Appalachian English

Appalachian English is one of the most historically distinct and culturally significant regional dialects in the United States. It preserves features from Scots-Irish settlement English that have disappeared elsewhere.

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Sample dialect map

Top matches
  1. Philadelphia94%
  2. Baltimore87%
  3. South Jersey81%

Most revealing word: bubbler

Appalachian English preview image for Dialect Quiz regional map results

Core Features of Appalachian English

Appalachian English includes distinctive grammatical patterns like a-prefixing on verbs, plural -es on some nouns, and pronoun patterns that differ from standard American English. Vocabulary includes words like poke for bag, toboggan for knit cap, and fixin to. Pronunciation features include the pin-pen merger and distinctive vowel patterns.

Historical Origins

The dialect's roots trace to 18th-century Scots-Irish, English, and German settlers in the Appalachian mountain region. Geographic isolation preserved features that the original settlers brought from the British Isles, making Appalachian English a living link to earlier forms of the language.

Dialect and Identity

Appalachian English is central to regional identity but has faced stigma and stereotyping in media and education. Linguists emphasize that it is a systematic, rule-governed variety with its own grammar and history — not broken or incorrect English.

How the Quiz Relates to Appalachian Patterns

The main quiz detects Southern and Midland patterns that overlap with Appalachian features. The pin-pen merger, y'all, fixin to vocabulary, and creek/crick pronunciation all score toward Southern regions in the quiz, though a dedicated Appalachian-specific version would capture more of its unique grammar.