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Jamaican English, includingJamaican Standard English, is the variety of English native toJamaica and is theofficial language of the country.[1] A distinction exists between Jamaican English andJamaican Patois (acreole language), though not entirely a sharp distinction so much as a gradualcontinuum between two extremes.[2] Jamaican English tends to followBritish English spelling conventions.[3]
There are severallanguage varieties that have significantly impacted the Jamaican dialect of English. English was introduced into Jamaica in 1655,[4] because of British colonisation.British English was spread through post-primary education, and through British teachers that immigrated to Jamaica.[4] Standard English in Jamaica conflated with the British standard.[5] Individuals who speak the standard variety are often considered to be of a higher social class; the people who speak more standard English than patois are known as “uptown”[4] Also,American English has contributed to the Jamaican English dialect. These impacts can be traced to the development of stronger social and economic ties with the United States,[when?] the popularity of U.S. cultural offerings, including film, music, andtelevised dramas and comedies and tourism.[6]Jamaican Patois is another source of influence on Jamaican English.[5] Many rural homes are monolingually Patois.
There are great similarities between standard British English and the standard variety of Jamaican English, including in grammar, idiom, and vocabulary.[5]
Features of standard Jamaican English include the characteristic pronunciation of the/aʊ/diphthong in words likeMOUTH, which is often more closed and rounded[ɵʊ] than in BritishReceived Pronunciation (RP) orGeneral American (GA); the pronunciation of theSTRUT vowel/ʌ/ to[ɵ~o] (again, more closed and rounded than the RP or GA varieties); and the very distinctive feature of "variable semi-rhoticity".[7] Non-rhoticity (the pronunciation of "r" nowhere except before vowels) is highly variable in Jamaican English and can depend upon the phonemic and even social context.[8] Jamaican English accents are: non-rhotic regarding words of theLETTERlexical set (at the ends of unstressedsyllables); rhotic (i.e., fully preserving the "r" sound) regarding words of theNEAR andFORCE sets; high to middling in degrees of rhoticity regarding theSQUARE,NURSE, andCURE sets; and low regarding rhoticity with most other word sets.[9][10] When "r" is followed by a consonant, non-rhoticity is more likely than when "r" is not followed by a consonant.[11] However, overall more rhoticity is positively correlated with higher levels of education. This has been attributed to the Jamaican education system normalising and promoting a rhotic variety of English.[12] Thus, the overall degree of rhoticity in educated Jamaican English remains very low, with rhoticity occurring 21.7% of the time.[13]
Merger of the diphthongs in"fair" and "fear" takes place both in Jamaican Standard English andJamaican Patois, resulting in those two words (and many others, like "bear" and "beer") often becominghomophones: the sound being[eːɹ], though often[iɛɹ] (something like "ee-air"; thus "bear/beer" as "bee-air").[14]
The short "a" sound (TRAP,MAN,HAT, etc.) is very open[a], similar to its Irish variants, whileBATH,PALM, andSTART all use this same sound too, but lengthened,[15] and perhaps slightly backed;[16] this distinction can maintain a London-likeTRAP–BATH split. BothLOT/CLOTH andTHOUGHT use a rounded[ɔ], though acot-caught merger is theoretically avoided by the latter set of words being more lengthened;[15] however, in reality, a full merger (ofLOT/CLOTH/THOUGHT) is reportedly increasing in informal contexts.[17] For Jamaican Patois speakers, the merged vowel is much lower.GOAT andFACE vowels in the standard educated dialect are longmonophthongs: respectively[oː] and[eː].[15] The unstressedschwa phoneme (COMMA) appears to be normally produced in the area of[a~ɐ].[18]
Before the low central vowel[a], thevelars[k] and[ɡ] can be realized withpalatalisation, so thatcat can be pronounced [khat ~ kjat] andcard as [kha:d ~ kja:d]); while [ɡ] and [ɡj] coexist, as ingap [ɡap ~ ɡjap] or guard [ɡa:(ɹ)d ~ ɡja:(ɹ)d]. These variations are distinctphonemes in Jamaican Patois before [a]: [ɡja:dn̩] isgarden while [ɡa:dn̩] isGordon; [kja:f] iscalf while [ka:f] iscough. They are not distinct phonemes in Jamaica English because these word pairs are distinguished by the vowel ([a] vs [ɔ]) instead. However, this fact hasn't stopped educated speakers from incorporating [kj] in their English at least before unlengthened "a". However, vowel length can be a relevant factor, since it is possible to hear forms like[kjat] forcat,[kjaɹɪ] forcarry,[kjaɹaktʌ] forcharacter, and[kjaɹɪbiǝn] forCaribbean, but affluent or aspiring middle-class speakers tend to avoid[kja:ɹ] forcar due to its longer vowel.[19][20]
Presumably less-educatedJamaican Patois speakers may speak English with several other notable features, including aTRAP–LOT merger (e.g. withrat androt homophones) to[ɔ] and aPRIZE–CHOICE merger (e.g. withline andloin homophones) to[ɔi].[21]Th-stopping is also common.
