promoted in schools and the use of Scots in classes was often even punishable. This policy understandably resulted into recession of Scots speaking population as well.
In the 1980s, more groups promoting Gaelic emerged and started to lobby for the use of Gaelic in education and in politics. It is possible to say that these efforts are successful since Professor Mackinnon in Gaelic in 1994 speaks about the rising number of pre-school playgrounds and primary units (in Murdoch, 1996, p. 4) and Gaelic is also encouraged to be used in Scottish television programming.
However promising these efforts may seem, the figures are still very low. The census of 2001 shows that around 92,400 (1.9 per cent) of the 4.9 million residents of Scotland *...+ had some Gaelic language ability in that they could speak, read, write or understand spoken Gaelic (Scotland's census, 2005, p. 9).
Unfortunately, it is not possible to speak in similar a detail about Scots, since no survey which would be as extensive as the census has been carried out. Some even argue that Scots, the traditional dialect has died out (Wells, 1982, p. 395). Scots is still spoken alongside Scotthish English, however, in written form it is used almost exclusively for literature which is, more often than not, about Scotland.
Figure 1 shows that the main Gaelic speaking parts of Scotland are the Outer and Ineer
Hebrides (adapted from Scotlands census,2005). Since the Scottish Parliament established Brd na Gidhlig, a body corporate whose main task is securing the status of the Gaelic language as an official language of Scotland commanding equal respect to the English language (Gaelic Language, 2005), it is possible to expect an increase in number of Gaelic speaking population to be shown by the Scotlands census of 2011. Unfortunately, it is not possible to speak in similar a detail about Scots, since no survey which would be as extensive as the census has been carried out. Some even argue that Scots, the traditional dialect has died out (Wells, 1982, p. 395). Scots is still spoken alongside Scotthish English, however, in written form it is used almost exclusively for literature which is, more often than not, about Scotland.
2.
PHONOLOGY OF SCOTTISH ENGLISH VIDEO DIFFERENCES SCOTTISH AND BRITISH ACCENT http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fgSkiKd3Sl4 BUEN VIDEO http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mALkCGVA2BU
In many ways, the conservative ScoE accent is phonologically close to Scots, while in others it has departed from it.
1.1.1.1
SSE is essentially Standard English spoken with a Scottish accent. SSE as spoken by educated, middle-class urban Scots is described here. The pronunciation differs from that of most other varieties of English. 1.1.1.2 Vowels and Diphthongs
The SVLR (Scots Vowel-Length Rule) also affects SSE. 1.1.1.3 The Scots Vowel-Length Rule
The SVLR is most developed in the central Scots dialects, in peripheral dialects not all vowels are affected. Certain vowels are long before /r/, voiced fricatives or a morpheme boundary.
Also, vowels in word-final open syllables are long.
BUSCAR MS SOBRE SVLR http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_vowel_length_rule http://orb.essex.ac.uk/lg/lg405/mcruic/svlr.htm http://www.scots-online.org/grammar/pronunci.htm#svlr
Phonetics http://www.multimedia-english.com/phonetics/scottish-english
1.2
Scots-based phonology.
1. The ScoE accent is rhotic, and all the vowels and diphthongs appear unchanged before /r/: beard /bird/, laird/lerd/, lard /lard/, moored /murd/, bird /brd/, word /wrd/, hea rd /hrd/, herd /hrd/, cord /krd/, hoard /hord/. A distinction is made between the vowels in such words as sword /srd/ and soared /sord/. Scots are widely supposed to trill the /r/, and many do, but majority usage is the alveolar tap in some phonetic environments and a fricative or frictionless continuant in others. There is a minority uvular r (see BURR) and retroflex r appears to be gaining ground in the middle class. 2. There are distinct phonemes in such words as rise and rice. The /a/ diphthong occurs in rise, tie/tied, sly, whywhile the // diphthong occurs in rice, tide, slide, while, as well as in such borrowings from Scots as ay(e) always,gey very, gyte mad. 3. ScoE operates the Scottish vowel length rule. 4. There is no distinction between cam and calm, both having /a/,
between cot and caught, both having //, and between full and fool, both having /u/. 5. There is a monophthong in most regions for /i, e, o, u/ as in steel, stale, stole, stool. 6. The monophthongs and diphthongs total 14 vowel sounds, perhaps the smallest vowel system of any long-established variety of English.
7. ScoE retains from Scots the voiceless velar fricative /x/: for example, in such names as Brechin and MacLachlan, such Gaelicisms as loch and pibroch, such Scotticisms as dreich and sough, and for some speakers such words of Greek provenance as patriarch and technical. 8. The wh- in such words as whale, what, why is pronounced /hw/ and such pairs as which/witch are sharply distinguished. 9. In some speakers, initial /p, t, k/ are unaspirated.
