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English In Newfoundland

The English of Newfoundland includes several dialects of English encountered in the province of Newfoundland and Labrador , and are often regarded as having the most peculiar features of English in Canada. Some dialects of Newfoundland are thought by the accent that we hear in the south-east of Ireland (as in Wexford and Waterford ), while others are reminiscent of the West Country in England, or a combination of both, the fact is mainly due to immigration from a massive limited number of ports in these regions.

These dialects developed separately because of the history of Newfoundland as well as its geography. Newfoundland was one of the first colonies settled by England in North America, starting with small numbers in the early seventeenth century before becoming more important in the early nineteenth century. Newfoundland was a colony of Britain until 1907 when it acquired the status of dominion independent within the British Empire and is now a region of Canada in 1949. Newfoundland is an island the Atlantic Ocean , separated by the Strait of Belle Isle from Labrador , the mainland of the province and the least densely populated. Most of the population has remained fairly isolated on the island, which has enabled dialects develop independently from those of the North American continent.

The English in Newfoundland has been identified as a separate dialect in the late eighteenth century, when George Cartwright published a glossary of Newfoundland.

List of regional variations of English
UK and Ireland British English Received Pronunciation English English ( English from East Anglia cockney Estuary English English West Country English Midlands Brummie scouse English North Geordie ) English Welsh English Scottish English Highland English Manx English Ulster Irish English English Channel Islands English Gibraltar English Maltese maltish / minglish
United States American English General American African-American English Ebonics Chicano English English New England American English North Central English Midwestern American English West Southern American English
Canada Canadian English English Newfoundland
Caribbean English Caribbean Jamaican English English Bahamian Trinidadian English English Belize English Guyana Bermudian English
Oceania Australian English English Australian aborigines English New Zealand
Asia Pakistani English Indian English English Sri Lanka English Burmese English Hong Kong English Singapore English Malaysian Philippine English
Africa Liberian English Nigerian English English Cameroon English Ugandan Malawian English South African English
International Standard English International English Mid-Atlantic Franais English North America
Variety simplified Basic Franais Plain Franais simplified English Special English Globish
Creole English Aluku, and Ndjuka Paramaka Creole ngatik Jamaican Creole Belizean Creole Gullah Ndjuka Sranan Saramaka Hawaiian Creole Creole Australian norfolk pitcairn Bislama Tok Pisin Pijin

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