In short: “estuary English” has replaced them. What is Estuary English? It’s cockney but less harsh…
They only interviewed 193 people to analyze their accents, though.
The title of the article is click-baity, but the article mentions some topics in linguistics that are actually interesting.
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bytheway @lemm.ee - 2.1yr
There’s a really good book I’ve been reading, which goes into detail about the development of the old RP accent (aka “BBC English”) into “Standard Southern British English”. It has a lot of detail about the individual sound changes. If you’re an accent nerd, you’ll probably enjoy it.
fossilesque in anthropology
Cockney and Queen's English have all but disappeared among young people – here's what's replaced them
https://theconversation.com/cockney-and-queens-english-have-all-but-disappeared-among-young-people-heres-whats-replaced-them-215478In short: “estuary English” has replaced them. What is Estuary English? It’s cockney but less harsh…
They only interviewed 193 people to analyze their accents, though.
The title of the article is click-baity, but the article mentions some topics in linguistics that are actually interesting.
There’s a really good book I’ve been reading, which goes into detail about the development of the old RP accent (aka “BBC English”) into “Standard Southern British English”. It has a lot of detail about the individual sound changes. If you’re an accent nerd, you’ll probably enjoy it.
"English After RP": Geoff Lindsey