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Encyclopedia > BBC English

Received Pronunciation (RP) is a form of pronunciation of the English language, usually defined as the "educated spoken English of southeastern England". This is a prescriptivist point-of-view — it is quite possible for an intelligent, educated individual to use a non-standard dialect. According to the Fowler's Modern English Usage (1965), the term is "the Received Pronunciation".


RP speech is non-rhotic, meaning that written r is pronounced only if it is followed by a vowel sound.


Earlier Received Pronunciation was sometimes referred to as BBC English (as it was traditionally used by the BBC). This term remains in use today, though less frequently than in past decades.


Many Britons abroad modify their accent to make their pronunciation closer to Received Pronunciation, in order to be better understood than if they were using their usual accent. They may also modify their vocabulary and grammar to be closer to Standard English (also known as the Queen's English), for the same reason.


Changing status of Received Pronunciation

Traditionally, Received Pronunciation is the accent of English which is "the everyday speech of families of Southern English persons whose menfolk have been educated at the great public boarding schools" (Daniel Jones, English Pronouncing Dictionary, 1926 — he had earlier called it Public School Pronunciation), and which conveys no information about that speaker's region of origin prior to attending the school. For many years, the use of Received Pronunciation has been considered a mark of education by prescriptivists within Britain. As a result, elitist notions have sprung up around it, and those who use it have often considered those who do not to be less educated than themselves.


There is some truth in this, however, as historically most of the best educational institutions (Oxford, Cambridge, many public schools) were located in the South East, so anybody who was educated there would pick up the accent of his peers.


However, from the 1970s onwards, attitudes towards Received Pronunciation have been slowly changing. Today, the accents of the English regions and of Scotland, Wales, and Ireland are more likely to be considered to be on a par with Received Pronunciation. BBC reporters no longer need to, and often do not, use Received Pronunciation. Stereotypes outside the United Kingdom nevertheless persist. It should also be noted that while the rejection of this so-called elitism reflects the predominant intellectual fashion to such a degree that alternative points of view are unlikely to be expressed in the media or academia as they are likely to be countered with aggressive dismissal rather than considered argument, there are still many people in the United Kingdom who privately endorse the concept of a preferred accent for educated people. However this altenative viewpoint is likely to die out over the next few decades as it is rarely publically asserted and is much less common among younger people.


The ongoing spread of Estuary English from the London metropolitan area through the whole South-East leads some people to believe that this will take the place of Received Pronunciation as the "Standard English" of the future. There are, however, important factors that militate against this, including the perceived inferior status and alleged lower intelligibility of Estuary English, which is characterized by the dropping of consonants and use of the glottal stop.


The closest equivalent in the United States is General American. Until the post-World War II era, some American actors and announcers used the now defunct Mid-Atlantic accent, which has been completely supplanted by General American, and among newsreaders by the Standard Midwestern accent.


Speaking with Received Pronunciation

In general, the accent gives great importance to vowel sounds, which are extended and rounded.


In RP, as for most English speakers, but not for speakers of some other English dialect:

  • "Oh!" is pronounced as a diphthong [əʊ], with a w sound to round off the word.
  • "Room" is often (but not always) pronounced with a short vowel sound. long:[ru:m]; short:[rʊm].

In addition to manipulating the vowels, great attention is paid to articulating consonants clearly. Therefore, whilst some accents may "drop hs", transforming "hello" to "'ello", or merge the t sound and the d sound at the beginning of unaccented syllables, pronouncing "coding" and "coating" the same (as some Australians do), Received Pronunciation makes sure to enunciate every consonant distinctly, except for the r consonant, which is not pronounced when it immediately precedes a consonant (as in cart), and which is enunciated at the end of syllables only when linking with vowel sounds. This is true regardless of whether the syllable linking is intrinsic or extrinsic to a word.


For example: The word "heresy" ['hɛrəsɪ] has a clear r consonant, but the word "hearsay" ['hɪəsɛɪ] does not. Similarly, "here we are" does not have either r pronounced, but "here it is" has its single r clearly pronounced.


Further, it is considered acceptable in RP, but by no means obligatory, that in an expression such as "law and order" there should be an r linking "law" and "and", making the final product sound like [lɔ:rəndɔ:də(r)] when spoken. The final r here depends on what follows.


There is a great number of distinct vowel sounds, for example "caught" [kɔ:t], "cot" [kɒt], "cart" [kɑ:t] are different in Received Pronunciation.


On the other hand, in common with most non-rhotic dialects "formerly" and "formally" ['fɔ:məlɪ] are homophones in Received Pronunciation, although rhotic speakers pronounce the words differently from each other. Similarly "ion" and "iron".


Also the l in words ending in "lk" is not pronounced, so "stalk" and "stork" are homophones [stɔ:k].


The Broad A sound is particularly elongated, sounding like "ah", noted in the pronunciation of words such as "class" [klɑ:s]. It also drops the h from wh, pronouncing "Wales" and "whales" identically [wɛɪlz].


See also



  Results from FactBites:
 
Received Pronunciation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (888 words)
Received Pronunciation ( RP) is a form of pronunciation of the English language, sometimes defined as the "educated spoken English of southeastern England ".
Earlier, Received Pronunciation was sometimes referred to as BBC English (as it was traditionally used by the BBC).
RP is sometimes known as "The Queen's English" but recordings show that even the Queen has changed her pronunciation over the past 50 years, no longer pronouncing words like "land" as though they rhymed with "lend".
BBC - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (3367 words)
The BBC is an autonomous corporation run by a board of governors appointed by the incumbent government for a term of four years (formerly five years).
BBC Worldwide also maintains the publishing arm of the BBC and it is the third-largest publisher of consumer magazines in the United Kingdom [1].
In March 2003 the BBC announced that from the end of May 2003 (subsequently deferred to 14 July) it intended to transmit all eight of its domestic television channels (including the 15 regional variations of BBC 1) unencrypted from the Astra 2D satellite.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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