| This is a more complete listing of English dialects, although by no means comprehensive. American English
							African-American Vernacular English (AAVE, Ebonics)Appalachian EnglishBaltimoreseChicano EnglishCoastal Southeast English (Charleston, South Carolina, Savannah, Georgia area)General AmericanGullahHayna Valley English (Scranton, Pennsylvania-area)Hudson Valley English (Albany, New York-area)Inland North American (Southern pennisula of Michigan, Chicago and upstate New York)Jersey EnglishLouisianian EnglishNative American English (see also subtypes below)New York City EnglishNorth Central English (includes Minnesota, North Dakota and some of South Dakota, Wisconsin, Michigan and Iowa)North Midlands English (thin swath from Nebraska to Ohio)Northeastern Coastal English (Eastern New England, Boston-English)Philadelphia-area EnglishPittsburgh-area EnglishProvidence-area EnglishSouth Midlands English (thin swath from Oklahoma to Pennsylvania)Southern American EnglishSouthern Highland EnglishStandard MidwesternSt. Louis-area EnglishWestern American EnglishWestern New England dialect
Anguillan EnglishAustralian EnglishBasic English (constructed)Bermudan EnglishBritish English
							Black Country English (Yam Yam)BrummieCockneyEast Anglian EnglishEstuary EnglishGeordieJockNorthern EnglishReceived Pronunciation (Queen's English, BBC English)ScouseScottish EnglishSouth Midlands EnglishSouth Welsh EnglishSouthern EnglishTyke
Canadian English
							Native American English (see also subtypes below)Newfoundland EnglishToronto English
Caribbean EnglishHiberno-EnglishIndian EnglishJamaican EnglishLiberian EnglishMalaysian English (Manglish)Native American English
							Mojave EnglishIsletan EnglishTsimshian EnglishLumbee EnglishTohono O'odham EnglishInupiaq English
New Zealand EnglishPakistani EnglishSingapore English (Singlish)South African EnglishTrinidadian English
 Pidgins and creoles include: Beach-la-marCanton EnglishKrioTok Pisin
 
Extinct varieties:
					 Middle EnglishOld English
 |