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CL LING_V 101 001/003 2025W1 H3 (Homework 3)

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Your work colleague Charles is a big fan of the royal family, and he often talks about how RP is 'beautiful' and  'the best' form of English, in particular because of how words like 'dark' and 'car' are pronounced in this dialect. One day after work, Charles hears you playing the John Legend song 'Who did that to you'. Links to an external site. As he listens to the song, Charles starts complaining about the version of AAVE (BAE) used by the singer. He says the pronunciation of words like 'Lord' and 'prepare for' are being 'butchered', because the r-sounds are not fully pronounced. Basing your answer only on linguistic evidence, is his evaluation of the two dialects fair? Choose the answer that gives the best evidence that it is or isn't fair.

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Contextualizing the question first: you’re comparing two dialects—RP (a form of British English) and AAVE (African American Vernacular English, here referred to via the BA E variant)—based on how rhoticity (the pronunciation of the 'r' sound in rhotic environments) operates in each. Option: 'It is not fair, in that both dialects are non-rhotic (i.e., deleting /ɹ/ in coda position), but he praises this phenomenon in RP and condemns the same thing in AAVE.' Analysis of the option: - The claim that both RP and AAVE are non-rhotic is already problematic, because it misrepresents the standard linguistic description of these dialects. RP is classically non-rhotic: in many syllable-final positions, the /ɹ/ is dropp......Login to view full explanation

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