You are seeing Ask web results for African American Vernacular English.
This page is the result of a project I did for my LIN 404T class. It is dedicated to the study of African American Vernacular English (AAVE). ... AAVE is a form of American English spoken primarily by African Americans. Although an AAVE speaker's dialect may exhibit regional variation, there are still many salient features.
bryan.myweb.uga.edu/AAVE/ · Cached
African American Vernacular English - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
African American Vernacular English ( AAVE )—also called African American English ; less precisely Black English , Black Vernacular , Black English Vernacular ( BEV ), or Black Vernacula...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_American_Vernacular_Engli... en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_American_Vernacular_English
Starting around 1970 and continuing throughout the decade, the preferred term was Black English or Black English Vernacular (BEV). In the mid-1980s African-American became the preferred term for black Americans, and by 1991 linguists were using the term African American Vernacular English (AAVE).
www.cal.org/Ebonics/
Amazon.com: African American Vernacular English: Features, Evolution,
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African American Vernacular English: Features, Evolution, Educational Implications (Language in Society) (Paperback) ... African American English: A Linguistic Introduction by Lisa J. Green ... African American English: A Linguistic Introduction...
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Using the Vernacular to Teach the Standard ... This paper was published in African American English ed. by Salikoko S. Mufwene, John R. Rickford, Guy Bailey and John Baugh. London: Routledge, 1998.
www.stanford.edu/~rickford/ebonics/ · Cached
Linguistics 73: African American Vernacular English (AAVE) ... (1) Present-Day Features of African American Vernacular English (AAVE), its pronunciation, grammar, and vocabulary (phonology, syntax, lexicon), as exemplified primarily in the informal vernacular speech of African Americans, but also in literature,
www.stanford.edu/~rickford/AAVE.html · Cached
Ebonics - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ebonics is a term that was originally intended and sometimes used for the language of all people of African ancestry, or for that of Black North American people; since 1996 it has been largely used t...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ebonics
African American Vernacular English (AAVE) is the variety formerly known as Black English Vernacular or Vernacular Black English among sociolinguists, and commonly called Ebonics outside the academic community.
www.une.edu.au/langnet/definitions/aave.html · Cached
African American Vernacular English - Definition of African American Vernacular English at Dictionary.com a free online dictionary with pronunciation, synonyms, and translation of African American Vernacular English. ... Use African American Vernacular English in a Sentence...
dictionary.reference.com/browse/African%20American%20Ve... dictionary.reference.com/browse/African%20American%20Vernacular%20English · Cached
"Ebonics" is a popular name for African American English, but is used most often for the vernacular (=colloquial, working-class, street, disrespected) forms of it. Periodically debate erupts in the USA -- most recently in 1996/7 -- over whether "Ebonics" exists; ... Course materials on African American Vernacular English...
privatewww.essex.ac.uk/~patrickp/AAVE.html · Cached