Black English: Its History and Usage in the United States"This book attempts to investigate the important and interesting ways in which Black English, the language of about eighty percent of Americans of African Ancestry, differs from other varieties of American English ... According to my thesis, differences from other English dialects are traceable to normal historical factors, specifically to language-contact phenomena associated with the West African slave trade and with European maritime expansion in general, and to survivals from West African languages"--From foreword. |
Contents
Black English and the Academic Establishment | 3 |
On the Structure of Black English | 39 |
A Sketch of the History of Black English | 73 |
Copyright | |
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African languages African Pidgin English Afro-American age-grading American English American Indian Pidgin American Negro American Speech attestations basilect behavior Bibliography bidialectal Black community Black English British century child Chinese Pidgin English course creole languages Cudjo culture day names decreolized diglossia Education evidence example factor forms French Creole ghetto grammatical guage Gullah historical house servants Indian Pidgin English influence Jamaica Jamaican Creole kind lingua franca linguistic massa matter minstrel show Negro dialect Negro Non-Standard noun observers patterns phonological pidgin and creole pidgin/creole Plantation Creole Portuguese probably pronoun pronunciation records relationship relexification reported Sea Islands seems Seminole sentences Sierra Leone Krio slang social Sociolinguistic South Southern white speak speakers spoken Sranan Tongo Standard English Stewart structure teachers teaching term tion tradition United varieties of English verb Virginia vocabulary vowel white dialects words writings York zero copula