Example 1
BOSTON WOMAN:
I was engaged for awhile to a “Yalie” who sounded like a Yalie to me, although he had a trace of a Southern accent. I thought sort a Bill Faulkner, Truman
Capote accent, you know, when you’re twenty you don’t, you know, make these distinctions and I went home to meet his family, ah, at Christmas. And as we drove further South from New Haven, his accent got heavier and heavier. It became filled with all these hillbilly kind of regionalisms, you know, this real kind of you all stuff and as well a lot of the …show more content…
No question.
Example 2
MISSISSIPPI WOMAN:
I don’t think they perhaps have the same values of hospitality that we do in the
South. And so I associate all of that with the sound of their voice. And it’s um, grating on your ears, maybe our sound is also, but it’s usually their nasal, um, and a lot of times the things they say are not kind.
B) There are variety of attitudes toward dialects that are illustrated in “ American Tongues”. Some dialects are discriminated against and/or seen as inferior. Discuss one example of dialect seen as inferior and one of dialect seen as superior.
Inferior : Black Dialect.
This suggested they believed that Black dialect was an inferior dialect and a poor attempt to speak Standard English, they were labeled as racist, holding negative views about African-Americans. Consequently, until the name and the theories were changed, Black English was a scarcely studied dialect. The term black English implies that all black people speak this dialect. This fails to recognize the fact that many Caucasians speak this dialect also. In fact, the designated speakers of Black English are those who live in urban areas, and the majority of these inhabitants happen to be African-American. However, not all blacks live in the inner-city, and not all of those who live in the inner-city are