This chapter is primarily devoted to segmental features of Scottish English, namely to consonants and various systems of vowels, and prosodic features.
Segmental Features Firstly, the segmental features will be discussed, i.e. vowels and consonants of SSE (Scottish Standard English). The segmental features can be differentiated according to four criteria: structural differences, systemic differences, distributional differences, and differences of phonetic realisation. These aspects will be taken into consideration in further description of vowels and consonants.
2.1.1.
Vowels
The vowel system of Scottish accent consists of 12 items (whereas the parenthesized items may or may not be present).
a) Basic Scottish Vowel System It is a system described by Wells, which comes comes from the system of Scottish Standard English created by David Abercrombie (table). The Basic Scottish Vowel System compares two representative accents: Standard Scottish English as a representative of Scotland, and Receive
Pronunciation as the representative of England, which is the most commonly-used system for Standard English in England. Basic Scottish Vowel System Scotland (SSE) bead bid bay bed (never) bad a balm not nought no pull u pool bud side sighed now boy i a ae u e a u o o i e ( ) a England (RP) i e
Scots did not follow the London English in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in splitting its /u/ phoneme and its /a/ phoneme into two and it possessed only one round vowel
to serve as /o/, thus The main differences originating from etymology are SSE lack of any opposition of the kind // vs. /u/ (pull vs. pool, FOOT vs. GOOSE), opposition /a/ vs. // (bad vs. balm, TRAP vs. PALM) and // vs. // (not vs. nought, LOT vs. THOUGHT) (Wells, 1982, p. 400). Syllables closed by /r/ Scotland (SSE) first word heard (herd) here fair hard forty four poor ( ) i e a o u England (RP)
Syllables closed by /r/ are under investigation. SSE column does not contain any new items but RP does, and interestingly RP seems to reduce rather than increase the number of items.
pitted
pitied
a) Aitkens Law
The Scottish vowel length rule, also known as Aitkens Law after its discoverer, professor Aitken, is probably the most characteristic Scottish rule. This law, originating in the sixteenth century, governs the exact realisations in different phonetic and morphemic environments of long or non-high short vowels. The rule says that a vowel is phonetically short unless it is followed by a morpheme boundary (#), a voiced fricative, or /r/, in which case it is long.
Thus there is a short vowel in bead, pronounced [bid], and the duration is similar to the vowel in bid [bid] and bed [bd]. Similarly, mood [md] rhymes with good, both words having short but close []. Vowels are long in morpheme-final position, or in the environment of following /v, , z, r/ (this applies to all vowels except // and // which are always short). Thus there are long vowels in key [ki], two [tu], stay [ste], know [no]; and in words such as sleeve [sliv],
need [nid] brood [brud] staid [tod] bad [bad] toad [nod]
knee#d [nid] brew#ed [brud] stay#ed [tod] baa#d [bad] gnaw#ed [nod]
Some other speakers also show signs of apparently autonomous length contrasts in other environments, for example leek [lik] vs. leak [lik], vane [ven] vs. vain [ven], creek [krek], choke vs. joke, made vs. maid, badge vs. cadge. (Wells, 1979, pp. 400-401)
MONOPHTHONGS
Phonology
The most archaic varieties of Scottish English (i.e. the lowland varieties) have not gone through the Great Vowel Shift. The diphthong which one nowadays has in words like down is still represented by a monophthong /u:/ while the but sound is still an unshifted /u/. In addition, a number of specifically Scottish characteristics are to be found. Most noticeable of these in the area of phonology are: 1) a strongly retroflex if not rolled /r/, 2) the lack of vowel length contrasts so that words like full and fool are homophones, 3) the retention of the wh sound in words like which, whale,
4) the presence of /ei/ for English /o:/ as in the Scottish pronunciation of words like home, ghost, 5) there is a distinction between front and back short vowels before /r/ as in germ /drm/ and burn /brn/ and 6) the inherited sound /x/ is still found in traditional varieties and initial /h/ as well as [] for /hw/, wh- are common almost everywhere. In some words the lack of palatalisation of /k/ is still to be seen, this having been carried out in practically all other varieties of English: kirk for church, rigg for ridge. The aspect of Scottish English which has attracted most attention from linguists recently is the so-called Scottish Vowel Length Rule or Aitkens Law, after the linguist who first described it linguistically, which specifies that vowels are lengthened (normally they are short in Scottish English) before voiced fricatives, /l/ and /r/. Here one has a case of phonetic conditioning for lengthening as a following voiced sound often causes a vowel preceding it to be realised as long, cf. the vowel in standard English bad [b:d] vs. bat [bt].