Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-4rdpn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-15T08:57:19.076Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Origin of Canadian Raising in Ontario

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 June 2016

Erik R. Thomas*
Affiliation:
University of Texas/Austin

Extract

One of the best known and most controversial features of Canadian English is the vocalic feature labeled by Chambers (1973) as “Canadian Raising”, which affects the /aI/ of right and the /aU/ of lout. This feature represents a situation in which the onset of the diphthong is closer to the target of the glide before fortis consonants than before lenis consonants: for instance, ride may have [aε] and right [3I], and loud may have [ao] but lout [ʌU]. Many of the previous studies of the feature, beginning with its original description by Martin Joos (1942), who raises the question of whether the second syllable of typewriter has the raised or non-raised variant, have involved the syllabification rules that determine when the onset is raised and when it is not. Chambers (1973) demonstrates that writer normally has the raised variant and shows that the relative stress on particular syllables can prevent raising from taking place in some cases where the diphthong occurs before a voiceless consonant. Vance (1987), Paradis (1980), and Chambers (1989) also deal with this latter problem, reformulating it in terms of linear (Vance) or Kahnian (Paradis, Chambers) theories of syllable formation.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Linguistic Association 1991

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Chambers, J.K. 1973 Canadian Raising. Canadian Journal of Linguistics 18:113135.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chambers, J.K. 1989 Canadian Raising: Blocking, Fronting, Etc. American Speech 64:7588.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chambers, J.K., and Hardwick, Margaret F. 1986 Comparative Sociolinguistics of a Sound Change in Canadian English. English World-Wide 7:123146.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gregg, R.J. 1973 The Diphthongs əi and ai in Scottish, Scotch-Irish and Canadian English. Canadian Journal of Linguistics 18:136145.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, Ellen 1990 The Distribution of Variants of /a1/ in the Middle and South At lantic States. International Congress of Dialectologists. Bamberg, 2 August.Google Scholar
Joos, Martin 1942 A Phonological Dilemma in Canadian English. Language 18:141144.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
King, Robert D. 1972 A Note on Opacity and Paradigm Regularity. Linguistic Inquiry 3:535539.Google Scholar
Kurath, Hans, and McDavid, Raven I. Jr., 1961 The Pronunciation of English in the Atlantic States. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Labov, William, Yeager, Malcah, and Steiner, Richard 1972 A Quantitative Study of Sound Change in Progress. Philadelphia: U.S. Regional Survey.Google Scholar
LAMSAS n.d. Basic Materials. University of Georgia Library. Athens.Google Scholar
LANCS n.d. Basic Materials. University of Georgia Library. Athens.Google Scholar
Lindblom, Björn 1980 The Goal of Phonetics, Its Unification and Application. Phonetica 37:726.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paradis, Carole 1980 La regie de Canadian Raising et l’analyse en structure syllabique. Canadian Journal of Linguistics 25:3545.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Payne, Arvilla C., 1980 Factors Controlling the Acquisition of the Philadelphia Dialect by Out-of-State Children. Pp. 143178 in Locating Language in Time and Space. Qualitative Analyses of Linguistic Structure 1. Labov, William, ed. New York: Academic.Google Scholar
Picard, Marc 1977 Canadian Raising: The Case Against Reordering. Canadian Journal of Linguistics 22:144155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thomas, Erik R., 1991 Vowel Changes in Columbus, Ohio. Journal of English Linguistics. [Forthcoming.]Google Scholar
Trudgill, Peter 1986 Dialects in Contact. New York: Basil Blackwell.Google Scholar
Vance, Timothy J. 1987 ‘Canadian Raising’ in Some Dialects of the Northern United States. American Speech 62:195210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar