Canadian raising (also sometimes known as English diphthong raising) is an allophone rule of phonology in many varieties of North American English that changes the pronunciation of with open vowel starting points. Most commonly, the shift affects or , or both, when they are pronounced before voiceless consonants (therefore, in words like price and clout, respectively, but not in prize and cloud). In North American English, and usually begin in an open vowel ~, but through raising they shift to , or . Canadian English often has raising in words with both ( height, life, psych, type, etc.) and ( clout, house, south, scout, etc.), while a number of American English varieties (such as Inland North, Western New England, and increasingly more General American accents) have this feature in but not . It is thought to have originated in Canada in the late 19th century.
In the U.S., aboot , an exaggerated version of the raised pronunciation of about , is a stereotype of Canadian English.
Although the symbol is defined as an open-mid back unrounded vowel in the International Phonetic Alphabet, or may signify any raised vowel that contrasts with unraised or , when the exact quality of the raised vowel is not important in the given context.
However, several studies indicate that this rule is not completely accurate, and have attempted to formulate different rules.
A study of three speakers in Meaford, Ontario, showed that pronunciation of the diphthong fell on a continuum between raised and unraised. Raising is influenced by voicing of the following consonant, but it may also be influenced by the sound before the diphthong. Frequently the diphthong was raised when preceded by a coronal: in gigantic, dinosaur, and Siberia.
Raising before , as in wire, iris, and fire, has been documented in some American accents.
Raising can apply to compound words. Hence, the first vowel in high school as a term meaning "a secondary school for students approximately 14–18 years old" may be raised, whereas high school with the literal meaning of "a school that is high (e.g. in elevation)" is unaffected. (The two terms are also distinguished by the position of the stress accent, as shown.) The same is true of "high chair".
However, frequently it does not. One study of speakers in Rochester, New York and Minnesota found a very inconsistent pattern of raising before voiceless consonants in certain prefixes; for example, the numerical prefix bi- was raised in bicycle but not bisexual or bifocals. Likewise, the vowel was consistently kept low when used in a prefix in words like dichotomy and anti-Semitic. This pattern may have to do with stress or familiarity of the word to the speaker; however, these relations are still inconsistent.
In most dialects of North American English, intervocalic and are pronounced as an alveolar flap when the following vowel is unstressed or word-initial, a phenomenon known as flapping. In accents with both flapping and Canadian raising, or before a flapped may still be raised, even though the flap is a voiced consonant. Hence, while in accents without raising, writer and rider are pronounced differently as a result of a slight difference in vowel length due to pre-fortis clipping, in accents with raising, the words may be distinguished by their vowels: writer , rider . In accents where raising applies to , pouter and powder are similarly distinct: pouter , powder .
The raised variant of varies by dialect, with more common in Western Canada and a fronted variant commonly heard in Central Canada. In any case, the open vowel component of the changes to a mid vowel (, , or ).
Raising of just is found in a much greater number of dialects in the United States; some researchers have begun to refer to raising of without raising of as American Raising. This phenomenon is most consistently found in the Inland North, the Upper Midwest, New England, New York City, and the mid-Atlantic areas of Pennsylvania (including Philadelphia), Maryland, and Delaware, as well as in Virginia. It is somewhat less common in the lower Midwest, the West, and the South. However, there is considerable variation in the raising of , and it can be found inconsistently throughout the United States.
The raising of is also present in Ulster English, spoken in the northern region of the island of Ireland, in which is split between the sound (before voiced consonants or in final position) and the sound (before voiceless consonants but also sometimes in any position); phonologist Raymond Hickey has described this Ulster raising as "embryonically the situation" for Canadian raising.
|
|