Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
Summary
I believe that the three volumes of Accents of English represent the first attempt ever to offer a reasonably comprehensive account of the pronunciation of English in all its native-speaker varieties.
I have of course exploited my own familiarity with the various accents – such as it is, varying in depth in accordance with the varying exposure to them which life has happened to give me. These biases will no doubt be apparent. But I have also endeavoured to make appropriate use of all kinds of scholarly treatments of particular regional forms of speech, wherever they have been available to me and to whatever tradition they belong (philological, dialectological, structuralist, ‘speech’, generativist, sociolinguistic, variationist). My aim has been to bring together their principal findings within a unified and integrated framework.
My own descriptive standpoint, as will be seen, lies within the University College London ‘phonetic’ tradition of Daniel Jones, A. C. Gimson, and J. D. O'Connor. I am fortunate to have been their pupil. This standpoint could be said to involve an eclectic amalgam of what seems valuable from both older and newer theoretical approaches.
Where surveys based on substantial fieldwork exist, I have made use of their findings. Where they do not, I have had to rely partly on my own impressions. The reader must bear in mind that some of the statements I make are for this reason necessarily tentative.
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- Accents of English , pp. xv - xviPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1982