South Asian English is the English accent of many modern-day South Asian countries, inherited from British English dialect. Also known as Anglo-Indian English during the British Raj, the English language was introduced to the Indian subcontinent in the early 17th century and reinforced by the long rule of the British Empire. Today it is spoken as a second language by about 350 million people, 20% of the total population.[1]
Although it is fairly homogeneous across the subcontinent, sharing "linguistic features and tendencies at virtually all linguistic levels", there are some differences based on various regional factors.[2]
South Asian English is sometimes just called "Indian English", as British India included most of modern-day South Asia (except Afghanistan). But today, the varieties of English are officially divided according to the modern states:
History
editBritish India
editPhonemes for broad transcriptions on Wiktionary
editSee country-specific pages for detailed phonology.
Diaphoneme | SAE |
---|---|
/ɑː/ | /aː/ |
/ɑːr/ | /aː(ɾ)/ |
/ɛ/ | /e/ |
/eɪ/ | /eː/ |
/ɛər/ | /ɛː(ɾ)/ |
/oʊ/ | /oː/ |
/ɔːr/ | NORTH /ɔː(ɾ)/
HOARSE /oː(ɾ)/ |
/ɜːr/ | /əː(ɾ)/ |
/ər/ | /ə(ɾ)/ |
/d/ | /ɖ/ |
/ð/ | /t̪/ |
/dj/ | /ɖj/ |
/r/ | /ɾ/ |
/t/ | /ʈ/ |
/tj/ | /ʈj/ |
/tʃ/ | /ʈʃ/ |
/θ/ | /t̪/ |
/θj/ | /t̪j/ |
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ Baumgardner, p. 1
- ^ Marco Schilk, Tobias Bernaisch, Joybrato Mukherjee, "Mapping unity and diversity in South Asian English lexicogrammar: Verb-complementational preferences across varieties", in Marianne Hundt, Ulrike Gut, Mapping Unity and Diversity World-Wide: Corpus-Based Studies of New Englishes, 2012, ISBN 9027274940, p. 140f
- ^ MacKenzie, John (January 2013). "A family empire", BBC History Magazine.
References
edit- Robert J. Baumgardner, ed. (1996). South Asian English: Structure, Use, and Users. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0252064933..
- Braj Kachru, Yamuna Kachru, Cecil Nelson, The Handbook of World Englishes, 2009, ISBN 1405188316.