One of the most salient sounds ofCaribbean English to speakers of outside English dialects is its unique rhythm and intonation. Linguists debate whether this system centres mostly on stress, tone, or a mixture in which the two interact. Sometimes, Jamaican English is perceived as maintaining less of a contrast betweenstressed and unstressed syllables, in other words, making all syllables sound relatively-equally stressed: thuskitchen not/ˈkɪtʃɪn/ so much as/kɪtʃɪn/ (perhaps even perceived by a non-Caribbean as having second-syllable stress:/kɪˈtʃɪn/). In Jamaican English, normally reduced English vowels are sometimes not reduced, and other times are hyper-reduced, so thattoken is not*[ˈtuokn̩] but[ˈtuoken], yetcement can be as reduced as[sment]; the exact nuances of the rules at play here are also highly debated.[22]
Jamaican Standard English andJamaican Patois exist together in apost-creole speech continuum. Jamaican (Creole/Patois) is used by most people for everyday, informal situations; it is the language most Jamaicans use at home and are most familiar with, as well as the language of most local popular music. Jamaican Patois has begun to be used on the radio as well as the news.[23] Standard English, on the other hand, is the language of education,high culture, government, the media and official/formal communications. It is also the native language of a small minority of Jamaicans (typically upper-class and upper/traditional middle-class). Most Creole-dominant speakers have a fair command of English and Standard English, through schooling and exposure to official culture and mass media; their receptive skills (understanding of Standard English) are typically much better than their productive skills (their own intended Standard English statements often show signs of Jamaican Creole influence).
Most writing in Jamaica is done in English (including private notes and correspondence). Jamaican Patois has a standardised orthography as well,[24] but has only recently been taught in some schools, so the majority of Jamaicans can read and write standard English only, and have trouble deciphering written Patois (in which the writer tries to reflect characteristic structures and pronunciations to differing degrees, without compromising readability). Written Patois appears mostly in literature, especially in folkloristic "dialect poems"; in humoristic newspaper columns; and most recently, on internet chat sites frequented by younger Jamaicans, who seem to have a more positive attitude toward their own language use than their parents.[25]
While, for the sake of simplicity, it is customary[by whom?] to describe Jamaican speech in terms of standard English versus Jamaican Creole, a clear-cutdichotomy does not describe the actual language use of most Jamaicans.[citation needed] Between the two extremes—"broad Patois" on one end of the spectrum, and "perfect" Standard English on the other—there are various in-between varieties. This situation typically results when a Creole language is in constant contact with Standardised English (superstrate or lexifier language) and is called acreole speech continuum. The least prestigious (most Creole) variety is called thebasilect; Standard English (or high prestige) variety, theacrolect; and in-between versions are known asmesolects.
Consider, for example, the following forms:
(As noted above, the "r" in "over" is not pronounced in any variety, but the one in "dere" or "there" is.)
Jamaicans choose from the varieties available to them according to the situation. A Creole-dominant speaker may choose a higher variety for formal occasions like official business or a wedding speech, and a lower one for relating to friends; a standard English-dominant speaker is likely to employ a lower variety when shopping at the market than at their workplace.Code-switching can also bemetacommunicative (as when a Standard-dominant speaker switches to a more heavily basilect-influenced variety in an attempt at humor or to express solidarity).