System in black language by David Sutcliffe (M. Ed), David Sutcliffe, John J. Figueroa

By David Sutcliffe (M. Ed), David Sutcliffe, John J. Figueroa

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LAUREN and M. NORDMAN The Use of Welsh: A Contribution to Sociolinguistics MARTIN J. ) Please contact us for the latest book Information: Multilingual Matters Ltd, Frankfurt Lodge, Clevedon Hall, Victoria Road, Clevedon, Avon BS21 7SJ, England Page iii MULTILINGUAL MATTERS 77 Series Editor: Derrick Sharp System in Black Language David Sutcliffe with John Figueroa MULTILINGUAL MATTERS LTD Clevedon Philadelphia Adelaide Page iv Disclaimer: This book contains characters with diacritics. gif), netLibrary will represent them as they appear in the original text, and most computers will be able to show the full characters correctly.

This is the younger Caribbean generation, the link generation, who have to be seen as decisive in the implantation of an incipient British Caribbean Creole, above all British Jamaican Creole. This youthful immigration was reducing in the late 1960s Page 2 and had virtually finished by 1975. Overlapping with these speakers, a second generation, British-born of Caribbean parentage, began to appear at the end of the 1950s. This second generation is now disappearing from the top end of schools to be replaced by the third generation.

What emerges here with regard to both the modals and the pronominal system of US/BEV is that they are distinctive, yet camouflagedand camouflage is in fact a pervasive feature of BEV morphology, as John Baugh (1988) and Arthur Spears (1982) have shown convincingly. In Chapter 2 we shall be arguing for the special place of pronouns and other clitics on the verb in the maintenance of separate system. In the case of US/BEV we can see that there has been relatively good contact with the lexifier language, English.

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