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1-3 of 3 matches of 32810 nodes total |
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Match 1 |
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ID a & Name b |
52-ABA-cai Black-American-Formal |
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Attributes |
Zone f |
pdf |
Page g |
417 |
LSName h |
black-american-formal |
LSType i |
dialect |
IsNotional k |
no |
Notes l |
african-american formal english ➤ Martin Luther King model |
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Relatives
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GeoEntity C 1
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United States
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Match 2 |
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ID a & Name b |
52-ABA-cia Black-Rural-SE. |
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Attributes |
Zone f |
pdf |
Page g |
419 |
LSName h |
black-rural-SE. |
LSType i |
dialect |
IsNotional k |
no |
Notes l |
african-american-SE. rural transition < [52=] Dixie English |
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Match 3 |
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ID a & Name b |
52-ABA-ci Talkin-Black |
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Attributes |
Zone f |
pdf |
Page g |
419 |
LSName h |
talkin-black |
LSType i |
inner language |
IsNotional k |
no |
Notes l |
tawkin-blak, black-american english, afro-american, african-american english, ebonics ; influence < languages brought from Africa by forced immigrants, especially from within 9=Transafrican phylozone; transition < [52=] Caribbean Anglo-Creole and Northamerican General # black is used here as a linguistic term, since patterns of linguistic solidarity have been a response within communities exposed for more than 3 centuries to major social discrimination based only on the relative pigmentation of the human skin (involving forced deportation from Africa; deprivement of freedom, personal name, language, culture and all personal possessions; enslavement and forced labour in the Americas; and frequent denial of basic human rights until modern times) ⊕ including northward and westward migration within North America during 19th and 20th cent. from rural to urban areas |
Scale o |
7 |
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Statistics |
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8 Dialects |
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Relatives
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GeoEntity C 1
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United States
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1-3 of 3 matches of 32810 nodes total |