Uptalk, Vocal Fry and, Like, Totally Slang: Assessing Stylistic Trends in American Speech

Tadeusz Lewandowski




Abstract

This paper examines linguistic debates surrounding new stylistic conventions in American English, namely the use o f uptalk (speaking statements with a sing note at the end, as in a question), vocal fry (the injection o f creaky, glottal vibrations at the end o f words), and the increasing appearance o f slang in the United States school system. These phenomena are assessed through the prism o f Dwight Macdonald’s essays on English from
the l°60s, and the “prescriptive” vs. “descriptive” debate on lexicography bom in that ame decade. While this division of perspectives and \alues defines the rift from past models of language and culture, the current prevalence of the descriptiv e school in American academia and its endorsement of uptalk, vocal fry, and slang designate the trajectory of English’s stylistic future.

Keywords:

uptalk, vocal fry, slang, lexicography, Dwight Macdonald

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Published
2020-12-12

Cited by

Lewandowski, T. (2020). Uptalk, Vocal Fry and, Like, Totally Slang: Assessing Stylistic Trends in American Speech. Stylistyka, 21, 209–220. Retrieved from https://czasopisma.uni.opole.pl/index.php/s/article/view/3015

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Tadeusz Lewandowski 

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