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When is a door a 'dower' or a 'deer'? That depends whether
you're in Bilsdale or Helmsley according to Paul,
Eva and Doreen, three of the people we talked to for 麻豆社
Voices.
Paul is a member of the Yorkshire Dialect Society, he
says that he can remember when within the space of three miles, people's
accent varied wildly.
"There's different dialects for different
areas. There were different..er..pronunciations for words in Bilsdale
for example...three mile up the road...for example we would call a door
a 'deer'...they'd call it a 'dower'."
We also spoke to Jim from Filey, he agreed that the way
people pronounce words can change within a very small geographical area.
| "the
dialects, 'ow they change in a few miles." |
| Jim from Filey |
"this is what you're speakin' about
now, in't it...the dialects, 'ow they change in a few miles."
So although we all come under the broad umbrella of
'Yorkshire', words can be pronounced completely differently within the
space a few miles.
But is this phenomonon of ultra-local accents and dialects
dying out? Have the days gone when you could tell which village someone
came from by their accent?
| "Some
dialectologists will talk about having a 5 mile rule" |
| Dr Barrie Rhodes |
We spoke to Yorkshire dialect expert Barrie
Rhodes, a retired doctor of Linguistics and active member of the Yorkshire
Dialect Society.
Dr Rhodes confirmed that areas only a few miles apart
can produce identifiable differences in accent.
"Some dialectologists will talk about having a 5
mile rule; it's just a rough rule of thumb where traditionally you could
say that there was some noticeable change in vocabulary or pronunciation,
normally classed as a dialect word."
However Dr Rhodes also confimed what our survey of North
Yorkshire discovered, that these ultra-local accents are steadily dying
out. Dr Rhodes referred to this erosion as a process of 'levelling out',
saying that 'less and less' can we identify people by the villages they
were born in.
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