DOI: 10.1017/s0954394526100702 ISSN: 0954-3945

The sociolinguistics of sounding happ y : A stable vocalic variable in Manchester English

Danielle Turton, Maciej Baranowski

Abstract

This paper investigates variation in the realization of the happ

y
vowel in Manchester, England, that is, the final vowel in happy, baby , etc., which is often described as extremely lax. It is based on the acoustic analysis of 109 speakers, stratified for age, gender, social class, and ethnicity. The vowel is a rarely reported case of a stable vocalic variable, with no change in apparent time but with clear conditioning by social class (with higher social classes having tenser vowels) and by ethnicity. Style-shifting is minimal, statistically insignificant, and appears to result from durational effects; we conclude that the variable lies largely below speakers’ conscious awareness within the speech community. We explore the long-standing Labovian hypothesis that internal linguistic constraints operate independently of social factors and find that the results largely support this hypothesis for the happ
y
vowel. This suggests a shared underlying system despite social differentiation in overall vowel realization.

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