25. The tot/taught merger I: It's not just California (with dialect maps)
Note: Make
sure that you have the Lucida
Sans Unicode font installed in your computer so that the IPA symbols will
display correctly.
When we talk about variations in speech
among different people, we are entering the subfield of sociolinguistics.
These variations may be due to geography, in which case we are usually
talking about different dialects
of a language. They may also be due to different education levels, social
or economic class, ethnic group, religion, neighborhood,
circle of friends, age, gender, sexual orientation,
mobility history, register (formal, informal, vulgar), or any
number of other social variables. All of these factors may cause slight to enormous
variations in the speech of an individual, and they all hold potential for fruitful
research in sociolinguistics. (Here is a page of links to sociolinguistics
resources.) On this page we will concern ourselves mostly with variation
due to geography, or dialect variation.
Many North American speakers of English use the
same vowel in tot and taught, and similar pairs.
This vowel is usually represented as /ɑ/,
though it may actually fall somewhere between [ɑ]
and [ɔ]. (Keep in mind that the
values represented by these symbols are the ones typical for US English, rather
than standard British English, in which [ɔ]
in particular is quite a different sound.) We've learned from our textbooks
that this merger is typical of American English as spoken on the U.S. West Coast,
but it is also typical of Canadian
English. And it is found in many other parts of the United States besides
the West Coast. Here
is a sample of [ɔ] -less speech
(it's chapter 21 of Book II of Tolstoy's War and Peace, read by Roger
Melin; it's a rather large file so be patient; source
page). The actual value of the vowel used may vary; it tends toward [ɑ]
in Western North America, and toward [ɔ]
in the East.
One way to study this kind of dialect variation
is to interview speakers from different areas of a country and determine how
they perceive and say certain words known to vary in pronunciation. After data
is collected for many speakers from different regions, the results for each
feature can be displayed, for example, with colored dots on a map, a 'dialect
map'. These give a clear picture of the distribution of a particular language
feature.
Professor William
Labov of the University of Pennsylvania is well known for his excellent
work in many areas of sociolinguistics, in particular for his studies of Black
English, or 'African-American
Vernacular English' ('AAVE'), now sometimes called 'Ebonics'. He has
also done extensive work on general American dialects. On his Web site you will
find many dialect maps of the kind described above which illustrate the distribution
of many different types of variation in U.S. English, including the tot/taught
merger. Note that some speakers distinguish the vowels in both their perception
and speech, or just perception, or just their speech.
Click on the following link for a map showing
the distribution of the tot/taught merger, which Labov here labels 'the
o (cot, tot) /oh (caught, taught)' merger (probably to avoid the
problems of displaying IPA symbols on a Web page). You can enlarge the map by
clicking on the link, and by clicking on points on the larger map you can see
data displayed for individual informants in Labov's study.
http://www.ling.upenn.edu/phono_atlas/maps/Map1.html
You
can see that the tot/taught merger appears in many parts of the U.S.
Here is Map
2, which shows "comparative progress of the /o/ ~ /oh/ merger before
/n/ and /t/".
There is a lot of information on this page, especially
if you have been following up on all of the links, so maybe you will want to
stop here for a while and take a break before continuing on to part II!
Next: The
tot/taught merger II: It's not just California (with
dialect maps)
on to next page back index I index II home