1989
DOI: 10.1017/s0954394500000119
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There's no tense like the present: Verbal -sinflection in early Black English

Abstract: This article contributes to the understanding of the origin and function of verbal -5 1 marking in the Black English grammar by systematically examining the behaviour of this affix in two corpora on early Black English. To ascertain whether the variation observed in (early and modern Black English) -s usage has a precedent in the history of the language, or is rather an intrusion from another system, we focus particularly on the linguistic and social contexts of its occurrence, within a historical and comparat… Show more

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Cited by 217 publications
(92 citation statements)
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References 18 publications
(37 reference statements)
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“…How can these be explained? Following from the ongoing debate over the last ten years as to the origins of present-day AAVE (Hannah, 1997;Poplack & Tagliamonte, 1989Rickford, 1997;Singler, 1991;Tagliamonte & Smith, 2000;Winford, 1992Winford, , 1997Winford, , 1998, Types 2 to 6 may have creole roots. These structures may have then spread to other varieties in contact with these creolebased languages: that is, varieties such as Alabaman and Appalachian English in the southern states.…”
Section: Language-internal Constraintsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…How can these be explained? Following from the ongoing debate over the last ten years as to the origins of present-day AAVE (Hannah, 1997;Poplack & Tagliamonte, 1989Rickford, 1997;Singler, 1991;Tagliamonte & Smith, 2000;Winford, 1992Winford, , 1997Winford, , 1998, Types 2 to 6 may have creole roots. These structures may have then spread to other varieties in contact with these creolebased languages: that is, varieties such as Alabaman and Appalachian English in the southern states.…”
Section: Language-internal Constraintsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This constraint has been attested in certain British dialects as well as in some Southern WNS varieties of American English (Feagin, 1979;Wakelin, 1977). This constraint is said to find its origins in Old English (Poplack & Tagliamonte, 1989). The second factor group, definiteness of the subject, was tested to determine whether indefinite subjects favor the non-inflected verb form more than definite subjects.…”
Section: The (Neg Pres) Variablementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Geography was never explicitly excluded from urban dialectology, but its importance to the study of dialect was diminished and sociology took its place. More recent work in comparative sociolinguistics (Poplack and Tagliamonte 1989;Tagliamonte 1998;Godfrey and Tagliamonte 1999;Tagliamonte and Smith 2000;Boberg and Strassel 2000;Boberg 2000) and particularly the new Atlas of North American English (Labov, Ash and Boberg forthcoming) mark the reengagement of variationists with geography.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%