Chapter Eight: Ethnicity and social networks
* It is often possible for individuals to signal their ethnicity by the
language they choose to use. Even when a complete conversation in an ethnic
language is not possible, people may use short phrases, verbal filers or
linguistic tags, which signal ethnicity. For Example: In New Zealand many Maori people
routinely use Maori greetings such as kia and ora, while speaking
in English, to signal their ethnicity.
- African American Vernacular English: a distinct variety or
dialect that was developed by African Americans as a symbolic way of
differentiating themselves from the majority group.
Some of AAVE linguistic features (pp186-187)
- Complete absence of the copula verb be in some social &
linguistic contexts
- The use of invariant be to signal recurring or repeated actions
- Mutable negation
- Constant cluster simplifications
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British Black English
1-Patois: a Jamaican Creole in origin,
which is used by Jamaican immigrants in London
and by young British Blacks in group talks as a sign of ethnic identity.
Some of Patois linguistic features (p190)
- Lexical items such as lick meaning 'hit' and kenge
meaning 'week, puny'
- Different pronunciation like then and thin are
pronounced 'den' and 'tin'.
- Plural forms don't have s on the end.
- Tenses aren't marked by suffixes on verbs, so forms like walk
and jump are used rather than walked, walks, jumped,
and jumps.
- The form mi is used for I, me and my (mi
niem / my name).
- The form dem is used for they, them and their
(dem car / their car).
2- Midland Black English: a variety of Standard English
with a west midland accent which is an informal variety with some Patois
features.
3- Multi-cultural London English: a variety used by adolescents
(teenagers) from a range of ethnic backgrounds, including Jamaican & Asian
backgrounds. Its features include using monophthongs instead of diphthongs
and a distinctive vocabulary, for example:
blood / mate and nang / good and yard
/ house.
- Social networks: who we talk and listen to regularly is an
important influence on the way we speak (regular patterns of informal social
relationships among people.
- Density: it refers to whether members of a person's network are
in touch with each other.
- Plexity: is a measure of the range of different types of
transaction people are involved in with different individuals.
- Uniplex relationship: is one where the link with
the other person is in only one area.
- Multiplex relationship: it involves interactions with
others along several dimensions.
- Community practice: the activities that group
members share, and their shared objectives and attitudes (one belongs to many
communities of practice such as family, workgroup, sports team, etc).
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