Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
934744 Language & Communication 2015 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The raising of /æ/ before g is an apparent-time change in progress in Western Canada.•Mormons are historically and currently an influential population in Southern Alberta.•Mormons show linguistic enclave effects in Southern Alberta.•Mormon speakers do not participate in the raising of /æ/ before g in Alberta.

This paper examines the patterning of /æ/ in the English of Southern Alberta, Canada, with particular attention paid to differences between the general population and Mormons (members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints). Expanding on work by Meechan (1999) and Sykes (2010), who examine /aw/ and /ai/ diphthongs among the LDS population, we first show that /æ/ is significantly raised before /g/ among speakers in Southern Alberta. We then show that Mormons in the region do not display as strong raising in this linguistic environment. We attribute this to the strong social network of the Mormons in rural Southern Alberta which has a conservative influence on the /æ/ in the English of Mormon church members in the region. We further show that young Mormon women are the most divergent from their other Southern Alberta counterparts, which may be an indication of them being more conservative than other groups, contra many studies showing that women are innovators in sociophonetic change (for example Eckert 1989; Labov, 1990; Wolfram and Schilling-Estes, 1998), or it may be an indicator that these young Mormon women are innovators of a different pattern.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Language and Linguistics
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