New York Latino English
The English language as primarily spoken by Hispanic Americans on the East Coast of the United States demonstrates considerable influence from New York City English and African American Vernacular English, with certain additional features borrowed from the Spanish language.[1][2] Though not currently confirmed to be a single stabilized dialect, this variety has received some attention in the academic literature, being recently labelled New York Latino English, referring to its city of nineteenth-century origin, or, more inclusively, East Coast Latino English.[3] In the 1970s scholarship, the variety was more narrowly called (New York) Puerto Rican English or Nuyorican English.[4] The variety originated with Puerto Ricans moving to New York City after World War I,[5] though particularly in the subsequent generations born in the New York dialect region who were native speakers of both English and often Spanish. Today, it covers the English of many Hispanic Americans of diverse national heritages, not simply Puerto Ricans, in the New York metropolitan area and beyond along the northeastern coast of the United States.
According to linguist William Labov, "A thorough and accurate study of geographic differences in the English of Latinos from the Caribbean and various countries of Central and South America is beyond the scope of the current work", largely because "consistent dialect patterns are still in the process of formation".[2] Importantly, this East Coast Latino ethnolect is a native variety of American English and not a form of Spanglish, broken English, or interlanguage, and other ethnic American English dialects are similarly documented.[6] It is not spoken by all Latinos in this region, and it is not spoken only by Latinos.[1] It is sometimes spoken by people who know little or no Spanish.
Phonology
General phonology
- Some New York Latino English speakers, the best documented being East Harlem Puerto Rican males with many African American contacts, may be indistinguishable by sound from African American Vernacular English (AAVE) speakers.[7]
- New York Latino English utterances may have some degree of syllable-timed rhythms, so syllables take up roughly the same amount of time with roughly the same amount of stress and particularly among older and male speakers.[8] Standard American English is stress-timed, so only stressed syllables are evenly timed, though Spanish is also syllable-timed.
- /t/ and /d/ are realized as dental stops [t̪] and [d̪] rather than the standard American and AAVE alveolars [t] and [d] (also found in many Romance languages, including Spanish). Dentalization is also common in New York accents, generally, and Latino English /n/ is also pronounced dentally as [n̪].[9]
- /θ/ is often pronounced [t̪], with the possibility of a near-merger among words like thin [t̪ɪn̪] and tin [t̪ʰɪn̪].[10]
- Devoicing of voiced obstruent codas is optional among stronger accents (e.g., characterize may be realized with a final [s]).
- Consonant cluster simplifications occur such as the loss of dental stops after nasals (bent) and fricatives, (left, test). That also leads to a characteristic plural, in which words like tests are pronounced [t̪ɛst̪ɪs], though this is highly stigmatized and not necessarily common.[11]
- /l/ (
listen) in syllable onsets (meaning at the beginning of syllables, such as in light, last, lose, line, uplink, etc.) and intervocalically (between vowels like filling or tally) are typically "clear" or "light". This differentiates Latinos from all other ethnic groups in New York.[12] In syllable codas (at the end of syllables), however, /l/ is often vocalized (turned into a back vowel) so that, for instance, soul may approach the sound of so, and tool may approach the sound of too.[13] - Predominantly, pronunciation is variably rhotic (in other words, pronouncing the R sound only between and before vowels, but not consistently after vowels),[14] in the same vein as current-day New York City English, African American Vernacular English, and Caribbean Spanish (wherein word-final /r/ is silent). Cultivated forms may be fully rhotic, particularly among many professional-class Hispanic New Yorkers from higher socioeconomic backgrounds. The R sound, when pronounced, is the typical English postalveolar approximant [ɹ̠].
