George Bernard Shaw ridiculed the British obsession with class, recognising that its most powerful expression was not in what someone said, but how he or she said it. Using a wealth of archive, we hear how the drive to hide linguistic, geographical roots often went hand in hand with a desire to be seen as part of the metropolitan set and we hear about the post war levelling and the move away from RP.
RP RIP - the demise of BBC English
Tagged with accent rp bbc linguistics language english pronunciation
Also huffduffed as…
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RP RIP - the demise of BBC English
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RP RIP - the demise of BBC English
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RP RIP - the demise of BBC English
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RP RIP - the demise of BBC English
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RP RIP - the demise of BBC English
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RP RIP - the demise of BBC English
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RP RIP - the demise of BBC English
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RP RIP - the demise of BBC English
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RP RIP - the demise of BBC English
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RP RIP - the demise of BBC English
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RP RIP - the demise of BBC English
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RP RIP - the demise of BBC English
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RP RIP - the demise of BBC English
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RP RIP - the demise of BBC English
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Accents In The Workplace
One in five Canadians speaks English (and French) as a second language. And more Canadians than ever speak with an accent, including Babel host Mariel Borelli. But while we love diversity in the streets, it can be a different story in the workplace. Babel explores what it’s like to have an accent on the job in Canada.
Tagged with accent work immigrants pronunciation cbc babel
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A Curious Case Of Foreign Accent Syndrome
When Karen Butler went in for dental surgery, she left with more than numb gums: She also picked up a pronounced foreign accent. It wasn’t a fluke, or a joke — she’d developed a rare condition called foreign accent syndrome that’s usually caused by an injury to the part of the brain that controls speech.
Tagged with linguistics disability speech medicine medical accent speaking
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Lexicon Valley: The role of language in Scrabble. - Slate Magazine
Does Scrabble in fact celebrate language? Or does it merely reduce English to a set of mathematical symbols and probability calculations? In the final episode of our first series of Lexicon Valley podcasts, I talk to Word Freak author and competitive Scrabble player Stefan Fatsis about how a math game disguised as a word game nevertheless unlocks the essential beauty of the English language.
