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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
Later National Literature, Part III
>
The English Language in America
> The Influence of the Spelling Book
American Spelling
The Need of American Attention to American Traditions in Speech and Usage
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
VOLUME XVIII. Later National Literature, Part III.
XXX.
The English Language in America
.
§ 8. The Influence of the Spelling Book.
The spelling book has exerted a powerful influence in America, where so many speakers have learned their language in the school and looked to it as a more compelling authority than the sometimes uncertain tradition of the home. The notion that all the letters of a word are entitled to a certain respect, reinforced by the native slowness of utterance, has led to the retention of unstressed vowels in
tapestry, medicine, venison,
and produced a secondary stress in such words as
secretary, extra-ordinary.
The eighteenth-century refinement ofdropping the
g
in
going, seeing,
which still persists as asmart pronunciation in England, almost all Americans, though they use it oftener than they could be got to confess, would regard with horror because it violates what seems to them the obvious principle that all the letters should be pronounced. The same state of mind leads to the retention of
h
in
hotel, hostler,
reinforces the distinction between
w
and
wh,
and induces many to persist in pronouncing an
r
final and before consonants, in spite of the frankly expressed disgust even of their own countrymen of the East and South.
Figure
has lost its fine old pronunciation (figger) for a spelling pronunciationfigyure. As for
lieutenant,
Coxe (1813, p. 36) notes that
lef-tenant
prevails most generally, but
lew-tenant
appears to be becoming more popular; spelling has now completely carried the day. Out of deference to spelling Americans pronounce a
g
in
physiognomy, recognizance,
and sometimes even in
suggest.
11
Enough has been offered in support and illustration of the contention that the roots of American speech lie deep in history. The same might be done for less literary speech. Lowell established the antiquity of much in the Yankee dialect of his Hosea Biglow, and it is to be presumed that research, of which there has been far too little in this field, may establish the antiquity, if nothing more, of many other dialectical peculiarities.
4
There is not an oddity in thecoarse, uncouth dialect of the Deerslayer and Hurry Harry (
The Deerslayer,
1841) that has not its root deep in the soil of the eighteenth and preceding centuries.
5
Cooper has Noah Websters own
creaturs, venturs, ferce. Sarpint, desarted, vartue, larned, sile, appinted, explite
can all be found recommended in grammars of the eighteenth century.
The Oxford Spelling Book
(1726) says that
sigh
is pronounced
sithe
according to the common way of speaking, just as Natty Bumppo pronounces it. His
venon
is still good English. His
consait
(
conceit
),
ginerous, frind, arth
sound Irish, but that is as much as to say that they belong to the old, authentic vernacular; they cannot be made to serve as illustrations of any wanton perversity on the part of Americans.
12
Note 4
. In phonetic notation vowels should be given their Continental sounds.
[
back
]
Note 5
. The spelling used in this chapter, as of this history in general, conforms ordinarily to British usage.
[
back
]
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
American Spelling
The Need of American Attention to American Traditions in Speech and Usage
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