2015
DOI: 10.1215/00031283-2914692
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CREOLE /L → /R IN AFRICAN AMERICAN English/Gullah: HISTORICAL FACT AND FICTION

Abstract: The use of /r/ for /l/ in initial consonant clusters, a feature found in some Atlantic English-based creoles, occurs sporadically in representations of African American English, in words such as bress ‘bless’, prease ‘please’, and grad ‘glad’, from the colonial period to the mid-twentieth century. This study documents and analyzes the history of these representations and compares the feature with similar occurrences in several Caribbean creoles, finding an ultimate source in the phonologies of several African … Show more

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