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A Mid-Atlantic accent is any of various accents of English that are perceived as blending features from both American and British English. [1] [2] In American popular culture, the informal label of Mid-Atlantic accent, [3] [4] [5] or Transatlantic accent, [6] [2] [7] usually refers to certain non-rhotic speech taught and promoted in early 20th-century American schools of acting, voice, and ...
Philadelphia and Baltimore accents together fall under what Labov describes as a single Mid-Atlantic regional dialect. According to linguist Barbara Johnstone , migration patterns and geography affected the dialect's development, which was especially influenced by immigrants from Northern England , Scotland , and Northern Ireland .
The Mid-Atlantic split of /æ/ into two separate phonemes, similar to but not exactly the same as New York City English, is one major defining feature of the dialect region, as is a resistance to the Mary–marry–merry merger and cot-caught merger (a raising and diphthongizing of the "caught" vowel), and a maintained distinction between ...
Her accent is fully dignified, vaguely British and entirely fake. What we formally call the mid-Atlantic accent first came about in the era of "talkies,". or the first movies to have sound, in the ...
The accent rapidly declined following the end of World War II, presumably as a result of cultural and demographic changes in the U.S. entering the postwar era. [16] This American version of a "posh" accent has disappeared even among the American upper classes, as Americans have increasingly dissociated from the speaking styles of the East Coast elite. [15]
It’s a mid-Atlantic accent that I’m doing, but it is hard to maintain. Every episode some of my Midwestern sound pops up. But with a voice like the one I’m using, you must take it on and ...
The Baltimore accent that originated among white blue-collar residents closely resembles blue-collar Philadelphia-area English pronunciation in many ways. These two cities are the only major ports on the Eastern Seaboard never to have developed non-rhotic speech among European American speakers; they were greatly influenced in their early development by Hiberno-English, Scottish English, and ...
For decades, the British actor with the perfectly suave, mid-Atlantic accent epitomized the kind of elegance, class, charisma and charm that only seemed to exist on the silver screen.