Part of
The Emergence of Black English: Text and commentary
Edited by Guy Bailey, Natalie Maynor and Patricia Cukor-Avila
[Creole Language Library 8] 1991
► pp. 173190
Cited by (7)

Cited by seven other publications

Rees-Miller, Janie
2021. A-prefixing in the ex-slave narratives. In All Things Morphology [Current Issues in Linguistic Theory, 353],  pp. 377 ff. DOI logo
Stephen J. Nagle & Sara L. Sanders
2003. English in the Southern United States, DOI logo
PICONE, MICHAEL D.
2003. Anglophone Slaves in Francophone Louisiana. American Speech 78:4  pp. 404 ff. DOI logo
Bailey, Guy
2001. Review of Ewers (1996): The origin of American Black English: Be-forms in the HOODOO texts. Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages 16:1  pp. 161 ff. DOI logo
Aceto, Michael
1997. Review of Montgomery (1994): The crucible of Carolina: Essays in the development of Gullah language and culture. Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages 12:1  pp. 169 ff. DOI logo
Tottie, Gunnel & Michel Rey
1997. Relativization strategies in Earlier African American Vernacular English. Language Variation and Change 9:2  pp. 219 ff. DOI logo
Montgomery, Michael, Janet M. Fuller & Sharon DeMarse
1993. “The black men has wives and Sweet harts [and third person plural -s] Jest like the white men”: Evidence for verbal -s from written documents on 19th-century African American speech. Language Variation and Change 5:3  pp. 335 ff. DOI logo

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