Article published In: English World-Wide
Vol. 45:3 (2024) ► pp.283–310
Soundin(g(k)) ethnic in Toronto
Published online: 29 November 2024
https://doi.org/10.1075/eww.24014.wal
https://doi.org/10.1075/eww.24014.wal
Abstract
Research on ethnolects tends to focus on qualitative salient features rather than quantitative differences in
variables shared across the speech community. This study examines ethnolinguistic variation in the realization of word-final velar
nasals in the English of Toronto, Canada. Over 4,000 tokens were extracted from sociolinguistic interviews with 50 residents of
Toronto stratified by ethnicity, generation and sex, and coded for a series of linguistic and social factors. While speakers
largely share linguistic conditioning, there are significant differences between social groups. A language-transfer explanation is
not supported by comparing ethnic orientation scores with overall rates. An explanation based on intersecting social factors
receives support by examining participant levels of education. Findings suggest that the meaning of velar nasals cuts across
several social dimensions.
Keywords: Canadian English, ethnicity, ethnolects, velar nasals
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Velar nasals in English
- 2.1(ING)
- 2.2Velar stopping
- 3.Data and methods
- 3.1Data
- 3.2Methods
- 4.Results
- 4.1Alveolar (ING)
- 4.2Variation and Ethnic Orientation
- 5.Discussion
- 6.Conclusion
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
References
References (77)
Abada, Teresa, Feng Hou, and Bali Ram. 2009. “Ethnic
Differences in Educational Attainment among the Children of Canadian Immigrants”. Canadian
Journal of Sociology 341: 1–28.
Abramowicz, Łukasz. 2007. “Sociolinguistics
Meets Exemplar Theory: Frequency and Recency Effects in (ing)”. University of Pennsylvania
Working Papers in
Linguistics 131: 27–37.
Adamson, H. D., and Vera M. Regan. 1991. “The
Acquisition of Community Speech Norms by Asian Immigrants Learning English as a Second
Language”. Studies in Second Language
Acquisition 131: 1–22.
Anshen, Frank. 1969. “Speech
Variation among Negroes in a Small Southern Community”. Ph.D.
Dissertation, New York University.
Bailey, George. 2019. “Emerging
from below the Social Radar: Incipient Evaluation in the North West of England.” Journal of
Sociolinguistics 231: 3–28.
. 2020. “Insertion
and Deletion in Northern English (ng): Interacting Innovations in the Life Cycle of Phonological
Processes”. Journal of
Linguistics 571: 465–497.
Bell, Allan, and Janet Holmes. 1992. “H-Droppin’:
Two Sociolinguistic Variables in New Zealand English”. Australian Journal of
Linguistics 121: 223–248.
Boberg, Charles. 2014. “Ethnic
Divergence in Montreal English”. Canadian Journal of
Linguistics 591: 55–82.
Borowsky, Toni. 1986. “Topics
in the Lexical Phonology of English.” Ph.D.
Dissertation, University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
Campbell-Kibler, Kathryn. 2006. “Listener
Perceptions of Sociolinguistic Variables: The Case of (ING)”. Ph.D.
dissertation, Stanford University.
Carlock, Elizabeth, and Wolfgang Wölck. 1981. “A
Method for Isolating Diagnostic Linguistic Variables: The Buffalo Ethnolects
Experiment”. In David Sankoff, and Henrietta Cedergren, eds. Variation
Omnibus. Edmonton: Linguistic Research Inc., 17–24.
Chambers, J. K. 2003. “Sociolinguistics
of Immigration.” In David Britain, and Jenny Cheshire, eds. Social
Dialectology: Studies in Honour of Peter
Trudgill. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 97–113.
Cheshire, Jenny, Paul Kerswill, Sue Fox, and Eivind Torgersen. 2011. “Contact,
the Feature Pool and the Speech Community: The Emergence of Multicultural London
English”. Journal of
Sociolinguistics 151: 151–196.
Clyne, Michael, Edina Eisikovits, and Laura Tollfree. 2001. “Ethnic
Varieties of Australian English”. In David Blair, and Peter Collins, eds. English
in Australia. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 223–238.
Cofer, Thomas M. 1972. “Linguistic Variability in a
Philadelphia Speech Community”. Ph.D.
dissertation, University of Pennsylvania.
Dobson, Eric J. 1968. English Pronunciation 1500–1700. Volume
II: Phonology. Oxford: Clarenden Press.
Drummond, Rob. 2012. “Aspects
of Identity in a Second Language: ING Variation in the Speech of Polish Migrants Living in Manchester,
UK”. Language Variation and
Change 241: 107–133.
