List of dialects of the English language
This is a
list of varieties of the English language.Dialects are
varieties differing in
pronunciation,
vocabulary and
grammar not to be confused with the
regional accents of English speakers, which mark speakers as members of groups by their various
pronunciations of the
standard language.
*
International English or World English
*
Commonwealth English*
North American English*
Mid-Atlantic English*
South Asian English*
East Asian English*
European English*
British English (BrE)
**
England (
English English (EngEng))
***
Received Pronunciation (Queen's English, BBC English)
***
Northern English****
Teesside****
Geordie (spoken in
Northumberland)
****
Pitmatic (spoken in
Durham)
****
Cumbrian****
Tyke (Yorkshire)
****
Lancashire****
Mancunian (or 'Manc')
****
Scouse (spoken in
Merseyside)
***
East Midlands English***
****
Derbyshire****
Nottinghamshire****
Lincolnshire****
Leicestershire***
West Midlands English****
Black Country (Yam Yam)
****
Brummie (spoken in
Birmingham)
****
Potteries (North Staffordshire)
****
Herefordshire****
Warwickshire****
Worcestershire***
East Anglian English****
Norfolk dialect (Broad Norfolk)
****
Suffolk dialect***
South East England****
Estuary English****
Cockney (London)
***
West Country dialects****
Somerset****
Devon****
Cornwall****
Dorset**
Scotland***
Scottish English***
Highland English**
Wales***
Welsh English***
North East English a toned down Scouse/Manchester accent due to English population
***
Pembrokeshire dialect*
Ireland (
Republic of Ireland and
Northern Ireland)
**
Hiberno-English**
Mid Ulster English*
Isle of Man**
Manx English*
American English (AmE)
**
Spanglish**Cultural
***
African-American Vernacular English (AAVE)
***
Appalachian English***
General American***
Nuyorican English***
Hawaiian Pidgin English***
Chicano English***
Native American English (Amerindian English) (see also subtypes below)
***
Pennsylvania Dutchified English***
Yinglish**Regional
***"
General American"
***Northeastern dialects
****
Baltimorese****
Boston English****
Northeast Pennsylvania English (
Scranton, Pennsylvania-area)
****
Hudson Valley English (
Albany, New York-area)
****
Maine-New Hampshire English****
Philadelphia-area English****
Pittsburgh English****
Providence-area English****
New York-New Jersey English****
Vermont English***Midwest
****
Inland North American (
Lower peninsula of Michigan, northern
Ohio and
Indiana,
Chicago, part of eastern
Wisconsin and upstate
New York)
****
North Central American English (includes
Minnesota,
North Dakota and some of
South Dakota,
Wisconsin,
Michigan and
Iowa)
*****
Yooper dialect (the variety of North Central American English spoken in the
Upper Peninsula of Michigan and in some neighboring areas)
****
North Midlands English (thin swath from
Nebraska to
Ohio)
****
St. Louis-area English****
Wisconsin-Illinois dialect***
Southern English****
Appalachian English****
Coastal Southeastern (
Charleston, South Carolina,
Savannah, Georgia area)
****
Harkers Island English (
North Carolina)
****
Louisianian English****
Southern Highland English****
South Midlands English (thin swath from
Oklahoma to
Pennsylvania)
****
Texan****
Virginia Piedmont****
Virginia Tidewater [
1]
****
Yat (New Orleans)***
Western English****
California English****
Hawaiian English****
Hawaiian Pidgin****
Utah English****
Pacific Northwest English*
Bermudian English*
Canadian English (CaE)
**Native American English (
Amerindian English)
**Quebec
***
Quebec English**Maritimes
***
Newfoundland English***
Cape Breton accent***
Lunenburg English**Ontario
***
Toronto English***
Ottawa Valley Twang***
Northern Ontario English*
Native American English (Amerindian English)
**
Mojave English**
Isletan English**
Tsimshian English**
Lumbee English**
Tohono O'odham English**
Inupiaq English*
Caribbean English**
Anguillan English**
Bajan**
Bay Islands Creole**
Belizean Creole (Kriol)**
Guyanese Creole**
Jamaican English**
Limón Coastal Creole**
Miskito Coastal Creole**
San Andrés-Providencia Creole**
Trinidadian English*
Burmese English*
Hong Kong English*
Indian English*
Malaysian English (MyE)
*
Philippine English*
Singapore English*
Sri Lankan English (SLE)
*
Liberian English*
Malawian English*
Nigerian Pidgin English*
South African English*
Australian English (AuE)
**
South Australian English**
Western Australian English**
Australian Aboriginal English*
Fijian English*
New Zealand English*
Basic English*
E-Prime*
European English*
Globish*
Newspeak*
Special English*
British Signed English* US
Signed Exact English (SEE)
*
Australasian Signed English*
Bislama*
Cameroonian Pidgin English*
Canton English*
Gullah*
Hawaiian Pidgin*
Sierra Leone Krio language*
Nigerian Pidgin*
Norfuk*
Tok Pisin*
Miskito Coastal CreoleThe following are
portmanteaus devised to describe certain local variants of English. Although similarly named, they are actually quite different in nature, with some being genuine
mixed languages, some being instances of heavy
code-switching between English and another language, some being genuine local dialects of English used by first-language English speakers, and some being non-native pronunciations of English. A few portmanteaus (such as
Greeklish and
Pinglish) are
transliteration methods rather than any kind of spoken variant of English.
*
Benglish (Bengali English)
*
Chinglish (Chinese English)
*
Czenglish (Czech English)
*
Danglish (Danish English)
*
Dunglish (Dutch English)
*
Englog (Filipino English)
*
Engrish (Japanese English)
*
Finglish (Finnish English)
*
Franglais (French English)
*Genglish/Ginglish/
Germish/
Pseudo-Anglicism (German English)
*
Hinglish (Hindi English)
*
Hunglish (Hungarian English)
*
Konglish (South Korean English)
*Manglish/
Malaysian Colloquial English (Malaysian English)
*
Pinglish {Polish English)
*
Runglish (Russian English)
*
Serblish (Serbian English)
*
Singlish (Singaporean English)
*
Spanglish (Spanish English)
*
Swenglish (Swedish English)
*
Taglish (Filipino English)
*
Tanglish (Tamil English)
*
Tinglish/
Thailish (Thai English)
*
Vinish (Vietnamese English)
*
Yeshivish (Yeshiva English)
*
Yinglish (Yiddish English)
*
History of the English language*
Old English*
Middle English*
Early Modern English*
Modern English*
macaronic*
American Dialects*
BBC sound archive of accents in the British Isles*
International Dialects of English Archive*
Runglish*
Regional Accents for the Non-Expert*
Speech Accent Archive*
|Dialect Poetry from the English regions