African American Slang
b. Of things or abstract concepts. 1937
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African American slang
b. Of things or abstract concepts.
1937 Sun (Baltimore) 19 Aug. 8/1 This picture is described as ‘the wackiest’. 1941 B. SCHULBERG What makes Sammy Run? i. 14 The whole office was afraid of him. I know that sounds wacky. Hardened newspapermen being afraid 14 of a..little office-boy? 1959 S. H. COURTIER Death in Dream Time x. 141 Your cousin's death was wacky why go to the trouble of staging an accident? 1969 L. HELLMAN Unfinished Woman iv. 37 The office was a wacky joint in a brownstone house on 48th Street. 1975 D. LODGE Changing Places v. 191 A characteristically whacky, yet somehow endearing tenderness for individual liberty. 1984 Listener 24 May 39/3 In his fear of death Betjeman's hand shook, and lines were created more from wacky fright than profound or energising contemplation. Hence wackiness, the state or quality of being ‘wacky’; craziness, oddness. 1941 Sun (Baltimore) 1 Oct. 10/2 Maybe the majority won't think that ‘the wonderful bums’ [sc. the Brooklyn Dodgers] can win, but they will be out by the thousands..hoping that wackiness will be more than its own reward. 1980 R. L. DUNCAN Brimstone iv. 80 For all her wackiness, Annie knew how to live. APPENDED FROM ADDITIONS 1993 wacky, a. Add: wackily adv., in a ‘wacky’ or crazy manner. 1961 in WEBSTER, Wackily. 1974 E. BRAWLEY Rap (1975) xxxvii. 358 Setting the sparrows to flying wackily about in the rafters, beaning themselves on the walls. 1988 Arena Autumn/Winter 33/2 No cuts, no rewrites just a squib of disinformation in Pravda wackily indicting Orwell for stealing his book from an essay by an obscure 19th century Russian literary critic. 15 Ebonics is a language the does intentionally try to be different from the mainstream. Only if and when the African American community feels completely like a part of the U.S. mainstream culture will the desire or the need to develop its own dialect end. Of course this is not to say that this is a desired result. Ebonics is a fun variation on the standard, and as stated in the beginning of this paper, Ebonics has an influence; many would say a positive one, on the mainstream dialect. 16 Works Cited Green, Jonathon. The Cassell Dictionary of Slang. London: Cassell, 1998. Klein, Ernest. A Comprehensive Etymological Dictionary of the English Language.Volume 1 A-K. Amsterdam: Elsevier Publishing Company, 1966. Major, Clarence. Dictionary of Afro-American Slang. New York: International Publishers, 1970. New York - - -. Juba to Jive: A Dictionary of African American Slang. London: Penguin Books, 2000. Oxford English Dictionary Online. 2 nd ed. May 2001. http://www.oed.com Scotti, Anna and Paul Young. Buzz Words New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1997. Smitherman, Geneva. Black Talk. 2 nd ed. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2000. Download 30.76 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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