Learn English – Non-rhotic dialects and intrusive r

dialectsintrusive-rrhotic

I am from New England (northeastern US) and it's my understanding that we have a non-rhotic dialect in this region, which is unusual compared to the rest of the US.

It is common to drop the final r in a word, and that is the most singular feature of the dialect, as Tom Bosley's character in Murder, She Wrote famously abused. Car turns into cah; Bar Harbor becomes Bah Hahbah.

One other feature of my native dialect is the intrusive r. This shows up in mysterious places, the examples that spring to mind are idea(r) and area(r), seemingly after terminal "a" sounds.

Similarly, it pops up where one would use non-r word endings like saw, especially when followed by a vowel (perhaps to make it easier to glide from one vowel to another without a glottal stop):

I sore [saw] a black Chevy van parked in front of my house this morning.

Does the intrusive r appear in all non-rhotic dialects? Does it appear only in non-rhotic dialects?

I have been wondering if it is a kind of over-correction, where I hear it at the ends of these words because I am used to hearing a dropped r when a word ends with an a sound. For example, since I hear "cah" as car, I also hear "idea" as idear.

Best Answer

I can only offer this bit from the venerable alt.usage.english group:

Many nonrhotic speakers (including RP speakers, but excluding most nonrhotic speakers in the southern U.S.) use a "linking r": they don't pronounce "r" in "for" by itself /fO:/, but they do pronounce the first "r" in "for ever" /fO: 'rEv@/. Linking "r" differs from French liaison in that the former happens in any phonetically appropriate context, whereas the latter also needs the right syntactic context.

A further development of "linking r" is "intrusive r". Intrusive-r speakers, because the vowels in "law" (which they pronounce the same as "lore") and "idea" (which they pronounce to rhyme with "fear") are identical for them to vowels spelled with "r", intrude an r in such phrases as "law [r]and order" and "The idea [r]of it!" They do NOT intrude an [r] after vowels that are never spelled with an "r". Some people blanch at intrusive r, but most RP speakers now use it.

This actually quite clearly suggests that the linking R is not used by all non-rhotic speakers, expressly excluding "most nonrhotic speakers in the southern U.S.".