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Category: 6. Language
WOLF003. Wolfram, Walt, and Jason Sellers.
Alternative regularization patterning and ethnic marking in a tri-ethnic
southern community. Paper presented at the Southeastern Conference
on Linguistics 56, Charlotte, N.C., April 1997. 16 pages.
8 references.
Publication type: Conference paper
Robeson County in one of the few tri-ethnic communities
in the United States in which Native Americans are the largest component.
Their ancestral language was obliterated without any apparent vestiges
generations ago, but they have a distinctive dialect identity,
typified by a unique constellation of Southern-based (actually more Southern
Highland) structures and some robust relic forms... (p. 1).
This paper discusses was leveling and were
leveling in Lumbee Vernacular English, which is bringing about remorphologization
of the allomorphs of past be. It also discusses an analogy
with generalized ain't. Table 2 presents tabulations of
the incidence of was/n't and were/n't, including positive
and negative structures, in conversational interviews with 22 Lumbee
speakers. One interesting finding is that the third person
plural noun phrases strongly favor regularization over pronouns.
Thus, speakers are more likely to say The dogs was out there
than They was out here (81). Also, both negativity
and person - number considerations may be involved in the configuration
of weren't leveling... (p. 10). Tables 5 and 6 compare
Lumbee regularization with Anglo-American and African-American in Robeson
County. Table 7 presents summary comparisons of past be leveling
in Robeson County speakers.
Additional subjects: be leveling | was/were leveling
| remorphologization
This annotation was edited on: June 5, 2002
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