Eckert, Penelope. 2008. “Variation
and the Indexical Field”. Journal of
Sociolinguistics 121: 453–476.
Elphinston, James. 1765. The
Principles of the English Language Digested, or, English Grammar Reduced to
Analogy. London: James Bettenham.
Fails, Willis C., and J. Halvor Clegg. 2022. Manual
de Fonética e Fonologia da Língua
Portuguesa. London: Routledge.
Forrest, Jon. 2015. “Community
Rules and Speaker Behavior: Individual Adherence to Group Constraints on (ING)”. Language
Variation and Change 271: 377–405.
. 2017. “The
Dynamic Interaction between Lexical and Contextual Frequency: A Case Study of (ING)”. Language
Variation and Change 291: 129–156.
Garrett, Andrew, and Juliette Blevins. 2009. “Analogical
Morphophonology”. In Kristin Hanson, and Sharon Inkelas, eds. The
Nature of the Word: Essays in Honor of Paul
Kiparsky. Cambridge: MIT Press, 527–545.
Guy, Gregory R. 1980. “Variation in the Group and the
Individual: The Case of Final Stop Deletion”. In William Labov, ed. Locating
Language in Time and Space. New York: Academic Press, 1–36.
de Haas, Hein, Stephen Castles, and Mark J. Miller. 2020. The
Age of Migration: International Population Movements in the Modern World. (6th
ed.). New York: The Guilford Press.
Hazen, Kirk. 2008. “(ING):
A Vernacular Baseline for English in Appalachia”. American
Speech 831: 116–140.
Hoffman, Michol F. 2010. “The Role of Social Factors in
the Canadian Vowel Shift: Evidence from Toronto”. American
Speech 851: 121–140.
Hoffman, Michol F., and James A. Walker. 2010. “Ethnolects
and the City: Ethnic Orientation and Linguistic Variation in Toronto English”. Language
Variation and Change 221: 37–67.
Houston, Ann. 1985. “Continuity
and Change in English Morphology: The Variable (ING)”. Ph.D.
dissertation, University of Pennsylvania.
Johnson, Daniel E. 2022. RBRUL. Version
3.1.6 〈[URL]〉 (accessed December 26, 2022).
Kendall, Tyler and Erik R. Thomas. 2019. “Variable
(ING)”. In Erik R. Thomas, ed. Mexican
American English: Substrate Influence and the Birth of an
Ethnolect. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 171–197.
Kenstowicz, Michael, and Charles Kisseberth. 1977. Topics
in Phonological Theory. New York: Academic Press.
Labov, William. 1966. The
Social Stratification of English in New York
City. Washington: Center for Applied Linguistics.
. 1972. Language
in the Inner City: Studies in the Black English
Vernacular. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
. 1991. “The
Three Dialects of English”. In Penelope Eckert, ed. New
Ways of Analyzing Sound Change. San Diego: Academic Press, 1–44.
. 2008. “Mysteries
of the Substrate”. In Miriam Meyerhoff, and Naomi Nagy, eds. Social
Lives in Language — Sociolinguistics and Multilingual Speech Communities: Celebrating the Work of Gillian
Sankoff. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 315–326.
Lass, Roger. 1992. “Phonology
and Morphology”. In Norman Baker, ed. The
Cambridge History of the English Language. Volume II:
1066–1476. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 23–155.
Levon, Erez, and Sue Fox. 2014. “Social
Salience and the Sociolinguistic Monitor: A Case Study of ING and TH-fronting in
Britain”. Journal of English Linguistics 421: 185–217.
Maddeaux, Ruth, Karrin Huynh, and T. J. Dunn. 2013. “What’s
Happen[in] with -ing in Toronto?” Paper presented at TULCON 6,
University of Toronto.
Mair, Christian. 2003. “Kreolismen
und verbales Indentitätsmanagement im geschriebenen jamaikanischen
Englisch.” In Elisabeth Vogel, Antonia Napp, and Wolfram Lutterer, eds. Zwischen
Ausgrenzung und Hybridisierung: Zur Konstruktion von Identitäten aus kulturwissenschaftlicher
Perspektive. Würzburg: Ergon, 79–96.
Mitchell, Bruce, and Fred C. Robinson. 2011. A
Guide to Old English (8th
ed.). Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
Nagy, Naomi, Michol F. Hoffman, and James A. Walker. 2020. “How
Do Torontonians Hear Ethnic Identity?” Toronto Working Papers in
Linguistics 421.
Nunes, Fernando. 2004. “Portuguese-Canadian
Youth and their Academic Underachievement: A Literature Review”. Portuguese Studies
Review 111: 41–87.
