Word On The Street: Debunking The Myth Of A Pure Standard EnglishThough there is a contingent of linguists who fight the fact, our language is always changing -- not only through slang, but sound, syntax, and words' meanings as well. Debunking the myth of "pure" standard English, tackling controversial positions, and eschewing politically correct arguments, linguist John McWhorter considers speech patterns and regional accents to demonstrate just how the changes do occur. Wielding reason and humor, McWhorter ultimately explains why we must embrace these changes, ultimately revealing our American English in all its variety, expressiveness, and power. |
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... cultural misunderstandings so entertaining in movies like Woody Allen's Sleeper, but the fact that we wouldn't understand a word anyone was saying, even though they would consider themselves to be speaking “English.” Moreover, new slang ...
... cultural misunderstandings so entertaining in movies like Woody Allen's Sleeper, but the fact that we wouldn't understand a word anyone was saying, even though they would consider themselves to be speaking “English.” Moreover, new slang ...
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... standard English looks so “legitimate” and “neutral” to us today. If the cultural center had happened to have settled in Nottingham, then the English of the gameskeeper in Lady Chatterley's. English (as shown in this figure). ...
... standard English looks so “legitimate” and “neutral” to us today. If the cultural center had happened to have settled in Nottingham, then the English of the gameskeeper in Lady Chatterley's. English (as shown in this figure). ...
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... cultural hub of England was because of the emergence of a cosmically clear and lovely dialect in Middlesex and Essex counties? Of course, we must remember that before the Norman Conquest, the commercial and cultural hub had been ...
... cultural hub of England was because of the emergence of a cosmically clear and lovely dialect in Middlesex and Essex counties? Of course, we must remember that before the Norman Conquest, the commercial and cultural hub had been ...
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... cultural center of America, theirs was considered the standard American English. Genuine Northeasterners like Davis, Roosevelt, and Haley spoke this way naturally, and those performers who did not were often taught to in elocution ...
... cultural center of America, theirs was considered the standard American English. Genuine Northeasterners like Davis, Roosevelt, and Haley spoke this way naturally, and those performers who did not were often taught to in elocution ...
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Word On The Street: Debunking The Myth Of A Pure Standard English John Mcwhorter Limited preview - 2000 |
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actually African Americans AfricanAmerican children AfricanAmerican students Afrocentric ain’t American English audience basic bidialectal bilingual Black and standard black children Black English black speech black students bridging advocates bridging approach classroom codeswitching complex Creole languages Creolist culture developed dialect of English dialect readers endings English dialects English speakers example expression fact French genderneutral German grammar Gullah habitual Haitian immersion issue Jamaican patois John Rickford language change language mixture Latin Level linguists means Media Lengua modern nonstandard dialects noun Oakland controversy Old English patterns person pidgin play prepositions problem pronoun Quechua reading Rickford Romance languages rules Saramaccan seen sense sentence structures separate language Shakespeare Shirley simply singular slang slaves sound system Spanish speak speech variety Sranan standard dialect standard English sure Swiss German teachers teaching tense things translation verb vowel walk West African languages words writing