California English

On my Local History travels throughout Riverside County I often encounter unique terms and phrases used to describe local and community cultural heritage.
On my Local History travels throughout Riverside County I often encounter unique terms and phrases used to describe local and community cultural heritage.
Recently, the web based "The Free Dictionary" site had an article on the development and heritage of our very own English--"California English" which I thought you would find interesting, educational and entertaining.  The library is a great place to learn about linguistics--the scientific study of natural language and a subfield of anthropology, the study of humanity and culture.  You will find materials on languages and linguistics in the 400s section of most libraries using the Dewey Decimal System.  Riverside County Library System also has free use of Auralog software online if you are interested in learning a new language.   
 
California English 
California English is a dialect of the English language spoken in the U.S. state of California. The most populous state of the United States, California is home to a highly diverse populace, which is reflected in the historical and continuing development of California English. As is the case of English spoken in any particular state, not all features are used by all speakers in the state, and not all features are restricted in use only to the state. However, there are some linguistic features which can be identified as either originally or predominantly Californian, or both.
 
History
English became spoken in the area now known as California on a wide scale beginning with a considerable influx of English-speaking European Americans during the California Gold Rush and after rapid growth from internal migration (from all parts of the United States, but particularly New England in earlier periods and later on, the Midwest) through the end of the 19th century and first half of the 20th century. The heavy internal migration from regions in the United States east of California laid the early groundwork for the varieties of English spoken in California today.
 
Before World War I, the variety of speech types reflected the differing origins of these early inhabitants. At the time a distinctly southwestern drawl could be heard in Southern California, although the San Francisco area sounded more Midwestern. When a collapse in commodity prices followed World War I, many bankrupted Midwestern farmers migrated to California, bringing speech characteristic of Nebraska, Ohio, Illinois, and Iowa; and this speech type dominates to this day.
 
California's status as a relatively young state is significant in that it has not had centuries for regional patterns to emerge and grow (compared to, say, some East Coast or Southern dialects). Linguists who studied English as spoken in California before and in the period immediately after World War II tended to find few if any distinct patterns unique to the region [1]. However, several decades later, with a more settled population and continued immigration from all over the globe, a noteworthy set of emerging characteristics of California English had begun to attract notice by linguists of the late 20th century and on.
 
Lexical characteristics
The popular image of a typical California speaker often conjures up images of the so-called Valley Girls popularized by the 1982 hit song by Frank Zappa and Moon Unit Zappa or "surfer-dude" speech made famous by movies such as Fast Times at Ridgemont High. While many phrases found in these extreme versions of California English of the 1980s may now be considered passé, certain words such as awesome and dude have remained popular in California and have spread to a national, even international, level. The use of the word like for numerous grammatical functions or as conversational "filler" has also remained popular in California English and is now found in many other varieties of English.
 
California, like other Southwestern states, has borrowed many words from Spanish, especially for place-geographical names, food, and other cultural items reflecting the heritage of Latino Californians. High concentrations of various ethnic groups throughout the state have contributed to general familiarity with words describing (especially cultural) phenomena. For example, a high concentration of Asian Americans from various cultural backgrounds, especially in urban and suburban metropolitan areas in California, has led to the adoption of words like hapa (itself originally a Hawaiian borrowing of English "half"[5]). A person who was hapa was either part European/Islander or part Asian/Islander. Today it refers to a person of mixed racial heritage. 
  
Freeway nomenclature
Since the 1950s and 1960s, California culture (and thus its variety of English) has been significantly affected by "car culture" — that is, dependence on private automobile transportation and the effects thereof.
 
One difference between California and most of the rest of the U.S. has been the way residents refer to highways, or freeways. The term freeway itself is not used in many areas outside California; for instance, in New England, the term highway is universally used. Where most Americans may refer to for the east-west Interstate Highway leading from San Francisco to the suburbs of New York, or "I-15" for the north-south artery linking San Diego through Salt Lake City to the Canadian border, Californians are less likely to use the "I" or "interstate" designation in naming highways or* freeways, (But other Californians refer to "I-80" in the same sense as most other Americans.).
 
