copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
LINGUIST List 7. 1048: aks and akst in AAVE Specialists in AAVE agree that current African Americans who use aks have inherited this as the base form of the verb Some further comments came from Raj Mesthrie at the University of Cape Town: Aks is I believe alive and well in parts of Britain and elsewhere in the world (e g my native dialect of South African Indian English, where it co
LINGUIST List 13. 821: Socioling, Walt Wolfram Erik R. Thomas Despite intense scrutiny of the historical and current development of AAVE, a number of issues remain unresolved Most prominent among these is the development of African American English during the antebellum period and the trajectory of change in twentieth-century AAVE
LINGUIST List 13. 357: Wardhaugh, Introduction to Sociolinguistics Then the author discusses the issue of African American vernacular English (AAVE) In the final section of this chapter Wardhaugh discusses the implications and consequences for education in view of the social disadvantage connected with the restricted code and AAVE
LINGUIST List 12. 174: Andrews, Linguistics for L2 Teachers The chapter further discusses properties Standard American English (SAE) and African American Vernacular English (AAVE) The author subscribes to the view that AAVE is not a dialect of SAE and that it rather developed from West African languages
LINGUIST List 13. 2343: Historical Linguistics: Wolfram Thomas (2002) Copula absence is an oft-cited structure in AAVE and Wolfram and Thomas argue that while there may be a number of influences on the historical development of this structure, including a creole predecessor and independent development, it developed exclusively in African American English
LINGUIST List 23. 3439: Review: Sociolinguistics: Lippi-Green (2011) Here,Lippi-Green argues that assimilation via accent reduction is commonly perceivedto be the price of success in America (see also Chapters 9 and 12 for example) Similarly, Chapter 10's focus on AAVE (African American Vernacular English), or"Black language" (p 182) argues that the issues surrounding this variety of USEnglish are historically
LINGUIST List 25. 2362: Review: Sociolinguistics: Du Bois Baumgarten . . . A Lane Igoudin’s short chapter, ‘Asian American girls who speak African American English: A subcultural language identity’, investigates language use and attitudes among three first-generation Asian-American teenage girls (two Filipino-American and one Cambodian-American) who use African American Vernacular English (AAVE) in their
LINGUIST List 13. 988: Historical Ling: Algeo, ed. (2001) In chapter 8, "African-American English," Salikoko S Mufwene reviews the major scholarship on African-American English (AAE) and African- American Vernacular English (AAVE)
LINGUIST List 32. 2155 The eighth edition contains new and updated coverage of such topics as the societal aspects of African American Vernacular English (AAVE), multilingual societies and discourse, gender and sexuality, ideologies and language attitudes, and the social meanings of linguistic forms