Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "Mid-Atlantic American English (or Delaware Valley English) is a class of American English, considered by the Atlas of North American English to be a single dialect, spoken in the Mid-Atlantic states of the United States. This variety of English centers most strongly around Philadelphia and Reading, Pennsylvania; Wilmington, Delaware; Baltimore, Maryland; and Atlantic City and Trenton, New Jersey. The Mid-Atlantic dialect is primarily united by some features in common with both the New York City dialect (a marked absence of the cot-caught merger, a raising and diphthongizing of /ɔː/, and a short-a split system) as well as the Midland/Southern dialects (r-fulness and strong fronting of /oʊ/, /aʊ/, and /uː/).The variety's most widely studied subsets are Philadelphia English and Baltimore English."@en }
Showing triples 1 to 2 of
2
with 100 triples per page.
- Mid-Atlantic_American_English abstract "Mid-Atlantic American English (or Delaware Valley English) is a class of American English, considered by the Atlas of North American English to be a single dialect, spoken in the Mid-Atlantic states of the United States. This variety of English centers most strongly around Philadelphia and Reading, Pennsylvania; Wilmington, Delaware; Baltimore, Maryland; and Atlantic City and Trenton, New Jersey. The Mid-Atlantic dialect is primarily united by some features in common with both the New York City dialect (a marked absence of the cot-caught merger, a raising and diphthongizing of /ɔː/, and a short-a split system) as well as the Midland/Southern dialects (r-fulness and strong fronting of /oʊ/, /aʊ/, and /uː/).The variety's most widely studied subsets are Philadelphia English and Baltimore English.".
- Q18155390 abstract "Mid-Atlantic American English (or Delaware Valley English) is a class of American English, considered by the Atlas of North American English to be a single dialect, spoken in the Mid-Atlantic states of the United States. This variety of English centers most strongly around Philadelphia and Reading, Pennsylvania; Wilmington, Delaware; Baltimore, Maryland; and Atlantic City and Trenton, New Jersey. The Mid-Atlantic dialect is primarily united by some features in common with both the New York City dialect (a marked absence of the cot-caught merger, a raising and diphthongizing of /ɔː/, and a short-a split system) as well as the Midland/Southern dialects (r-fulness and strong fronting of /oʊ/, /aʊ/, and /uː/).The variety's most widely studied subsets are Philadelphia English and Baltimore English.".