Difference between revisions of "Urban English"

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(remove the oblique reference to Airplane! where the condescending white woman says, 'I speak jive.")
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'''Urban English''' (also referred to as '''Urban Vernacular English''', or '''Jive''') is a variant or [[dialect]] of English spoken by historically segregated minorities in [[urban]] communities (or cities) across the [[United States]], predominantly [[African-American]]s. While mutually intelligible with [[standard English]], it can sometimes be difficult to understand a person speaking urban English if one is not familiar with the particulars of its structure and [[pronunciation]]. Urban English has its roots in the [[Creole]] tongue which was spoken in the South among slaves, and hence some of the differences between it and standard English can be attributed to the adaptation of native [[African]] phonological processes and syntax to an [[English]] [[lexicon]].
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'''Urban English''' (also referred to as '''Urban Vernacular English''', or '''Jive''') is a variant or [[dialect]] of English spoken by historically segregated minorities in [[urban]] communities (or cities) across the [[United States]], predominantly [[African-American]]s. Urban English has its roots in the [[Creole]] tongue which was spoken in the South among slaves, and hence some of the differences between it and standard English can be attributed to the adaptation of native [[African]] phonological processes and syntax to an [[English]] [[lexicon]].
  
 
==Changes in pronunciation==
 
==Changes in pronunciation==

Revision as of 18:08, April 3, 2009

Urban English (also referred to as Urban Vernacular English, or Jive) is a variant or dialect of English spoken by historically segregated minorities in urban communities (or cities) across the United States, predominantly African-Americans. Urban English has its roots in the Creole tongue which was spoken in the South among slaves, and hence some of the differences between it and standard English can be attributed to the adaptation of native African phonological processes and syntax to an English lexicon.

Changes in pronunciation

  • Using D for soft TH, such as "this" pronounced more like "dis."
  • Develarization of final NG: "singing" becomes "singin'."
  • Use of metathesised forms, such as "aks" for "ask." Common patterns of metathesis in Urban english include
    • SC to CS at the end of a word where C denotes any plosive.
    • RC to CR before a vowel anywhere in a word, though this occurs less regularly.
  • Some forms are non-rhotic, in that R's are sometimes dropped if not occuring before a vowel. This is similar to the pronunciation of R in British English.
  • Lowering of some vowels, like ING to ANG, "thing" to "thang."