Subcultural variations
As the unity of the dialect is still in transition, in order to enhance their study, Slomanson & Newman grouped their participants based on differences in subcultural (or peer group) participation and identification. The study differentiated between the influential youth groups/subcultures of hip hop (involving rap music, turntablism, graffiti art, etc.), skater/BMX (involving bicycling and skateboarding tricks), and geek (involving video game culture, computers, and other technological interests). The findings located young Latinos mostly in the first two categories (with hip hop culture being influenced significantly by African American Vernacular English and NYC skater/BMX culture by NYC European-American Vernacular English and General American English). Latinos also largely fell into a third, non-peer-based grouping: family-oriented, whose members show the strongest pride and self-identification with their ethno-cultural heritage. They admittedly did not examine gang (or "thug") culture, which minimally affected their population sample.[15]
The study found that the gliding vowel /aɪ/ (
Grammar and vocabulary
- Similarity of many grammatical structures between New York Latino English and African American Vernacular English (AAVE) is clearly evident.[8][18]
- Lack of inversion or do support particularly in first- and second-person questions (I can go to the bathroom? rather than Can I go to the bathroom?)[19]
- Calques and direct translations of Spanish expressions and words (owned by the devil, instead of possessed by the devil, closed meaning locked).[20]
- The AAVE and Southern U.S. term you-all [juɑʷ] or y'all is common.[21]
Notable native speakers
- Cardi B (variably rhotic; no /aɪ/ glide deletion) — "an Afro-Latina with a thick Bronx accent"[22][23][24]
- Fat Joe (non-rhotic; /aɪ/ glide deletion) — "Fat Joe is a born and bred Bronxite who still speaks in the singular city accent"[25]
- Luis Guzman (non-rhotic; no /aɪ/ glide deletion) — "his Nuyorican accent is oh so thick"[26]
- La India (variably rhotic; variable /aɪ/ glide deletion) — "speaking in a gruff Nuyorican accent"[27]
- John Leguizamo (variably rhotic; variable /aɪ/ glide deletion) — "his hardcore New York accent"[28] and "he has a Nuyorican accent he can't shake"[29]
- Jennifer Lopez (rhotic; no /aɪ/ glide deletion) — "Bronx Puerto Rican... when I grew up I talked like this"[30] and "her Nuyorican (meaning, a Puerto Rican from New York, since Jenny from the Block was born in the Bronx) accent"[31]
- Rosie Perez (non-rhotic; no /aɪ/ glide deletion) — "she will always be remembered [for...] the Nuyorican accent"[32] and "a high-pitched voice with a thick Nuyorican accent"[33]
- Marc Anthony (variably rhotic; no /aɪ/ glide deletion)
- Shaggy Flores (non-rhotic; no /aɪ/ glide deletion)
- Immortal Technique (variably rhotic; /aɪ/ glide deletion)
- Lumidee (variably rhotic; no /aɪ/ glide deletion)
- Rick Gonzalez (variably rhotic; no /aɪ/ glide deletion)
- Cuban Link (variably rhotic; no /aɪ/ glide deletion)
- Joell Ortiz (variably rhotic; /aɪ/ glide deletion)
- Victor Rasuk (variably rhotic; no /aɪ/ glide deletion)
- Prince Royce (rhotic; no /aɪ/ glide deletion)
- Glen Tapia (variably rhotic; /aɪ/ glide deletion)
- Tru Life (variably rhotic; no /aɪ/ glide deletion)
- Lauren Vélez (rhotic; no /aɪ/ glide deletion)
- David Zayas (non-rhotic; no /aɪ/ glide deletion)
- 6ix9ine (variably rhotic; no /aɪ/ glide deletion)
- Big Pun (non-rhotic; no /aɪ/ glide deletion)
- Romeo Santos (variably rhotic /aɪ/ glide deletion)
References
- Newman, Michael. "The New York Latino English Project Page." Queens College. Accessed 2015.
- Labov, William; Ash, Sharon; Boberg, Charles (2006). The Atlas of North American English, Berlin: Mouton-de Gruyter, p. 24.
- Slomanson & Newman (2004:214)
- Wolfram, Walt (1974) Sociolinguistic Aspects of Assimilation: Puerto Rican English in New York City Washington, DC: Center for Applied Linguistics ISBN 0-87281-034-8
- Newman, Michael (2010). "Focusing, implicational scaling, and the dialect status of New York Latino English". Journal of Sociolinguistics, 14: 210.