·         Northern California
Northern Californians will typically say "80", "101 (one oh one)" to refer to freeways. Some long-time San Francisco Bay Area residents and many traffic report broadcasts still refer to such highways by name and not number designation: "the Bayshore", for 101, or "the Nimitz" for I-880, which was named for Admiral Chester Nimitz, a prominent World War II hero with strong local ties). State Route 1 is called "Highway 1" or simply "One" (ie "take One down the coast").
 
·         Southern California
In Greater Los Angeles, Orange County and San Diego, Interstate Highways are referred to either by name or by route number (perhaps with a direction suffix), but with the addition of the article "the", such as "the 405 North" or "the 605". This is in contrast to typical Northern California usage, which omits the article.
 
There is no road named "Los Angeles Freeway"; instead, each freeway which radiates from downtown L.A. is named for its nominal terminus in some other city, such as Santa Monica, Santa Ana, or San Diego. Typical advice from a native is, "Take the Santa Monica West to the San Diego South to Washington", meaning, "Take Interstate 10 west to Interstate 405 south, then take the Washington Blvd. exit."
 
Conversely, the older state highways are generally called not by their numbers, but by their names, as used on signage and in postal addresses. For example, State Route 1, in southern California is called Pacific Coast Highway, and is often referred to as "PCH", pronounced as three separate letters.
 
The sequential numbering of freeway exits, common in most parts of the United States, has only recently been applied in California and initially appearing only in more populous areas. Thus, virtually all Californians refer to exits by signage name rather than by number, as in "Grand Avenue exit" rather than "Exit 21."
 
Southern Californians often refer to the lanes of a multi-lane divided highway by number, "The Number 1 Lane" (usually referred to as "The Fast Lane") is the lane furthest to the left, with the lane numbers going up sequentially to the right until the far right lane, which is usually referred to as "The Slow Lane."
  
Place names
Northern California
 
Another common Northern California expression is the way in which residents refer to San Francisco as simply "The City" if they live in nearby suburbs (such as San Mateo) or cities like Oakland or Danville, or even as far south as Santa Cruz, some Mexican Spanish speakers refer to it as "San Pancho" because Pancho is a nickname for Francisco in Mexico. Similarly, the city of South San Francisco, technically not a part of the city and county of San Francisco, is sometimes referred to as "South City", especially in the pages of the San Francisco Examiner. The term "Frisco" is almost never used by residents, except in jest, much as "The Big Apple" is not typically used by native New Yorkers. The term "Frisco" continues to be viewed by many northern Californians as vaguely derogatory. 
   .
The metro region often referred to as the Bay Area includes San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Alameda, Marin, Contra Costa, Sonoma, Solano and Napa counties.
 
Furthermore, the San Francisco Bay Area is occasionally referred to as "the Bay" and more commonly "The Bay Area" in mainstream culture as well as hip hop culture. The San Francisco Bay Area is sub-divided into regions such as:
 
The "North Bay" (Marin County, the southern half of Napa County and the southern half of    Sonoma County with the northern border of the North Bay ending just north of Santa Rosa). The northern portions of Sonoma and Napa counties are typically considered to be Wine Country, a separate region. Some cities in central areas of these counties are considered to be members of both communities.  
·         The "South Bay" (Santa Clara CountySan Jose, Milpitas, and surrounding cities,
           sometimes extending as far south as Gilroy)
·         The "East Bay" (Alameda and Contra Costa counties—Oakland, Berkeley, Walnut Creek,
           Fremont, Hayward, Martinez, Pittsburg, etc.)
·         "The Peninsula" (San Mateo county, including San Mateo, Redwood City, Menlo Park, et
            cetera, but excluding San Francisco).
·         "The City" (San Francisco).  
Northern Californians refer to Sacramento, the state capital, as "Sac", "Sactown", "Sacra" (by the Chicano community), and various other nicknames.
 
