• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

British People Sound Smarter Than Americans, Right?

March 10, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Are British people smarter and more informed than Americans? According to a new study, many Americans seem to think so, and it may come down to a simple difference in how we use a common word.

Oscar Wilde famously noted that British and American people “have really everything in common…except, of course, language”. While this witticism may appear flippant, it may actually have a significant point.

Advertisement

A team of researchers at Rutgers University, New Jersey, have examined how American and British English speakers use “right” as a response particle in conversation. They found that Americans tend to use “right” to show they already have knowledge of a subject or situation, and that they are informed about it. However, British English speakers use “right” to indicate that the information they are receiving is interesting and relevant to the discussion. 

The word “right” belongs to a specific class of linguistic devices that are sometimes called “response tokens” or “response particles”. These register, signal agreement, or take a position toward the information they respond to. However, despite its common usage as a response particle, there has been surprisingly little research into “right” in this context.   

To an American, the way British people use “right” makes them sound like they already know what is being said, leading them to appear more informed than they necessarily are. In addition, the British accent carries with it a stereotype of sophistication that also, according to many Americans, makes the speaker sound more intelligent. The situation is made worse (for Americans at least) by the fact the British use “right” quite a lot more in conversation. 

The Rutgers team was originally inspired when they overheard a “puzzling misunderstanding” between an American and a British person during a conversion. During the conversation, the American was explaining a situation that prompted the “right” response from the listener, but this confused the American who asked whether this information was already known, to which the British listener responded with a confused “no?”. 

Advertisement

In order to study this phenomenon, the team used Conversation Analysis, a method that studies social interactions and talk-in-interaction, to examine the use of “right” in American and British interactions. They drew on a collection of around 125 transcribed segments of everyday conversation and work discussions from a historical span from the 1970s to the present. Within this collection of segments, 70 were in British English and 55 in American English. 

The research “sheds light on how minute linguistic differences, which we might not even recognize, impact our interactions with others and color our perceptions of their expertise and knowledge,” Galina Bolden, professor of communication at Rutgers, said in a statement. 

The study reveals the different ways speakers can demonstrate their epistemic stances – how they relate to and lay claim to different types of knowledge. The research also has important methodological implications for using Conversation Analysis on cross-cultural and intercultural communications. It could be a useful way to probe different varieties of English and other languages. 

The study authors state that future work could “examine the entire landscape of these kinds of response particles (in particular positions) in the U.S. vs. U.K. data with an eye towards the kinds of stances they convey vis-a-vis prior talk (i.e. what exactly they do internationally). Such analysis might enable researchers to explore whether the differences between the two language varieties are primarily linguistic or cultural.”

Advertisement

The study was published in the Journal of Pragmatics.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Chinese #MeToo plaintiff heads back to court for what could be last time
  2. Intuit’s $12B Mailchimp acquisition is about expanding its small business focus
  3. Spanish ride-hailing app Cabify bets on grocery delivery amid e-commerce boom
  4. Motor racing-Hamilton and Verstappen renew battle in Turkey

Source Link: British People Sound Smarter Than Americans, Right?

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Is The Weather Making Your Headache Worse?
  • “Zoning Out” Actually Helps You Learn? Data From Up To 90,000 Brain Cells Says So
  • Over Past 250,000 Years, Three Major Waves Of Human-Neanderthal Interbreeding Have Been Identified
  • Zebrafish “Catch” Yawns Just Like Us – We Might Need To Rethink Evolution To Account For That
  • 80,000-Year-Old Neanderthal Footprints Reveal How Children Hunted On Beaches
  • 5 Animals That Have Absolutely No Business Jumping (In Our Very Humble, Definitely Unbiased Opinion)
  • Polar Vortex Patterns Explain Winter Cold Snaps Against Background Warming Trend
  • Scientists Tracked An Olm For 2,569 Days And It Did Not Move An Inch
  • Look Out For “Fireballs”: The Best Meteor Shower Of 2025 Is About To Commence, According To NASA
  • Why Do Many Large Language Models Give The Same Answer To This “Random” Number Query?
  • Adidas Jabulani: The World Cup Football So Bad NASA Decided To Study It
  • Beluga Whales Shake Their Blob-Like Melons To Say Hello And Even Woo A Mate, But How?
  • Gravitational Wave Detected From Largest Black Hole Merger Yet: “It Presents A Real Challenge To Our Understanding Of Black Hole Formation”
  • At Over 100 Years Of Age, The World’s Oldest Elephant Passes Away In India
  • Ancient Human DNA Reveals Earliest Zoonotic Diseases Appeared 6,500 Years Ago
  • Boys Are Better At Math? That Could Be Because School Favors Them Over Girls
  • Looptail G: Most People Can’t Recognize A Letter You Have Seen Millions Of Times
  • 24-Million-Year-Old Protein Fragments Are Oldest Ever Recovered, A Robot Listened To Spoken Instructions And Performed Surgery, And Much More This Week
  • DNA From Greenland Sled Dogs – Maybe The World’s Oldest Breed – Reveals 1,000 Years Of Arctic History
  • Why Doesn’t Moonrise Shift By The Same Amount Each Night?
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version