Comparing Phonetic Characteristics of African American and European American Speech.

Authors

  • Erik R. Thomas
  • Elizabeth L. Coggshall Coggshall

Abstract

African American English (AAE) has been studied more heavily, by far, than any other forms of American English. Nevertheless, much of the emphasis has been placed on morphosyntactic variants and its phonetic characteristics are poorly known. We examined several variables to see how AAE differs phonetically from European American English (EAE) varieties in North Carolina.


Forty interviews were drawn from the North Carolina Language and Life Project corpus at North Carolina State University from three North Carolina counties: Hyde, Robeson, and Warren. Speakers included ten older and ten younger African Americans and ten older and ten younger European Americans, balanced among the three counties and by sex. The interviews were all conversational. Tokens were measured with the Praat software using methods appropriate to the particular variable.

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Published

2007-06-21

How to Cite

Thomas, E. R. ., & Coggshall, E. L. C. (2007). Comparing Phonetic Characteristics of African American and European American Speech. Linguistica Atlantica, 27, 112–116. Retrieved from https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/la/article/view/32492

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Articles