The Gilbert Scott Building Contemporary Scottish Research The Glaswegian Context Nate Lindgren Haj Bakir Glaswegian research •Seeing Speech project (2011-2019) UofG one of 6 universities •NOW: Perception of sung vowels and /s/ in transgender Glaswegians • • • • • Religion in (socio)phonetics •(London)Derry - McCafferty (2001) found no difference among Protestant and Catholic Northern Irish Christians •Alam’s (2015) on young South Asian Muslim Glaswegian women •Community of Practice was statistically significant for /t/ and /i ʉ/ • •Then – why is the UK treating all South Asians as homogenous? •Do Punjabi heritage speaking Sikhs and Muslims speak identical Glaswegian? • • • Isolation, integration, and variation: a sociophonetic study on the role of religion in Sikh and Muslim Glaswegian •Glottals in three phonetic contexts •Intervocalic e.g., Scottish •Pre-vocalic word-boundary e.g., get a •Pre-pausal e.g., that… •Young, second generation, male Glaswegians •Sikh or Muslim, with Punjabi spoken at home •Interview register • • • Examples (Sikh – Raj Singh from the Punjabi band Tigerstyle) •Intervocalic: both of us ended up joining the Scottish police force • •Pre-vocalic: I’m trying [to] get a budget • •Pre-pausal: there’s no way we could ever afford that… em • • [USEMAP] [USEMAP] [USEMAP] Findings Chart, bar chart Description automatically generated Findings Chart, bar chart Description automatically generated Findings •No significant difference in linguistic pattern or freq from each other! •Also – no difference in pattern or freq from white Glaswegians (Stuart-Smith 1999) • •What it means: •Overt variable •Identify as Glaswegian •Census data • • • • • • • Chart, bar chart Description automatically generated Chart, bar chart Description automatically generated Findings • •Formal topic caused over-correction compared to white Glaswegians at the same register (Schleef 2013) • • • Chart, bar chart Description automatically generated Future research •Look at less overt features •Retroflex /d t/ e.g., talk, do •VOT in /p t k b d g/ (Punjabi has “true” voiced stops) •Vowel quality e.g., FLEECE, BOOT, GOAT, FACE vowels •Liquids /l r/ •Broader participant pool •Age – adolescent pre- or post-9/11 •Spontaneous speech •In depth interviews • • Bibliography •Alam, F. (2015) ‘Glaswasian?’ A Sociophonetic Analysis of Glasgow-Asian Accent and Identity. PhD Thesis, University of Glasgow. •McCafferty, K. (2001) Ethnicity in Language Change: English in (London)Derry Northern Ireland. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company •Schleef, E. (2013) Glottal replacement of /t/ in two British capitals: effects of word frequency and morphological compositionality. Language Variation and Change, 25, pp. 201- 223. •Seeing Speech: https://www.seeingspeech.ac.uk/ •Stuart-Smith, J. (1999) Glottals past and present: a study of T-glottalling in Glaswegian. Leeds Studies in English, 30, pp. 181-204. • • • • • • The University at sunset #UofGWorldChangers @UofGlasgow Thank you! Nate Lindgren Haj Bakir 2298547L@student.gla.ac.uk