Page:The American Language.djvu/188

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172
THE AMERICAN LANGUAGE

g, we give nephew a clear f-sound instead of the clouded English v-sound, and we boldly nationalize trait and pronounce its final t, but we drop the second p from pumpkin and change the m to n, we change the ph(=f) -sound to plain p in diphtheria, diph- thong and naphtha,[1] we relieve rind of its final d, and, in the complete sentence, we slaughter consonants by assimilation. I have heard Englishmen say brand-new, but on American lips it is almost invariably bran-new. So nearly universal is this nasal- ization in the United States that certain American lexicographers have sought to found the term upon bran and not upon brand. Here the national speech is powerfully influenced by Southern dialectical variations, which in turn probably derive partly from French example and partly from the linguistic limitations of the negro. The latter, even after two hundred years, has great diffi- culties with our consonants, and often drops them. A familiar anecdote well illustrates his speech habit. On a train stopping at a small station in Georgia a darkey threw up a window and yelled "Wah ee?" The reply from a black on the platform, was "Wah oo?" A Northerner aboard the train, puzzled by this inarticulate dialogue, sought light from a Southern passenger, who promptly translated the first question as " Where is he?" and the second as "Where is who?" A recent viewer with alarm[2] argues that this conspiracy against the consonants is spreading, and that English printed words no longer represent the actual sounds of the American language. "Like the French," he says, "we have a marked liaison—the borrowing of a letter from the preceding word. We invite one another to 'c'meer' (=come here)…'Hoo-zat?' (=who is that?) has as good a liaison as the French vois avez." This critic believes that Ameri- can tends to abandon t for d, as in Sadd'y (= Saturday) and siddup (=sit up), and to get rid of h, as in "ware-zee?" (= where is he?). But here we invade the vulgar speech, which belongs to the next chapter.

  1. An interesting discussion of this peculiarity is in Some Variant Pronunciations in the New South, by William A. Read, Dialect Notes, vol. iii, pt. vii, 1911, p. 504 et seq.
  2. Hugh Mearns: Our Own, Our Native Speech, McClure's Magazine, Oct., 1916.