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BLACK ENGLISH: AN ENGLISH DIALECT OR A CREOLE??

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Presentation on theme: "BLACK ENGLISH: AN ENGLISH DIALECT OR A CREOLE??"— Presentation transcript:

1 BLACK ENGLISH: AN ENGLISH DIALECT OR A CREOLE??
Important questions to be answered thru research: -how is BE different from white English? -to what extent is popular BE/BE vernacular/non-standard Negro English distinct from non-standard popular English (of white Northerners-Southerners)?

2 DIFFERENT VIEWS ON WHETHER BE IS AN E DIALECT OR A CREOLE
Most Americans think it’s easy to identify a black person by its voice but: a test conducted to middle class white Chicagoans: they interpret speech of south college professors, all urban reared, as rural, uneducated Negroes’ speech (McDavid, 1967). Davis, 1970: “there simply were no systematic differences between the speech of Negro and that of Whites’

3 Any conclusions drawn about the debate whether BE is a creole or just another E dialect?
The range of phonological variation is the same bwn Black and Whites even though the distribution of speech variants is made by Whites. Still, In Tucker’s & Lambert’s experiment (1969): white judges COULD distinguish White from Negro speakers If BE is quite unique, do its characteristics derive from popular local accents of English or from an African L??

4 Views about BE being another E dialect or an African L
Past/older view: African influence was denied Recent views: there ARE African linguistic survivals culturally-rather than racially-transmitted among American Blacks. Similar linguistic remnants: Scandinavian in Minnesota, Dutch in Hudson Valley, etc… ‘Gullah’: an English -based creole, Black L spoken in South Carolina, Sea Islands Are other BE varieties creoles or English dialects??

5 Views on BE as creole or English dialects
The linguistic assimilation of Afro-Americans: slow, incomplete; a true creole L spoken by black slaves in the plantations of North America (Steward, 1968) Structural differences in American Negro speech proving its creole origin The most convincing creole argument: syntax (Steward, 1967, 1968; Labov, 1969, 1972): there are important syntactic differences bwn BE and Standard English attributable to creole influence

6 BE: rather a creole L than an English dialect but:
Reciprocal influence bwn Black and White (southern American E) speech Vocabulary of General English from BE: ‘goober’: peanut, ‘okra’, ‘juke’(box), ‘okay’ (Dalby, 1972) In grunts: ‘uh-huh’ [əˏhə](rising tone: yes), ‘Uh-uh’ [ˋʌhə]=[ʔʌʔʔʌ]:no! (BE)

7 THE MOST STRIKING FEATURES OF BE PHONETICS-PHONOLOGY
NOT ALL BE AMERIACNS TALK ‘LIKE THE MOST IGNORANT TEEN-AGED DELIQUENTS’ (Sledd, 1973) Urban-ghetto dwellers of low socio-economic substratum

8 The vowel system of BE 1) CURE+FORCE merger=GOAT
‘poor’=‘door’ [poə-doə], ‘poor’=‘Poe’ [poʊ], ‘door’=‘dough’ [doʊ] 2)FORCE#NORTH ‘hoarse’- ‘horse’ but 3)NEAR+SQUARE ‘fear’=‘fair’→[feə] 4) /ɪ/+/æ/ before /ŋ/ ‘drink’=‘drank’, ‘ring’, ‘rang’ 5) /ɪ/+/ɛ/ before [+ nasal C] ‘pin’=‘pen’, ‘Jim’=‘jem’

9 The phonetic realisation the BE vowels
6) PRICE →[a] particularly /- { [+C, +voice], #} ‘Price’, ‘pride’→[pras], [prad] but also: 7) Before [+C, +voice]+LOT ‘ride’=[rad]=‘find’[fond] or: the V may retain its contrast: ‘ride’[rad] vs ‘rod’[rɑd] 8)MOUTH, PRICE: monophthongs ‘proud’=‘pride’→[prad] /aʊ/+/aɪ/ → [a] ‘dine’, ‘down’, ‘find’, ‘found’:[a]

10 The phonetic realisation of BE vowels
In some speakers: a 3-way neutralisation ‘pride’=‘proud’=‘prod’ 9) [ɜ:]+[ɜɪ] NURSE (as in White NY) 10)FOOT : lack of lip roundness [ʊ] 11)DRESS: an open [ɛ]

11 The BE consonants 1)Non-rhoticity →potential homophony
‘guard’=‘god’, ‘farther’=‘father’, ‘lord’=‘laud’, ‘shore’=‘’sure’=‘show’: [∫oʊ], ‘their’=‘there’=‘they’, ‘you’re’=‘your’=‘you’] ‘Paris’=‘pass’, ‘terrace’=‘Tess’ 2)Absence of /r/→ᴓ /-/ө/ ‘throw’, =‘threw[өoʊ], [өu]

12 Main features of BE consonants
3)vocalisation or deletion of final /l/ →homophony ‘tool’=‘too’, ‘goal’-’go’, ‘pole=poor=pour=Poe Deletion of /l/→/-[+C] ‘help’=‘hep’[hɛəp]] or /l/ may be retained but realised as: [L] (velar lateral) /or[ʊ] 4) /ө, ð/:TH-Fronting in medial/final position ‘mouth’ [maʊf], ‘tooth’ [tuf], ‘nothing’ [ˈnəfɪn], ‘smooth’ [smuv], ‘brother’ [ˈbrəvə]

13 Some phonetic realisations of BE consonants
‘with’, ‘nothing’→[t] or ᴓ ‘with ʼem’ [witəm] (voiced t), ‘with me’ [wɪmɪ], ‘nothing’ [nətʔṇ]=[nəʔṇ]=[nən]=[naɪn] 5)TH-Stopping of non-initial /ө/ (preceded by a nasal or plosive) ‘keep your mouth closed’ [maʊt] (Wolfram, 1969) Word initially BE does have a /ө/ ‘thought’ [өɔ(ʊ)t]

14 Phonetic features of BE consonants
6) stopping of initial /ð/ ‘then’: [dɛn] 7)final cluster reduction: no final /t/: ‘list’, ‘mist’, ‘left’, ‘act’ no final /p, t, k/: ‘wasp’, ‘’desk’ No final /d/ ‘find’, ‘cold’, ‘loved’, ‘named’ ‘Desk’, ‘list’ may also receive syllabic plural ending proving the underlying non-final plosive: [ ̍lɪsɪz], [̍ ̍dɛsɪz]

15 Some phonetic realisations of BE consonants
8) final /b,d,g/→[ʔ] or [p˥, t˥, k˥]: ( ˥ =inaudibly released plosives) word finally ‘rob’, ‘bed’, ‘big’→[rɔʔ], [bɛʔ], [bɪk˥] 9) Final plosives/or other voiced Cs→ᴓ so, BE :CV syllable structure, homophones ‘road’=‘row’, ‘bid’=‘big’=‘bit’, ‘poke’=‘pope’=poor’, ‘seed’=‘see’=‘seat’ 10)Morpheme final Cs→ᴓ/ -suffix ‘kids’:[ki:z] 11)Initial C cluster ‘street’ [skrit], ‘stream’=‘scream’ 12)Oddities of lexical incidence: [̍bidnɪs]’business’, [idṇt] ‘isn’t’ Stress oddities: [ ̍police], [ ̍defence], [̍̍ ̍Detroit], ‘gonna’→[go], ‘I’m gonna’→ [amo], ‘ I don’t know’→[ ̍aono]


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