Residents of the San Fernando Valley (the section of Los Angeles to the north of the Santa Monica mountains), often use the phrase "over the hill" to refer to Los Angeles, where the San Fernando Valley itself is generally called "the Valley". Similarly, Bay Area and Sacramento residents refer to going "up the hill" in to the neighboring mountains to Lake Tahoe or Reno, Nevada and "over the hill" for crossing the Santa Cruz Mountains. In the Sacramento area, "the Valley" refers to the Central Valley. Additionally, residents of the San Francisco Bay Area will sometimes refer to the area of the Santa Clara Valley and surrounding cities as "the Valley" and sometimes as, the more famous term, "Silicon Valley". Residents of Santa Cruz use the phrase "over the hill" to refer to Silicon Valley, but for them "the Bay" refers to Monterey Bay, not San Francisco Bay.
 
Southern California 
Southern Californians frequently add the word "the" to a large number of placenames (i.e. "The Grapevine," "The Southland"), especially highway numbers (i.e. "The 101" rather than just "101").
 
Southern California has many distinctive accents and dialects; these often reflect the geographic origins of the people who came there. Bakersfield English and the "Valley Girl" dialect of the San Fernando Valley have their roots in the Ozark Southern English of Oklahoma and Missouri, and first developed when many people from the Ozarks migrated to California in the 1930s. East Los Angeles and the Gateway Cities house a distinctive form of Chicano English, notable for its use of the word "foo" for any person. These dialects can exist in very small areas, such as the traditionally New Orleanian Yat in northern Pasadena.
 
In Los Angeles County, the "South Bay" refers to the area between Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) and Los Angeles Harbor. This area is usually downwind from the southern part of Santa Monica Bay.
 
In San Diego County, South Bay refers to the area adjacent to the southern portion of San Diego Bay. It is also common to refer to the many beach communities by their initials, i.e. IB, OB, and PB, for Imperial Beach, Ocean Beach, and Pacific Beach respectively.
 
"Eastside" and "Westside" are subjective terms in Los Angeles. The Westside, which includes areas like Beverly Hills, is often perceived to be more affluent, so the choice of where to draw the boundary between Eastside and Westside can itself be a socioeconomic marker. Most Angelenos place the boundary well to the west of downtown, meaning that many Eastsiders live west of downtown. The area south of downtown Los Angeles, including Watts, was called "South Central," after Central Avenue, which runs through it and was a major location for jazz and nightlife in the fifties and sixties. Today it is usually called South LA.
 
A common complaint from residents of Southern California's Orange County is the reference to the area as "the OC" instead of just as "Orange". Attributed to the Fox television show The O.C., the inclusion of the article in the county's name is mainly perceived to be used by those from outside of the area, rather than natives.
 
 
References
1.       ^ a b c d Walt Wolfram and Ben Ward, editors (2006). American Voices: How Dialects Differ from Coast to Coast. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing, 140, 234-236. ISBN 978-1-4051-2108-8.
2.       ^ Ladefoged, Peter (1999). "American English." In Handbook of the International Phonetic Association, 41–44, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-63751-1.
3.       ^ Labov, William, Sharon Ash, and Charles Boberg (2006). The Atlas of North American English. Berlin: Mouton-de Gruyter, 68. ISBN 3-11-016746-8.
     5^ Mary Kawena Pukui, Samuel H. Elbert & Esther T. Mookini, The Pocket Hawaiian
           Pocket Dictionary (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1983)
Further reading
·         Vowels and Consonants: An Introduction to the Sounds of Languages. Peter Ladefoged, 2003. Blackwell Publishing.
·         Language in Society: An Introduction to Sociolinguistics. Suzanne Romaine, 2000. Oxford University Press.
·         How We Talk: American Regional English Today. Allan Metcalf, 2000. Houghton Mifflin.
 
Source: "The Free Dictionary"   
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/California+English