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7 - Back to the present: verbal -s in the (African American) English diaspora

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

Raymond Hickey
Affiliation:
Universität-Gesamthochschule-Essen
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Summary

Introduction

Of the linguistic features stereotypically associated with African American Vernacular English (AAVE), the variable inflection of present-tense verbs, regardless of grammatical person or number of the subject, illustrated in (1), is among the best documented.

  1. (1) First person singular:

  2. a. I forgets about it. (SE/009/470)

  3. b. I forget the place where he is. (SE/009/1201)

  4. Second person singular:

  5. c. You speaks fine French (SE/006/256)

  6. d. When you speak with me fast, fast I don't … know what you tell me. (SE/006/1421-4)

  7. Third person singular:

  8. e. When she come out she goes and she takes her children. When she's on vacation well, she remain in the home. (SE/009)

  9. First person plural:

  10. f. We call her Virgie.

  11. (Interviewer: Why?)

  12. 'Cause that's the name we calls her. That's her nickname. (SE/006/1643-4)

  13. Third person plural:

  14. g. They speak the same English. But you see, the English people talks with grammar. (SE/007:1104)

Our initial research into this phenomenon (Poplack and Tagliamonte 1989, 1991) confronted a legacy of different and controversial explanations for the origin and function of verbal -s. Based on its rare occurrence in AAVE third-person-singular contexts, and sporadic appearance elsewhere, early quantitative work (e.g. Fasold 1972; Labov et al. 1968) had characterised it as hypercorrection. Analyses of texts representing older forms of African American English suggested other explanations. Several scholars (Brewer 1986; Jeremiah 1977; Pitts 1981, 1986) reported having detected an aspectual function of verbal -s in the WPA Ex-slave Narratives (Rawick 1972).

Type
Chapter
Information
Legacies of Colonial English
Studies in Transported Dialects
, pp. 203 - 223
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

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