which speech came to be known as received pronunciation?
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It is also known as BritishReceived Pronunciation, BBC English, the Queen's English, and posh accent. Standard British English is sometimes used as a synonym. The term received pronunciation was introduced and described by phonetician Alexander Ellis in his book "Early English Pronunciation" (1869).
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Typically British speech came to be known as received pronunciation.
- Received Pronunciation is the promptly recognisable accent frequently interpreted as ‘typically British’.
- Traditional terms for this accent like "the Queen’s English", "Oxford English" or "BBC English" are all a little trickery.
- Queen Elizabeth Il as a representative, spoke an almost unusual form of English, while the English heard at Oxford University or on the BBC is no longer constrained to one category of accent.
- Received Pronunciation is an accent, not a language since all received pronunciation speakers talk in Standard English.
- In simple words, they forgo non-standard grammatical formations and localised vocabulary aspects of provincial languages.
- RP is furthermore locally non-specific, that is it does not include any indications about a speaker’s geographic setting.
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