The Word on the Street: Fact and Fable about American EnglishIn The Word on the Street, John McWhorter reveals our American English in all its variety, beauty, and expressiveness. Debunking the myth of a "pure" standard English, he considers the speech patterns and accents of many regions and ethnic groups in the U.S. and demonstrates how language evolves. He takes up the tricky question of gender-neutral pronouns. He dares to ask, "Should we translate Shakespeare?" Focusing on whether how our children speak determines how they learn, he presents the controversial Ebonics debate in light of his research on dialects and creoles. The Word on the Street frees us to truly speak our minds. It is John McWhorter's answer to William Safire, transformed here into everybody's Aunt Lucy, who insists on correcting our grammar and making us feel slightly embarrassed about our everyday use of the language. ("To whom, " she will insist, and "don't split your infinitives!") He reminds us that we'd better accept the fact that language is always changing - not only slang, but sound, syntax, and words' meanings - and get on with the business of communicating effectively with one another. |
From inside the book
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Page 46
instead whole new languages — Brooklyn English is a dialect of English, but
Sranan is a separate language, for which English happens to have been a
springboard as a vocabulary source. It is easy to suppose that creoles are in fact
just ...
instead whole new languages — Brooklyn English is a dialect of English, but
Sranan is a separate language, for which English happens to have been a
springboard as a vocabulary source. It is easy to suppose that creoles are in fact
just ...
Page 178
A final factor that muddies the distinction between dialect and language is
geopolitics. Speakers of Swedish ... However, because they are spoken in
separate countries, they are officially considered separate languages. On the
other hand, ...
A final factor that muddies the distinction between dialect and language is
geopolitics. Speakers of Swedish ... However, because they are spoken in
separate countries, they are officially considered separate languages. On the
other hand, ...
Page 198
Of course, because dialects of a language are usually spoken in the same
general space (England, America, France, ... For this reason, the changes in
Black English no more suggest that it is on its way to becoming a separate
language than ...
Of course, because dialects of a language are usually spoken in the same
general space (England, America, France, ... For this reason, the changes in
Black English no more suggest that it is on its way to becoming a separate
language than ...
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The word on the street: fact and fable about American English
User Review - Not Available - Book VerdictIn the first section of this enlightening book, McWhorter (linguistics, Berkeley) examines language as "a system that is at all times on its way to changing into a different one." Not only are new ... Read full review
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Lava Lamps and Language | 7 |
The Linguistic Melting Pot | 35 |
Copyright | |
7 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
The Word on the Street: Debunking the Myth of "pure" Standard English John H. McWhorter Limited preview - 2001 |
Word On The Street: Debunking The Myth Of A Pure Standard English John Mcwhorter Limited preview - 2009 |
Common terms and phrases
actually African Americans African-American children African-American students Afrocentric ain't American English audience basic Black and standard black children Black English Black English sound black speech black students bridging advocates bridging approach classroom code-switching complex creole languages culture dard developed dialect of English dialect readers endings English dialects English speakers example expression fact French gender-neutral pronoun glish grammar guage Gullah Haitian Haitian Creole issue Jamaican patois John Rickford language change language mixture languages spoken Latin less linguistic look means Media Lengua nonstandard dialects noun Old English patterns person play prepositions problem pronoun Quechua reading reason 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 teachers tense things tion translation verb vowel walk West African languages words writing