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Submitted by hueyphoto on Tue, 08/19/2008 - 2:04pm.
I took these photos of the Mud Bay race in 2008. I just now posting this, now after many months. forgive me Mud Bay Race
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Submitted by Rick on Fri, 02/08/2008 - 7:48am.
Here's an article by Steven Pinker on the issue of language and the widespread view that English is in a state of decay and one step away from total collapse.
Submitted by Rick on Wed, 02/06/2008 - 8:25am.
The issue was raised in another thread that African Americans tend to speak differently than the majority culture (who's language is commonly referred to as Standard American English, or SAE). Often, the way that people characterize the English spoken by African Americans (African American Vernacular English, or AAVE) is as a degenerate version of SAE. Actually, AAVE is a highly systematic dialect of English which is as expressive and communicative as any other dialect on the planet. Indeed, there are important structural differences between AAVE and SAE that suggest that the two dialects may have developed in parallel from early in American history. The first point to make is that there is really no such thing as "the English language," per se. English is really just a collection of dialects, SAE, AAVE, Spanish American English, British English, Australian English, etc. The "language" label is really a political distinction. Linguists like to say that a language is just a dialect with an army and a navy. Many linguists think that the AAVE dialect may have originated first as a pidgin of English (think: simple trade language), and then developed into a creole (fully expressive human language). This is supported by the fact that plantations contained Africans from many different language communities, thus creating an unstable linguistic environment. (The process of creolization has been documented in several other geographic locations by the linguist Derick Bickerton.) |
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