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THE COCKNEY ACCENT. Phonetical features that differ from RP. a)Vowels: - [i:] [ i:] ([mi:] [m i:]) - [u:] [ u] ([du:] [d u]) - [e] [ ] ([get] [g t]) - [ı] [e] ([ıf] [ef]). b) Diphthongs: - [a ] [a ]/ [ ]
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Phonetical features that differ from RP a)Vowels: - [i:] [i:] ([mi:] [mi:]) - [u:] [u] ([du:] [du]) - [e] [] ([get] [gt]) - [ı] [e] ([ıf] [ef])
b) Diphthongs: - [a] [a]/ [] ([mal] [mal]) - [e] [] ([pep] [pp]) - [a] [:] ([tan] [t:n]) tendency to centralise back vowels and diphthongs and a tendency to rounding (“nasalisation”)
c) Consonants: - ‘h’- dropping (‘ouse) - ‘g’- dropping word finally (doin’) or pronounced as a ‘k’ in words such as “nothink” - intrusive ‘r’ (“Maria Ann” “Maria ran”) - old Cockney: interchange of ‘w’ and ‘v’ (“wery cold vater”) - glottaling of ‘p’, ’t’, ’k’ word- medially and –finally (“What a lot of little bottles” [w] - ‘th’ is pronounced as ‘f’ (voiceless) and ‘v’ (voiced) or word initially as ‘d’ in pronouns like “this” or “those” ( My farver finks dis) - omission of ‘w’ in unaccented position and compound words (somewhat summat) - ‘l’ is pronounced as a semi- vowel /w/ when it is followed by a Velar /l/ (milk [mıwk]) omission of unaccented syllables (‘sted, ‘cause, fam’ly)
Some characteristic grammar of Cockney: - Double negation (“ I don’t know nothing about it”) - 3rd person sing. ‘s’ attached to other persons ( similar use of ‘is’ and ‘was’ “The blokes is goin’ to de pictures”) - use of unorthodox superlatives (“worser”) - Adjectives used as Adverbs (“it must be done quick”) - Possessive pronouns modelled on ‘mine’ (“ourn”, “theirn”, “hern”) - Reflexive pronouns modelled on ‘myself’ (“He thinks a lot of hisself”) - ‘that’ is replaced by ‘what’ in phrases like “ a bloke what I knows” rhyming slang (“Britneys” = beers)
Some characteristic Cockney vocabulary - stretchers = lies - beak = nose - chap = friend - swop = exchange - choaker = tie - screwed = drunk to mug = to rob