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Erm. Not really sure what you're saying here... Legolas Send a noteboard - 29/07/2015 11:35:26 PM

View original postTrue: There is far more to dialect generally. That only underscores the significance of modern British English being practically indistinguishable from that taught and spoken in India, all of Western Europe, most of Africa and the remaining British colonies (just for the record: Indias population ALONE outnumbers the US (not just its Southern region) by a factor of 4, and Europes by a factor of 2.) Given all dialect involves, the nearly perfect equivalence between UK, Continental European, African and Indian English strongly suggest they are not just superficially and/or incidentally identical, but ACTUALLY so. That those speakers outnumber Southern US English speakers by an order of magnitude irrefutably establishes British English as the "larger" dialect by population as well as area.

Is there any particular definition of "British English", or alternatively of "practically indistinguishable" and "nearly perfect equivalence", that one needs to be aware of to make sense of this paragraph? Because it's not making a whole lot of sense to me using the normal definitions of those concepts.

As for "Continental European, African and Indian English" - apart from the question of what those actually sound like, you intentionally refer to populations of which the vast majority speaks English only as a second language? Is it really fair to include those when comparing dialect sizes?



Edit: Also, while I will obviously defer to you as well as to RT on the finer points of Southern accents, his basic point - that at least some varieties of American English are closer to the English spoken in Britain several centuries ago than contemporary British is - seems fairly widely acknowledged? Wikipedia also indicates that "(...)spoken American English did not simply evolve from period British English, but rather retained many archaic features contemporary British English has since lost". Yes, he is wrong in calling it "Victorian" as it's older than that, but besides that it makes perfect sense to me.

This message last edited by Legolas on 29/07/2015 at 11:43:48 PM
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Y'all, you guys, yous guys, or hey you all? - 25/07/2015 05:38:44 PM 1053 Views
Y'all may be the American South's greatest gift to the English language. - 27/07/2015 12:14:47 AM 690 Views
*whistles innocently* - 27/07/2015 04:17:43 AM 823 Views
"Hey, you guys!" is only correct if you are Rita Moreno - 27/07/2015 04:15:07 AM 653 Views
Perhaps, but you're also wrong. - 27/07/2015 04:45:48 AM 893 Views
Both spellings are "correct" to the extent EITHER are. - 27/07/2015 05:04:43 AM 872 Views
Funny.... - 29/07/2015 12:13:35 AM 751 Views
It is also correct if you are Sloth... on a pirate ship... *NM* - 29/07/2015 07:09:56 PM 555 Views
I will defer to you and Jeordam on that one - 29/07/2015 07:45:31 PM 729 Views
well since language is a democracy and the souther dialetic is the largest Y'all wins - 27/07/2015 02:07:22 PM 809 Views
The Southern dialect is the largest by what metric? - 27/07/2015 06:26:20 PM 800 Views
It also the accent most similar to what Victorian brits would have spoken - 27/07/2015 07:45:09 PM 727 Views
Whoa, now: The PIEDMONT accent may be closest to Received Pronunciation, but is not the whole South - 28/07/2015 12:37:56 AM 807 Views
I don't make the catagories but all the southern accents tend to be close *NM* - 28/07/2015 02:12:15 PM 505 Views
Except, as you noted, Virginias accent is closer to Englands (and New Englands, and South Africas) - 28/07/2015 11:00:46 PM 769 Views
that is not what I said - 29/07/2015 02:14:49 PM 783 Views
Sorry, I credited you w/knowing the Deep South, Appalachia and TX sound nothing like any UK accents - 29/07/2015 07:42:21 PM 729 Views
read slower and then read again until you understand what I said - 29/07/2015 08:14:19 PM 1005 Views
"The people in the American South were Victorian Brits"?! I must have read that too fast - 29/07/2015 10:39:08 PM 737 Views
Erm. Not really sure what you're saying here... - 29/07/2015 11:35:26 PM 693 Views
Would "UK English" have been better? - 30/07/2015 10:47:53 PM 738 Views
Not really. - 31/07/2015 07:30:41 AM 693 Views
David Crystal estimates proficient non-natives outnumber native English speakers 3:1 - 10/08/2015 02:45:58 AM 668 Views
Interesting stuff. - 10/08/2015 07:12:26 PM 769 Views
Who says "yous guys"? Seriously? - 27/07/2015 07:56:28 PM 718 Views
B-movie mobsters - 28/07/2015 12:40:04 AM 891 Views
They said it when I lived in Chicago - 28/07/2015 02:10:27 PM 710 Views
Scots. - 28/07/2015 02:42:28 PM 751 Views
I have heard it a couple of times. - 28/07/2015 03:13:20 PM 703 Views
Isn't fake culture almos the defintion of hipster? *NM* - 28/07/2015 05:18:53 PM 369 Views
Depends, are trying to sound cool, like a douche, or Joe Pesci? *NM* - 29/07/2015 07:12:28 PM 561 Views
The distinction between the first two is negligible - 29/07/2015 07:52:50 PM 741 Views

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