North-Central American English
Adapted from Wikipedia Β· Adventurer experience
North-Central American English is a special way of speaking used by many people in the Upper Midwestern United States. This area includes places like Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan. People often call it the "Minnesota accent" or "Wisconsin accent."
This way of speaking developed where many different ways of talking come together. It is related to the way people talk in the Inland Northern dialect areas near the Great Lakes region, as well as dialects from Canada and nearby regions.
One clear feature of this dialect is the way people say certain sounds. For example, words like "cot" and "caught" might sound the same. This feature helps define where the dialect is spoken, covering parts of several states including North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, and Nebraska.
History and geography
The way people talk in the northern United States changed because many people from Scandinavia and Germany moved there in the late 1800s. Some experts think this mixing of languages created new sounds in the local speech. Others believe these sounds have been around for a long time and were kept by people from places like Scots-Irish or other British areas.
People in places like the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, parts of the Lower Peninsula of Michigan, and Northern Wisconsin come from many backgrounds, including Finnish, French Canadian, and Scandinavian families. Because of these different languages, people from other areas might find it hard to understand their speech. Many Finnish people moved to the Upper Peninsula, and some went on to Minnesota. A similar way of talking is also found in Southcentral Alaska's Matanuska-Susitna Valley, where people from the northern United States settled during the Great Depression.
Phonology
The North-Central American English dialect has some special sounds and ways of speaking. For example, the sounds in words like "coat" and "ago" stay the same, unlike in other parts of the United States. Some people here say words like "bag" and "flag" with a slightly higher sound.
Words like "fire" and "tiger" often sound a bit higher too. People might say "cot" and "caught" the same way, which is common here. This accent also keeps some sounds the same as in General American English, like saying all the sounds in "Mary," "marry," and "merry" the same way.
Some people might say "these" as "deez" or "those" as "doze," especially in some places. There are also small influences from languages like Swedish and Norwegian in some areas.
Grammar
In this way of speaking, people sometimes use the word "with" without saying what it goes with. For example, they might say, "Do you want to come with?" instead of "Do you want to come with me?" or "with us?" This is different from most other kinds of English. This special use of "with" probably came from the languages of some immigrants, like Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, German, Dutch, or Luxembourgish.
People in some areas also use the word "yet" in a special way. They might say, "I need to clean this room yet," meaning "I still need to clean this room." Also, in some places, saying "shut the lights" can mean "turn off the lights."
Vocabulary
Here are some special words and phrases used by people living in the northern middle part of the United States:
- boulevard β a grassy median strip
- berm, boulevard, or terrace β a grassy road verge
- bubbler β a drinking fountain (mainly used in Eastern Wisconsin, especially Milwaukee)
- breezeway or skyway β a hallway-bridge connecting two buildings
- duck, duck, gray duck β the children's game duck, duck, goose in Minnesota
- eh? β a question tag (particularly used in the northern sections of Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Upper Michigan)
- frontage road β a service or access road
- hotdish β a simple entree (main) cooked in a single dish, like a casserole
- ope β an onomatopoeia with variable meanings, including "excuse me" or "I'm sorry". Itβs a short and polite way to talk about a small mistake.
- pop or soda pop β a sweet carbonated soft drink
- parking ramp β a multi-story parking structure
- rummage sale β a yard or garage sale
- sliver β a splinter
- spendy β expensive or high-priced
- stocking cap β a knit wool hat
- supposably (for supposedly) β particularly in Wisconsin
- troll β a person from the Lower Peninsula of Michigan
- uff da β a Scandinavian exclamation or interjection used to express dismay, surprise, astonishment, exhaustion, or relief
- Yooper β a person from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan
Sub-varieties
A special kind of North-Central English is found in southcentral Alaska in the Matanuska-Susitna Valley. This happened because many people moved there from Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin in the 1930s.
Two strong types of North-Central English are "Yooper" English, spoken in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, and Iron Range English, spoken in Minnesota's Mesabi Iron Range. These types were shaped by Nordic immigration to those areas around the early 1900s. Iron Range English is sometimes called "Rayncher" English.
Upper Peninsula English
The English spoken in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, and some nearby parts of Wisconsin, is known as Yooper English. This kind of English has been influenced by Finnish-speaking immigrants. However, younger speakers might sound more like nearby Standard Canadian English.
In popular culture
The Minnesota accent is famous from the film Fargo, especially through the character Marge Gunderson played by Frances McDormand. You can also hear this accent from many minor characters, especially those voiced by Sue Scott, in the radio program A Prairie Home Companion. The accent also appears in the film New in Town.
Notable lifelong native speakers
Some famous people speak North-Central American English. They include Steven Avery with a Wisconsin accent and Michele Bachmann with a flat Minnesota accent. Others are Charlie Berens (in character), Chris Farley with his Wisconsin accent, Jan Kuehnemund, Brock Lesnar, Don Ness, Julianne Ortman, Sarah Palin, and Mark Proksch. Sarah Palinβs speech sounds like characters from Fargo because she grew up in Alaska where many people came from Minnesota.
Images
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on North-Central American English, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
Images from Wikimedia Commons. Tap any image to view credits and license.
Safekipedia