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- New York accent - Wikipedia
The accent of the New York metropolitan area is one of the most recognizable in the United States, largely due to its popular stereotypes and portrayal in radio, film, and television [1][2] Several other common names exist based on more specific locations, such as Bronx accent, Brooklyn accent, Queens accent, Long Island accent, and North Jerse
- NYC Speaks: The Difference Between Brooklyn and Manhattan Accents
"Brooklynese" is perhaps the only word coined to distinguish any of these accents The Oxford English Dictionary (OED) defines it as the overarching accent of the borough itself: "A strongly accented variety of New York English, associated especially with the borough of Brooklyn "
- Elyse Graham ’07 tells the history of New York City’s accent
As Elyse Graham ’07 stepped off the plane in Newark Airport, to begin her freshman year at Princeton, she encountered her first, real-life New York accent “I thought they were made up for television,” admits the West Coast native
- Why There’s No Such Thing As A Brooklyn Accent
There’s no Brooklyn accent It’s just a New York accent, and the mere fact that someone’s from Brooklyn is extremely unlikely to indicate anything about the way that person speaks
- Brooklyn Accent - Slang Meaning and Examples - FastSlang
The Brooklyn accent is a distinctive way of speaking that originated in the borough of Brooklyn in New York City It is characterized by its unique pronunciation and intonation patterns, which differ from standard American English
- The Brooklyn Accent (And the City it Stands For) - Dialect Blog
‘Brooklyn accent’ (the blue line) takes the lion’s share of mentions of borough-specific English, followed distantly by ‘Bronx accent’ (the red line) and ‘Queens accent’ (the green line): (I’ve included Staten Island and Manhattan for good measure, and both yield predictably insignificant results )
- The Myth of the New York City Borough Accent: Evidence from Perception
When listeners hear a traditional NYCE accent, they laminate that voice onto a borough where they expect traditional NYCE to predominate As a result, the popular term “Brooklynese” does not directly index borough residence, but rather, the social groups that align with a stereotypical Brooklynite, including a working-class social address
- Where does Brooklyn accent come from? – ProfoundAdvice
Based on years of research, American sociolinguist William Labov has concluded that the New York accent originated as a derivative of a British accent, specifically speakers from South London But the many aspects of the accent have roots all over Europe
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