British Isles English

E3671

British Isles English is the group of English dialects and accents spoken across the islands of Great Britain and Ireland, including varieties such as English English, Scottish English, Welsh English, and Irish English.


Statements (47)
Predicate Object
instanceOf group of English dialects
variety of English
basedOn English language
contrastedWith Australian English
Global English varieties
New Zealand English
North American English
hasFeature distinct intonation patterns
distinct stress patterns
non-rhotic accents in many regions
regional accents
regional grammar
regional lexical borrowings
regional vocabulary
rhotic accents in some regions
variation in consonant realization
variation in vowel quality
hasStandardForm British Standard English
hasVariant Irish English
surface form: "Hiberno-English"

Scots-influenced English
Welsh-influenced English
regional English dialects of England
includesDialect English English
Irish English
Scottish English
British English
surface form: "Welsh English"
influencedBy Celtic languages
Latin
Anglo-Norman
surface form: "Norman French"

Norse languages
local substrate languages
languageFamily Germanic languages
Indo-European language family
surface form: "Indo-European languages"
spokenIn British Isles
Great Britain
Ireland
subfamily West Germanic languages
subjectOf dialectology studies
lexicographical documentation
phonological studies
sociolinguistic research
usedAs lingua franca within the British Isles
usedIn Channel Islands (crown dependencies)
surface form: "Channel Islands"

Isle of Man (crown dependency)
surface form: "Isle of Man"

Ireland
surface form: "Republic of Ireland"

United Kingdom
writingSystem Latin alphabet

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

English hasMajorDialectGroup British Isles English

Please wait…