- Buffalo English
Buffalo English, sometimes colloquially referred to as Buffalonian, is the variety of English used in and around the U.S. city of Buffalo,
New York .This variety is part of the Inland North dialect of
American English , which spreads fromUtica, New York toWisconsin , and is therefore more like the local speech of Chicago and theLower Peninsula of Michigan thanNew York City .Key traits
The key phonetic feature of Buffalo English is the
Northern cities vowel shift . The low back merger does not occur in Buffalo, so words like "cot" and "caught" remain distinct in pronunciation.Speakers of stronger Buffalonian variants often employ "possessification", where an ad hoc genitive case is applied to business names. For example, speakers of thick Buffalonian will say they shop at "Kmart's," "Target's" or "Home Depot's;" have drug prescriptions filled at "Rite-Aid's" or "Eckerd's"; rent DVDs at "Blockbuster's" or "Hollywood's" (Hollywood Video); and eat lunch at "Burger King's," "
Mighty Taco 's," or "Outback's" (Outback Steakhouse). [http://nycbbb.com/features/buffaloenglish.htm The Guide to Buffalo English] ]In contrast to
New York City English , Buffalonian English is rhotic and not closely related to non-rhotic varieties.Buffalo is one of the easternmost cities that uses the word "pop" to refer to soft drinks: the
isogloss between "pop" and "soda" is to the east of Rochester.A feature believed to have originated with Polish immigrants and then spreading to the region as a whole is "there" interjected after a
noun orpronoun for emphasis, sometimes more than once in a sentencendash "Go out and get us some crullers atTim Hortons there"; "My sister there lives down in Hamburg there."References
See also
*
Inland Northern American English
*American English regional differences Resources
* [http://www.bigorbitgallery.org/soundlab/TEXTARCHIVES/buffalobibliography.html Select Annotated Bibliography On the Speech of Buffalo, NY]
* [http://www.nycbbb.com/features/buffaloenglish.htm The Guide to Buffalo English]
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