Poccasin English

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Poccasin English
Cassinglish
Created byJukethatbox
Date2025
SettingAdventures in the Poccasins
Native toPoccasin Archipelago
EthnicityPoccasins
Early forms

Poccasin English or Cassinglish is a variety of the English language native to the Poccasin Archipelago and Poccasin Federation. Today, it is primarily spoken by upper-class urbanites in Cassim Po, the capital of the Poccasin Federation, and is commonly considered the international trade language of the Federation alongside the English creole language Bemé.

Poccasin English is typically considered the most prestigious or mesolectal language in the Poccasins, as it is commonly associated with the upper classes in the Federation. As such, although stable, there are actually very few monolingual speakers of Poccasin English; most speakers of Poccasin English are usually bilingual with Bemé and incorporate a creole continuum in their speech that goes beyond the traditional tak and kriyal distinction in Bemé.[1]

Poccasin English generally follows British spelling conventions, though more recent loanwords from American English may retain their American spelling, so "colour/color" is spelt as in British English, colour, but "person of color/person of colour" is spelt as in American English, person of color, because the term is chiefly used in the US. However, various degrees of eye dialect spellings are also common.

Poccasin English also features a rather unique phonology, such as a full trap-strut merger as well as the loss of a /v/ phoneme (merging into /b/), and unique vocabulary derived primarily from Bemé and other indigenous language of the Poccasin Archipelago.

Phonology

Consonants

Vowels

Monophthongs (short)
Front Central Back
Close i u
Mid ɛ ə ɔ
Open a

Short /i/ is raised to a close front /i/, and not the more typical near-front near-close /ɪ/ found in other dialects of English such as General American or Received Pronunciation.

Another distinctive feature of Poccasin English is the trap-strut merger, where the typically distinct trap vowel /æ/, as seen in words like cat, rat and that, and the strut vowel /ʌ/, as seen in cut, mutt and rut, merge into the open central vowel /ä/, which is more often written simply as /a/. This means that words like cat and cut are homophones.

Monophthongs (long)
Front Central Back
Close (iː)
Mid ɛː
Open

The status of long /iː/ as a phoneme is debated; although traditionally considered distinct from short /i/ by linguists, modern scholars have found that a growing number of primarily younger, working-class speakers have begun incorporating a kit-fleece merger, so that fit and feet are pronounced the same. However, a lack of such a merger is still generally considered the standard, if acrolectal, pronunciation.

References

  1. ^ cf. the distinction between Jamaican Standard English and Jamaican Patois.