Lexical creation is an important part of African American slang and involves such mechanisms as coinage, onomatopoeia, reduplication, and phoneticism. They are enormously productive and account for numerous slang expressions. Their productivity testifies to great linguistic creativity of African Americans; moreover, as in the case of phoneticism, it shows that lexical creation can be used consciously for sociocultural reasons stemming from the African American experience. This paper presents these processes in detail. Partially drawing from the book African American: A Linguistic Description (Widawski, forthcoming) and an earlier publication on African American lexicon (Widawski & Kowalczyk 2012), the presentation is based on lexical mate...
Abstract: African languages have contributed and continue to contribute a great many vocabu-lary ite...
The aim of the paper is to discover the degree of involvement of African American Vernacular English...
African American Vernacular English (AAVE) emerged from the historical context of African American e...
Semantic change is an important part of African American slang and involves two mechanisms: figurati...
Semantic change is an important part of African American slang and involves two mechanisms: figurat...
The African Diaspora created many dynamic cultural phenomena, which invariably evolved from oppressi...
To comprehend that a language belongs to a dialect, one may examine its lexicon. As it is considered...
Semantic reanalysis produces lexemes that bear positive connotations in AAE in contrast with their "...
The overall scope of this research is to define and explain the different styles of African American...
Thesis (M.A.)-University of Durban-Westville, 2000.The research 'Specialized Lexicography with refer...
The term “Black Semantics” refers to a core of words and phraseological units typical of African Ame...
The term “Black Semantics” (Smitherman 2006) refers to a core of words and familiar expressions typi...
Ebonics or African American English (AAE) has long been treated as a “street slang” spoken by Africa...
This study is in the area of terminology activities in Zimbabwe and it analyses the term creation us...
Abstract: In this article, we look at the relationship between linguistics and lexicography. We spec...
Abstract: African languages have contributed and continue to contribute a great many vocabu-lary ite...
The aim of the paper is to discover the degree of involvement of African American Vernacular English...
African American Vernacular English (AAVE) emerged from the historical context of African American e...
Semantic change is an important part of African American slang and involves two mechanisms: figurati...
Semantic change is an important part of African American slang and involves two mechanisms: figurat...
The African Diaspora created many dynamic cultural phenomena, which invariably evolved from oppressi...
To comprehend that a language belongs to a dialect, one may examine its lexicon. As it is considered...
Semantic reanalysis produces lexemes that bear positive connotations in AAE in contrast with their "...
The overall scope of this research is to define and explain the different styles of African American...
Thesis (M.A.)-University of Durban-Westville, 2000.The research 'Specialized Lexicography with refer...
The term “Black Semantics” refers to a core of words and phraseological units typical of African Ame...
The term “Black Semantics” (Smitherman 2006) refers to a core of words and familiar expressions typi...
Ebonics or African American English (AAE) has long been treated as a “street slang” spoken by Africa...
This study is in the area of terminology activities in Zimbabwe and it analyses the term creation us...
Abstract: In this article, we look at the relationship between linguistics and lexicography. We spec...
Abstract: African languages have contributed and continue to contribute a great many vocabu-lary ite...
The aim of the paper is to discover the degree of involvement of African American Vernacular English...
African American Vernacular English (AAVE) emerged from the historical context of African American e...