African-American English

African-American English

Structure, History, and Use

Baugh, John; Bailey, Guy; Mufwene, Salikoko S.; Rickford, John R.

Taylor & Francis Ltd

10/2021

352

Dura

Inglês

9780367760724

15 a 20 dias

730

Descrição não disponível.
List of figures and tables

List of contributors

Foreword

Acknowledgements

Introduction

PART I: Structure

1 The sentence in African-American vernacular English

2 Aspect and predicate phrases in African-American vernacular English

3 The structure of the noun phrase in African-American vernacular English

PART II: History

4 Some aspects of African-American vernacular English phonology

5 Co-existent systems in African-American vernacular English

6 The creole origins of African-American vernacular English: Evidence from copula absence

PART III: Use

7 Word from the hood: The lexicon of African-American vernacular English

8 African-American language use: Ideology and so-called obscenity

9 More than a mood or an attitude: Discourse and verbal genres in African-American culture

10 Linguistics, education, and the law: Educational reform for African-American language minority students

Subject index

Name index
AAVE;African-American English;African American Vernacular English;Salikoko S. Mufwene;African American Language;John R. Rickford;African American English;Guy Bailey;AAVE Speaker;John Baugh;Copula Absence;Structure, History, and Use;Main Verb;African-American vernacular English;Consonant Cluster Reduction;African-American vernacular English phonology;African American Speech Communities;lexicon of African-American vernacular English;African American Culture;African-American language use;Black English;verbal genres and African-American culture;AAE;Educational reform for African-American language;Verbal Genres;African-American language minority;Aspectual Markers;Discourse and African-American culture;LEP Student;Sonja Lanehart;Data Sets;Black English Trial;Uncensored Speech;Language Minority Students;Finite Auxiliaries;Vowel Space;Northern Cities Chain Shift;White Vernaculars;Vowel System;Grammatical Environment