Does the southern pronunciation fixen ‘disappear in parts of the south of America?

Growing in Atlanta in the 1940s and 1950s, Susan Levin’s trips to New York City relatives included an impromptu novelty show to be the star of the show: his cousin invited friends and charged 25 cents on a pop to listen to Levin’s southern pronunciation. Even though he also grew up in Atlanta, Levin’s two sons, followed by more than a quarter of a century, never spoke with the pronunciation that is probably the most famous regional dialect in the United States, with its long vowels and soft “R” sounds. “I have no pronunciation,” said his oldest son Ira Levin. “People with whom I work, and even in school, people did not believe that I was from Atlanta.” The southern pronunciation, which has many variations, disappears in some regions of the south because people migrate to the region from the US and other parts around the world. A series of research papers published in December documented the lack of regional accents among the black residents of the Atlanta region, the white working class in the New Orleans region and the people who grew up in Rale in Northern Carolina. So far in the 2020s, more than 5.8 million people have moved to the south of the US, more than four times the combined total of the three other regions of the country. Linguists believe that mass media has played an important role in language change, which begins in urban areas and reach more rural places. In the late 20th century, the migration growth affects the classical white southern pronunciation in the Atlanta region and other parts of the urban south were placed at its peak with baby boomers born between 1946 and 1964 and then fell with General Exers born between 1965 and 1980 and later generations. According to recent research by linguists of Georgia University, Georgia Tech and Brigham Young University, it has been replaced with a dialect in the youngest speakers in the 21st century, which was first seen in California in late 1980s. The dialect, which was also found in Canada, has become a pan-regional pronunciation as it has spread to other parts of the US including Boston, New York and Michigan, which contributes to the reduction in their regional accents. In Rale, Northern Carolina, the Southern Point in the Southern Point was inaugurated in 1959, the Research Triangle Park, a huge complex of research and technology firms, which attracted thousands of highly educated workers from outside the south. Born after 1979, the white resident, after the establishment of the research triangle, does not usually talk with a southern pronunciation, the linguist Sean Lubargan wrote in a paper published in December. Often, outsiders incorrectly combine a southern accent with lack of education, and some young people may try to remove themselves from that stereotype. “Today young people, especially educated young people, they do not want to sound too much like they are from a specific hometown,” said Georgia Tech linguist Lelia Glass, who co-written the Atlanta study. “They want to sound more, non -neutralized and geographically mobile.” The pronunciation of Southern dialect for young people among black people in Atlanta has been closed mainly due to the influx of African Americans from North American cities in recent decades, described as “reverse great migration”. During the great migration, from around 1910 to 1970, the African Americans moved to cities in the north such as New York, Detroit and Chicago. His grandchildren and pardon have returned to south in large numbers in places like Atlanta during the 20th and 21st centuries and are more likely to be college-educated. According to a study published in December, researchers dropped the southern accents among African Americans with General Z, or people born between 1997 and 2012. The same researchers had previously studied the southern tone among the white people in Atlanta. General Exers Mitchell and Richard Bake, who live in the Atlanta region, have southern accents, but are missing in their two sons born in 1998 and 2001. Law Enforcement Officer Richard Bake said of her sons, “I think they speak clearly than me.” “They do not sound as a country as I talk of a southern draw.” New Orleans ‘Yacht’ pronunciation has reduced unlike other accents that have changed due to the influx of new inhabitants, specific, white working-class “yat” of New Orleans has left the devastating storm Katrina in 2005. Hurricane was a “frightening” language change incident for New Orleans as it was displaced around a quarter million inhabitants in the first year after the storm and brought thousands of outsiders in the next decade. Virginia Tech Sociologist Katie Carmaik said in a paper published in December that the shortage of “Yat” pronunciation is most worth noting in the millenniums, who were teenagers when Katrina was a hit, as they were made aware of other methods of speaking during an important time for linguistic development. Cheryl Wilson Lanier, a 64 -year -old, one of the New Orleans suburbs, grew up in Louisiana, which was the most prevalent pronunciation, is worrying, the part of the specificity of the region will lose part of the specificity if the accent disappears. “This is such that we are losing our different personality,” he said. Southern identity is changing during low in many urban areas, the southern pronunciation is unlikely to disappear completely because “one of the authors of the Atlanta study, Georgia’s linguist Margaret Renvik said,” The tone is an incredibly straightforward way to show others something about themselves. Instead it can reflect a change of how young speakers see the southern identity, with a regional accent, which is considered southern like the previous generations, and linguistic borders are no less important than other factors, he said. “What is life in the south among the youth of the Atlanta region or Rale region,” said Renvik. “And this is not the same as his parents or grandparents have grown up with grandfather.”