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On Tue, 02 Dec 2003 09:54:57 -0600, Ron Hammon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >Holger Dansk wrote: >> >> On Mon, 01 Dec 2003 16:11:48 GMT, "Byron Canfield" >> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >> >"Holger Dansk" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message >> >news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] >> >> On Sat, 29 Nov 2003 17:24:14 -0800, Joni Rathbun <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >> >> wrote: >> >> >> >> >In my district, immigrant children for whom English is a second >> >> >language score higher on reading/language arts measures than native >> >> >born African Americans. >> >> >> >> Many native born African Americans (negroes) don't seem to be able to >> >> learn how to pronounce English even though negroes have been in this >> >> country for a couple of hundred years. >> >> >> >The operative words there are "don't seem" -- which is merely a statement >> >regarding your preception, nothing more. >> >> Haven't you noticed how many negroes say... >> "Aunt" pronounced to rhyme with "up" and "but" instead of the correct >> way which rhymes with "cat" and "man", and is pronounced the same as >> ant; > >snip > >Lol. The "correct way" is the same as "ant"? This is funny. The >"correct" way is NOT the same as "ant". This is the only word, as far >as I know, that blacks have right. Why do you think that there is a "u" >in there? Before the war, "House niggers" spoke proper English in the >fine mansions of the very wealthy. Lower-class rednecks said "ant", >"ain't", and "aunt" the same way. The word, "aunt" is the legacy of >that time when some blacks spoke far, far better than most whites. Hog doo doo. Holger
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