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A Pronunciation Guide by Pronunciation Studio
MLE has been around for about thirty years, but it’s getting exposure now, as some of England’s biggest stars like footballer Raheem Sterling and musician Stormzy who grew up speaking it, are in the spotlight.
Although it has London in its name, you’ll actually hear it all over England in mixed urban areas. People who speak it in cities including Birmingham, Leicester and Manchester will also throw in flavours of the local accents in those places. The key feature of this accent is its ability to adapt to the people using it, so it keeps changing.
In today’s lesson we learn how to do the MLE vowel and consonant sounds, comparing it to both standard English pronunciation (GB) and the last urban accent to come out of London – cockney.
Audio Accent Key:
Black text = read in MLE (Multicultural London English)
The front [i̠ː] vowel sound is a little bit relaxed in MLE so the tongue isn’t quite as far to the front: FEE, NEED, LEAD.
“See these? They feel cheap to me.”
In CHOOSE, DO and YOU the tongue is to the front of the mouth, not in the centre, it sounds a little bit French:
“D’you know who’s doing the food?”
The sound [ɐ] in MAN, PAT, and RAN isn’t made so much to the front as in standard English:
“Dan is having a mad jam in the flat.”
In FEAR, DEER and NEARLY the sound is more often a long monophthong [ɪː] instead of a diphthong:
“Here’s your beer, cheers bruv.”
This sound varies a lot in MLE, it can be a monophthong [ëː] PAY, WAY, TAKE or a diphthong [ëɪ] PAY, WAY, TAKE, or a bit of a mixture:
“Take the train now Dave or you’ll be late.”
This is pronounced as a single position, slightly front sound [ɜ̟ː] LIKE, FIND, WHITE
“Why don’t you try size nine?”
The sound in HOW, ROUND, and OUT is often pronounced as a single nearly open vowel which can be to the front [æː] or fairly central [ɐː], it can also have a slightly diphthongal quality to it [ɐu]:
“How about we go round his house now?”
This diphthong sound starts with the tongue to the back in MLE [oʊ]: GO, LOAD, OVER, WINDOW but the second part is often dropped so it can just be [oː].
“I don’t know why he goes over the road to phone, though.”
In MLE, TH sounds are either /f,v/ THANKS, BOTHER, or /t,d/ THANKS, BOTHER, or even mixture of all four:
“He thinks he’s the babyfather.”
MLE shares the cockney use of glottal stops [ʔ] for /t/ after vowel and consonant sounds FOOTBALL, LIGHTLY, BETTER.
“Don’t keep me waiting tonight, alright?”
Like most regional accents in England, ‘ng’ endings are pronounced /n/ WORKIN’, WRITIN’, WALKIN‘
“I was thinking of going to buy something.”
Like cockney, MLE swaps dark [ɫ] for a back vowel sound, most commonly [u]: LITTLE, FALL, HILL:
“All my bottles are being recycled.”
MLE speakers tend to pronounce /h/: HAT, HOME, AHEAD. This is a key difference from cockney, which does not normally include /h/ at all:
MLE: “It’s too hot with the heating on in here.”
In MLE /k/ and /g/ tend to be made with the tongue slightly further back in the mouth: KITE, CRY, QUEEN, GATE, AGO, GRIME.
“Can Gareth go and pick up some carrot cake?”
These sounds can be made with the tongue near the teeth: SO, SITE, PASSAGE, ZOO, CHEESE, ROSE.
“Pass the salmon and mayonnaise sandwiches please.”
The pitch range used by MLE speakers is also very variable, ranging from monotone cool and casual to an animated and jumpy collection of pitch changes.
The post MLE (Multicultural London English) – the Urban Accent appeared first on Pronunciation Studio.
By A Pronunciation Guide by Pronunciation Studio
MLE has been around for about thirty years, but it’s getting exposure now, as some of England’s biggest stars like footballer Raheem Sterling and musician Stormzy who grew up speaking it, are in the spotlight.
Although it has London in its name, you’ll actually hear it all over England in mixed urban areas. People who speak it in cities including Birmingham, Leicester and Manchester will also throw in flavours of the local accents in those places. The key feature of this accent is its ability to adapt to the people using it, so it keeps changing.
In today’s lesson we learn how to do the MLE vowel and consonant sounds, comparing it to both standard English pronunciation (GB) and the last urban accent to come out of London – cockney.
Audio Accent Key:
Black text = read in MLE (Multicultural London English)
The front [i̠ː] vowel sound is a little bit relaxed in MLE so the tongue isn’t quite as far to the front: FEE, NEED, LEAD.
“See these? They feel cheap to me.”
In CHOOSE, DO and YOU the tongue is to the front of the mouth, not in the centre, it sounds a little bit French:
“D’you know who’s doing the food?”
The sound [ɐ] in MAN, PAT, and RAN isn’t made so much to the front as in standard English:
“Dan is having a mad jam in the flat.”
In FEAR, DEER and NEARLY the sound is more often a long monophthong [ɪː] instead of a diphthong:
“Here’s your beer, cheers bruv.”
This sound varies a lot in MLE, it can be a monophthong [ëː] PAY, WAY, TAKE or a diphthong [ëɪ] PAY, WAY, TAKE, or a bit of a mixture:
“Take the train now Dave or you’ll be late.”
This is pronounced as a single position, slightly front sound [ɜ̟ː] LIKE, FIND, WHITE
“Why don’t you try size nine?”
The sound in HOW, ROUND, and OUT is often pronounced as a single nearly open vowel which can be to the front [æː] or fairly central [ɐː], it can also have a slightly diphthongal quality to it [ɐu]:
“How about we go round his house now?”
This diphthong sound starts with the tongue to the back in MLE [oʊ]: GO, LOAD, OVER, WINDOW but the second part is often dropped so it can just be [oː].
“I don’t know why he goes over the road to phone, though.”
In MLE, TH sounds are either /f,v/ THANKS, BOTHER, or /t,d/ THANKS, BOTHER, or even mixture of all four:
“He thinks he’s the babyfather.”
MLE shares the cockney use of glottal stops [ʔ] for /t/ after vowel and consonant sounds FOOTBALL, LIGHTLY, BETTER.
“Don’t keep me waiting tonight, alright?”
Like most regional accents in England, ‘ng’ endings are pronounced /n/ WORKIN’, WRITIN’, WALKIN‘
“I was thinking of going to buy something.”
Like cockney, MLE swaps dark [ɫ] for a back vowel sound, most commonly [u]: LITTLE, FALL, HILL:
“All my bottles are being recycled.”
MLE speakers tend to pronounce /h/: HAT, HOME, AHEAD. This is a key difference from cockney, which does not normally include /h/ at all:
MLE: “It’s too hot with the heating on in here.”
In MLE /k/ and /g/ tend to be made with the tongue slightly further back in the mouth: KITE, CRY, QUEEN, GATE, AGO, GRIME.
“Can Gareth go and pick up some carrot cake?”
These sounds can be made with the tongue near the teeth: SO, SITE, PASSAGE, ZOO, CHEESE, ROSE.
“Pass the salmon and mayonnaise sandwiches please.”
The pitch range used by MLE speakers is also very variable, ranging from monotone cool and casual to an animated and jumpy collection of pitch changes.
The post MLE (Multicultural London English) – the Urban Accent appeared first on Pronunciation Studio.