Salmoneus wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2019 1:07 pm
Boşkoventi wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2019 12:43 pm
Salmoneus wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2019 12:18 pm
And you speak which dialect?
[and just for the sake of completeness, since I coincidentally included both 'walk' and 'balk' - do you deround 'talk' as well?]
I guess I'd have to call it GA. No significant regionalisms that I'm aware of. I have both FATHER-BOTHER and COT-CAUGHT mergers
*looks quizzically*
You say 'no significant regionalisms' and then admit to the most famous American regionalism! So... you're most likely from the West?
I wouldn't call the cot-caught merger the most significant American regionalism since it doesn't actually correspond very nicely to regions, certainly not as much as some other well-known features (the NCVS, southern monophthongization, New York City vowels, etc.). I'm from Massachusetts, about 20 miles from Boston, but I speak essentially "GA" with the exception of the cot-caught merger (and some /æ/-diphthongization; and no, no California Vowel Shift or Canadian Raising for me -- though I should note the cot-caught merger is actually common in Boston/New England, but I merge them to [a]~[ɑ] as in GA, not [ɒ] or whatever).
That being said -- Vijay, there's absolutely regional American dialects, very distinctive ones. I've now lived in the Houston suburbs for many years, and you can still find plenty of people who sound like Dubya or Rex Tillerson in the sticks or if they're old enough (~50+; and some younger (sub)urban people have more subtle hints of Southern vowels as well, including
sometimes the pin-pen merger, plus *everyone* who's not a transplant uses "y'all" although that's now spreading outside the South and becoming less of a clear-cut regional feature [and it was already present in the non-regional sociolect AAVE]). There's also of course the NCVS, many major cities/regions on the eastern seaboard have immediately-identifiable dialects, you have the western upper midwest, Californian English, backwoods Louisiana [aka "incomprehensible"] and New Orleans [aka "might as well be NYC but more hillbilly" -- though I don't actually know how strong this dialect is faring(?), but I did work with a middle-class woman from New Orleans in her 40s with a very strong Nawlins accent], etc. etc., some of which Nort pointed out.