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- W1569634099 abstract "466LANGUAGE, VOLUME 53, NUMBER 2 (1977) la, pt.a Particle used primarily in narrative speech—e.g., gossip, folk tales, dreams— indicating object or action not directly perceived, or information for whose veracity the speaker assumes no responsibility; they say. ?a ti vo?nee ?o la hun vinik ... Once there was a man ... hi? Ia. Yes, so they say. (201) me?, n5.3 Term of address to mother, step-mother, grandmother, aunt, great aunt, older sister, older female cousin, mother-in-law, older sister-in-law, wives offiance's petitioners, older female relatives and non-relatives ofone's husband's parents who attend the houseentering ceremony and/or the wedding, older female relatives and non-relatives of the wedding godparents who attend the wedding, godmothers of baptism, confirmation and marriage, wife of the ritual tutor who instructs a couple during husband's term of office as steward, steward-royal, publican, ensign-bearer, tithing man of VoP-ble. me?___, nphr(n type n)5.4 Term of address to older woman, term of reference to older woman when speaking with her kin; Mother ___ /personal name./. me?___, nphr(nld of nld).8 female___/animal/. me? £ih. ewe, doe. me? baka. cow. me? ?ai'el, nphr(n of n)5. 'mud mother', spotted sandpiper Actitis macularia, killdeer Charadrius voclferus. cf. Paâ'el mut. They are eaten, seasoned with mexican tea. They are 'cold'. (232) This continues for 50 more entries involving me?. In the English-Tzotzil section, we find this sample entry: snack /because one does not want to spend money/: si^'ah c'ut, vphr(tv & n4d).6 /eaten by members of curing ceremony at various crosses, most frequently at Kalvario/: Palmorsal, nld. /food eaten to fill stomach after insufficient meal/: kapin, n4f.7 (506) Although something of the form and content of TGTD can be comprehended through examples such as these, and through description of the work and its preparation, one cannot possibly appreciate the book without knowing it first hand. I would urge readers to do that. TGTD is one of those few works that engender greater admiration in the reader as acquaintance with them grows. [Received 31 August 1976.] Perspectives on Black English. Edited by J. L. Dillard. (Contributions to the sociology of language, 4.) The Hague: Mouton, 1975. Pp. 391. /48.00. Reviewed by Derek Bickerton, University of Hawaii Ifone looks up the word 'perspective' in Webster's Third International, he finds, inter alia, the following definitions: 'one ofvarious devices which produce fantastic effects or optical illusions ... a picture or figure which appears distorted unless viewed from a particular point'. I have to report that these definitions fit, all too 2 Particle root. 3 Unpossessed noun. * Noun phrase (noun-type noun phrase) unpossessed. 5 Noun phrase (noun class Id [i.e. animate possession same as absolute form, only animate occurs] of noun class Id). 6 Verb phrase (transitive verb and noun class 4d [always possessed, only animate occurs]). 7 Noun class 4f (always possessed, only inanimate occurs with or without - Vl). REVIEWS467 appropriately, the contents of this curious, disappointing, and often frustrating collection. It should be made clear from the start that my largely negative reactions are in no way prompted by the thesis which the volume seeks to promote. The arguments for assuming that Black English is a creóle in the final stages of decreolization are, I believe, unanswerable; many have already been set forth in Dillard's Black English (1972) and sources cited there. The present volume was clearly intended to provide further support for the creolist case. Instead, regrettably, it merely weakens that case by triviality, irrelevance, and a selection process that can only be described as bizarre. The volume is divided into four sections: 'Black English dialectology: theory, method' (five articles, 33-90); 'The history of Black English' (eleven articles, 91-271); 'Black English and the acculturation process' (three articles, 273-306); and 'Black English and psycholinguistics' (four articles, 307-77). Each section has a short introduction by D, who provides a rather longer introduction for the volume as a whole (9-32). The latter, however, contains little of substance that cannot be found in D's earlier work. Ofthe articles..." @default.
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- W1569634099 date "1977-01-01" @default.
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- W1569634099 title "Perspectives on Black English Edited by J. L. Dillard" @default.
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