Article: 'Ingl?s de Miami es afectado por el espa?ol'
I was watching Encuentro today on CNN en espa?ol and one of the topics was a linguistic study done by a university professor, Phillip Carter of FIU (Florida International University) on the influence of Spanish on English spoken in Miami. It caught my attention right away and after looking at the segment, I decided to search for info on the topic on Google and there was an article published this week as well in several newspapers - Diario Libre and El Nuevo Herald are two common Spanish newspapers that featured an article.
The segment and article are spot on in my opinion and Phillip Carter, a professor of sociolinguistics touches on several key aspects on how these two languages spoken by many in Miami impact each other and most interesting is the fact that Spanish has an impact on English and the way it is spoken by native English speakers as well because of the high percentage of Spanish speakers in the city. Usually, one hears and reads about the impact of English on Spanish.
The point I found most interesting and glad that it was mentioned is that many native English speakers who have the influence of Spanish spoken around them speak English with a different intonation (nothing to do with accent) compared to those who have no influence of Spanish at all.
This is something I have taken note of a long time ago in language especially with first generation children whose parents speak Spanish but they grow up speaking English but have the influence of Spanish intonation from their parents and others around them when they speak English.
Although the study focuses on Miami, I think a sociolinguistic study of similar cities in North America such as New York, Toronto, Montreal, Boston, Houston and any city in California would reveal similar results regarding the influence on Spanish on English among those who do speak both languages or just English speakers (but are influenced by Spanish speaking family members, peers etc)
Ingl?s de Miami es afectado por el espa?ol - DiarioLibre.com
-MP.
I was watching Encuentro today on CNN en espa?ol and one of the topics was a linguistic study done by a university professor, Phillip Carter of FIU (Florida International University) on the influence of Spanish on English spoken in Miami. It caught my attention right away and after looking at the segment, I decided to search for info on the topic on Google and there was an article published this week as well in several newspapers - Diario Libre and El Nuevo Herald are two common Spanish newspapers that featured an article.
The segment and article are spot on in my opinion and Phillip Carter, a professor of sociolinguistics touches on several key aspects on how these two languages spoken by many in Miami impact each other and most interesting is the fact that Spanish has an impact on English and the way it is spoken by native English speakers as well because of the high percentage of Spanish speakers in the city. Usually, one hears and reads about the impact of English on Spanish.
The point I found most interesting and glad that it was mentioned is that many native English speakers who have the influence of Spanish spoken around them speak English with a different intonation (nothing to do with accent) compared to those who have no influence of Spanish at all.
This is something I have taken note of a long time ago in language especially with first generation children whose parents speak Spanish but they grow up speaking English but have the influence of Spanish intonation from their parents and others around them when they speak English.
Although the study focuses on Miami, I think a sociolinguistic study of similar cities in North America such as New York, Toronto, Montreal, Boston, Houston and any city in California would reveal similar results regarding the influence on Spanish on English among those who do speak both languages or just English speakers (but are influenced by Spanish speaking family members, peers etc)
Ingl?s de Miami es afectado por el espa?ol - DiarioLibre.com
-MP.
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