I would say I hear [eɪ ʊp mɪ dʊk] more frequently than [eɪ ʌp mɪ dʌk]. Despite having the foot-strut split in my normal accent, I always use the foot vowel in "Ay up". I picked up more of my mum's SSBE accent than the local East Mids accent. For me those are clues that I fall into the middle class, rather than the working class that most of the kids at my school belonged to (who roundly teased me for sounding posh).chris_notts wrote: ↑Tue Apr 07, 2020 4:01 pm In the East Midlands it's similar, but there are also clear differences in pronunciation. To take our most famous dialect phrase, "hey up my duck" [eɪ ʌp mɪ dʌk] shows both h dropping and the use of [mɪ] for "my".
For me, the clearest distinction between working and middle class is the attitude towards conversation. WC people typically value directness and honesty, whereas MC value politeness and avoiding discomfort. (These tendencies, of course, and context-dependent.) I'm aware that MC politeness is often read as two-faced pr deceptive by WC, and likewise WC directness could be interpreted as rudeness by MC people.
The kind of community people engage with differs by class too. Entry to an MC household tends to be invite-only, even for good friends, whereas WC often have open households where an outer circle of known people come and go quite freely.
Messy aspects of life can be more visible in WC communities, but MC do their best to hide the mess of life, seeing it as a source of shame.
I realise that these are generalisations. Class is kind of a fuzzy model of society.
I must have heard this around, but I cannot conceptualise it.chris_notts wrote: ↑Tue Apr 07, 2020 4:01 pm One particularly jarring one my son has picked up from school is the use of [yə] as a stressed object pronoun, which is just not possible for me.
I don't have this, but I do find myself responding to new information with "Is it?" even when that doesn't match the statement, e.g.chris_notts wrote: ↑Tue Apr 07, 2020 4:01 pm Then there are incorrect verb forms like "was" as a general past in all persons.
"Janet got her hall repainted finally"
"Oh, is it?"