- Zacarian, Debbie (2012). Mastering Academic Language: A Framework for Supporting Student Achievement. Corwin Press p. 16.
- Lanehart, Sonja (2015). The Oxford Handbook of African American Language. Oxford University Press. p. 284-285
- Shousterman, Cara (2014) "Speaking English in Spanish Harlem: The Role of Rhythm," University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics: Vol. 20 : Iss. 2, Article 18. Available at: http://repository.upenn.edu/pwpl/vol20/iss2/18
- Newman (2014:84)
- Newman (2014:82)
- Newman (2014:86)
- Newman (2014:83)
- Slomanson & Newman (2004:213)
- Cutler, C. (2010). "Hip-Hop, White Immigrant Youth, and African American Vernacular English: Accommodation as an Identity Choice". Journal of English Linguistics, 38(3), p. 252.
- Slomanson & Newman (2004:202)
- Slomanson & Newman (2004:205)
- Slomanson & Newman (2004:211)
- Newman (2014:94–95)
- Newman (2014:95)
- Newman (2014:99)
- Newman (2014:89)
- Shamsian, Jacob (September 27, 2017). "Meet Cardi B, the rapper who dethroned Taylor Swift from the top of the charts". Business Insider. Archived from the original on October 19, 2017. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
Her distinctive New Yawk accent makes her an important part of the city's constellation of hip-hop artists.
- Breihan, Tom (July 19, 2017). "Cardi B Is A Great Rapper, And You Need To Start Taking Her Seriously". Stereogum. Archived from the original on October 19, 2017. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
Her voice is a full-bodied New Yawk nasal bleat...
- Cepeda, Eddie (September 2017). "Cardi B Won't Change To Make White Fans Comfortable — And That's Why She's Number One". Bustle. Archived from the original on October 19, 2017. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
She's an Afro-Latina with a thick Bronx accent...
- Guzman, Sandra (2008). "MY NEW YORK: FAT JOE". New York Post. NYP Holdings, Inc.
- "[www.tuvez.com/our-five-favorite-luis-guzman-performances/ Our Five Favorite Luis Guzman Performances]". Tu Vez.
- Valdes-Rodriguez, Alisa (2000). "Commanding Respect". Los Angeles Times.
- "John Leguizamo Has A Southern Accent (Southern Queens, That Is)". CBS. CBS Interactive.
- Rico, Jack (2009). "John Leguizamo to play 'Cantinflas' in biopic?" ShowBizCafe.com.
- Know the Difference Between a Brooklyn Accent and a Bronx Accent? Here's a Tutorial by Jennifer Lopez and Leah Remini". Dexter Canfield Media Inc./YouTube. 2018.
- Gonzalez, Irina (2019). "How Jennifer Lopez Paved the Way for a Generation of Latinas". O: The Oprah Magazine. Hearst Magazine Media, Inc.
- "4 ways Rosie Perez stole our hearts". Gizmodo Media Group. 2014.
- George, Nelson (2014). '"Face dance means you don't know what the hell the rest of your body was doing but your face is fierce. That's face dancing." —Rosie Perez'. Esquire. Hearst Magazine Media, Inc.
Bibliography
- Newman, Michael (2014), New York City English, Mouton de Gruyter.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Slomanson, Peter; Newman, Michael (2004), Peer Group Identification and Variation in New York Latino English Laterals (PDF), English World-Wide, 25, pp. 199–216CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Wolfram, Walt & Natalie Schilling Estes (2005) American English 2nd edition Blackwell ISBN 1-4051-1265-4
- Wolfram, Walt & Ben Ward (2005) American Voices: How Dialects Differ from Coast to Coast Blackwell ISBN 1-4051-2109-2
External links
- The New York Latino English Project The site of the New York Latino English project, which studies the native English spoken by New York Latinos.