Learn English – Who is in charge of determining a pronunciation

american-english

Recently I hear many words that sound different than they used to. There are the classic changes in words like pecan and Uranus. But the word that bugs me most now is caramel. Is there some group in America that has control of pronunciation?

Personally, once I learn a word, I will never change how I say it. Love them pee cans.

Best Answer

Those of us from the Western United States would believe that we speak the "purest" form of American English (if such a thing exists)--I think this is what's being called "TV English" in the other post, although as a speaker of this dialect, my lip curls at such a designation.

However, even among us, we differ on pronunciations/word choice. A few examples: 1) the pop v. soda debate, which many argue has regional roots, although I've never been able to map it specifically; 2) bag being pronounced as either "baag" or "beg"; 3) tour being pronounced as either "too-er" or "tore".

As an aside, the irony I find is that I imagine the majority of Americans do NOT speak in our "generic" dialect, considering the density of population in other parts of the US (besides perhaps California).

However, I think this is one of the hallmarks of English. It does not have a regulating body like the French language. No one and everyone (thank you, J.M.) regulates English.