Manchester Vowel Sounds
Manchester Vowel Sounds
Manchester Vowel Sounds
Introduction:
This page is a brief guide to phoneme-grapheme correspondences for English spoken
with a Manchester accent. It is intended as a resource for teachers and other
professionals involved in phonics-based literacy teaching. Further detail on the aims
of the website and the relevance of accent variation to phonics is provided in the
Introduction to the website.
This page outlines the major distinguishing characteristics of a Manchester accent and
how these translate into phoneme-grapheme correspondences. Comparisons with RP
are made at certain points, in order to facilitate adaptation of RP-based materials.
The accent described here is one typical of Manchester and much of the immediate
surrounding area. It does not cover the rhotic accent which may be found to the north
of Manchester in, for example, Rochdale, Blackburn and Preston. (A rhotic accent is
one where the r in a word such as cart would be pronounced, so the sequence of
sounds before the /t/ sounds different from that before the /m/ in the word calm.)
Neither does it cover accents to the west where, as in a Liverpool accent, the words fir
and fair may be homophones (i.e. sound the same). As discussed in the Introduction
to the website, there may be variation both between speakers and also within one
individuals speech as to whether particular features occur.
Symbols: IPA symbols are used for phonemes (between // brackets). In addition, the
symbols used for phonemes in the DfES publication Playing with sounds: a
supplement to Progression in Phonics (2004) are added in parentheses (NLS).
Symbols between angled brackets (<>) indicate letters or letter strings (graphemes).
Vowel phonemes which are discussed in some detail in the text, as they differ from
RP in a way relevant to phoneme-grapheme correspondences, are highlighted.
VOWELS
A. The vowel system of a Manchester accent:
vowel
(NLS
symbol)
example
word
vowel
(NLS
symbol)
example
word
vowel
(NLS
symbol)
example
word
//
(i)
sit
/i/
(ee)
sheep
/e/
(ae)
day
//
(e)
bed
/u/
(ue)
soon
/a/
(ie)
tie
/a/
(a)
cat
//
(ar)
calm
//
(oy)
toy
//
(o)
lot
//
(au)*
four
//
(oe)
show
//
(oo)
put
//
(ur)
bird
/a/
(ow)
clown
//
(ear)
here
/e/
(air)
chair
//
(ure)
sure
//
(er)
banana
* the symbol /or/ is used for some of the words in this set in NLS 1999
as in
as in
as in
as in
as in
A table of example words containing this phoneme is given below (Table 1).
For these speakers, all the words, both in 1a and 1b, would have the same vowel (//
(NLS /oo/). There would be no // (NLS /u/) in their vowel system, and no distinction
made between the upper and lower halves of the list. (This is not the case in RP,
where // is used in the words in 1a only, and // in the words in 1b.)
<oo>
put
full
pull
bull
push
sugar
cushion
good
wood
stood
foot
wool
cut
hut
putt
cud
sun
luck
tuck
blood
flood
1a
look
book
cook
took
<ou>
<o>
should
could
would
wolf
woman
enough
young
money
month
son
mother
come
Monday
<oe>
1b
does
<a>
bath
grass
ask
castle
after
branch
dance
answer
example
<au>
laugh
draughts
aunt*
* some speakers may have an // (NLS /ar/) rather than an /a/ in this word
The words in all three columns would for most speakers contain an /a/ (unlike in RP,
where the words in the second and third columns are produced with an //). Thus in
the second column, where <a> is followed either by (a) an /m/ or /n/ as the first
consonant in a consonant cluster or by (b) / s f/, it represents /a/, not //.
<al>
palm
calm
half
<a>
father
rather
tomato
banana
<ear>
heart
<er>
clerk
sergeant
<o>
one
nothing
none
once
<a>
swan
was
what
wash
want
squabble
salt
<au>
sausage
cauliflower
Words containing a // are usually spelt with a <o>. The // which occurs after a /w/
is usually spelt with an <a>. Speakers may have a // or // in some or all of the
words in the second column, which all contain an // in RP.
<ue>
blue
true
clue
<oo>
soon
moon
cool
food
loop
room
<o>
do
to
who
<ou>
group
wound
<ew>
new
few
flew
crew
CONSONANTS
A. Inventory:
The inventory of consonant phonemes is as it is in RP. There is, for example, /w/, as
in was, witch, which, where, but no // (NLS 1999 /wh/), as there is in some accents
in the last two examples.
For many Manchester speakers, however, there may be no /h/ phoneme, so that
lexical words such as hat, happy, hear, hurriedly, have no /h/ at the start.
B. Distribution:
The sequence of letters <ng> would for many speakers often or always represent //
(not //), i.e. it would end in a //:
sing
/s/
rang
/ra/
song
/s/
singer
/s/
singing
/s / (or /sn/)
humming
This may also be the case before another consonant phoneme: thus sings may be
/sz/ or /sz/.
There may be considerable variation within one individuals speech as to whether a
// is produced or not.
References:
The National Literacy Strategy: Progression in Phonics. DFEE (1999) (NLS 1999)
Playing with Sounds: A supplement to Progression in Phonics. DfES (2004)
Susan Barry
Manchester Metropolitan University
Last modified: July 2006