Penry Williams, Cara. 2019. Folklinguistics
and Social Meaning in Australian
English. London: Routledge.
Pereira, David. 2011. “Dropping
Out or Opting Out? A Qualitative Study on How Young Men of Portuguese Ancestry in Toronto Perceive Masculinity and How This
Informs Educational Attainment”. M.A. Thesis, University of Toronto.
Rosen, Nicole, Alexandra D’Arcy, and Jillian Ankutowicz. 2016. “Think-een
About [ING].” Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the
American Dialect Society, Washington, DC.
Schleef, Erik, and Nicholas Flynn. 2015. “Ageing
Meanings of (ing): Age and Indexicality in Manchester, England”. English
World-Wide 361: 47–89.
Schleef, Erik, Nicholas Flynn, and William Barras. 2017. “Regional
Diversity in Social Perceptions of (ing)”. Language Variation and
Change 291: 29–56.
Schleef, Erik, Miriam Meyerhoff, and Lynn Clark. 2011. “Teenagers’
Acquisition of Variation: A Comparison of Locally-Born and Migrant Teens’ Realisation of English (ing) in Edinburgh and
London”. English
World-Wide 321: 206–236.
Shnukal, Anna. 1982. “You’re
Gettin’ Somethink for Nothing: Two Phonological Variables of Australian English”. Australian
Journal of Linguistics 21: 197–212.
Szmrecsanyi, Benedikt, and Bernd Kortmann. 2009. “Vernacular
Universals and Angloversals in a Typological Perspective”. In Markku Filppula, Juhani Klemola, and Heli Paulasto, eds. Vernacular
Universals and Language Contacts: Evidence from Varieties of English and
Beyond. London/New York: Routledge, 33–53.
Tagliamonte, Sali, and Alexandra D’Arcy. 2017. “Individuals,
Communities and the Sociolinguistic Canon.” Paper presented at New
Ways of Analyzing Variation 46, University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Teixeira, José Carlos, and Robert A. Murdie. 2009. “On
the Move: The Portuguese in Toronto”. In Victor Da Rosa, and José Carlos Teixeira, eds. The
Portuguese in Canada: Diasporic Challenges and
Adjustment. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 191–207.
Travis, Catherine E., James Grama, and Benjamin Purser. 2023. “Stability
and Change in (ing): Ethnic and Grammatical Variation over Time in Australian English”. English
World-Wide 441: 435–469.
Troper, Harold. 2003. “Becoming
an Immigrant City: A History of Immigration into Toronto since the Second World
War”. In Paul Anisef, and Michael Lanphier, eds. The
World in a City. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 19–61.
Trudgill, Peter. 1974. The
Social Differentiation of English in
Norwich. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Wagner, Suzanne Evans. 2012. “Real-time Evidence for Age
Grad(ing) in Late Adolescence”. Language Variation and
Change 241: 179–202.
Wald, Benji, and Timothy Shopen. 1985. “A
Researcher’s Guide to the Sociolinguistic Variable (ING)”. In Virginia Clark, Paul Escholtz, and Alfred Rosa, eds. Language:
Introductory Readings. New York: St Martin’s Press, 515–542.
Walker, James A. 2016. “The Intersection of Sex and
Ethnicity in Language Variation and Change.” Paper presented
at IGALA9, City University of Hong Kong.
2019. “Sociophonetics at the
Intersection of Variable Processes: Variation in English
(ING)”. In Sasha Calhoun, Paola Escudero, Marija Tabain, and Paul Warren, eds. Proceedings
of the 19th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, Melbourne, Australia, 34–37.
2023. “Redefining the Variable
Context(s) for English (t/d)-Deletion”. In Radek Skarnitzl, and Jan Volín, eds. Proceedings
of the 20th International Congress of Phonetic
Sciences. Prague: International Phonetic Association, 3696–3699.
Walker, James A., Michol F. Hoffman, and Miriam Meyerhoff. 2022. “What’s
in a Lect? Coherence in Phonetic and Grammatical Variation.” In Karen Beaman and Gregory R. Guy, eds. The
Coherence of Linguistic Communities: Orderly Heterogeneity and Social Meaning. London/New York: Routledge, 71–86.
Warren, Jane. 1999. “‘Wogspeak’:
Transformations of Australian English”. Journal of Australian
Studies 231: 85–94.
Cited by (3)
Cited by three other publications
Fraiese, Lucía, Celeste Rodríguez Louro, Matt Hunt Gardner, Glenys Dale Collard & James Walker
Gardner, Matt Hunt
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 17 november 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
