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Holger Dansk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >>I am a linguist; there is no morality in language. There are many >>dialects and each is appropriate to its own context, so that there is >>no "correct" or "incorrect" language, except with regards to a >>specific context. > >We are not talking about local dialects here. We are talking about the >English language in the entire world You apparently are unaware of the range of variation of English in the entire world. http://www.une.edu.au/langnet/singlish.htm (see the section on sounds) covers Singaporean English. Actually, here is a better one: http://eleaston.com/world-eng.html#ng gives sites with discussion of many varieties of English and sound samples of each. >and what is right or wrong in the use of it. There is no right or wrong. >You seem to be confused. Just because there is a dialect in >east Tennessee where people say "tar" for a tire, "far" for fire, "war" >for wire, "diddle" for baby chicken instead of biddy, etc., does not >mean that this is correct English. Of course it is, for them. >Correct English conforms to correct pronunciation. Who defines correct pronunciation? You? Don't make me laugh. There is NO official standard that defines what correct English is. >Otherwise, why have dictionaries giving the correct pronunciation? They don't. They give the most frequent pronunciations (most good dictionaries will list multiple pronunciations when dialectal differences are significant on the matter). >>>What's the matter with you? >> >>I'm more educated than you are about the nature of language in >>general, and about the English language in particular. > >You, evidently, have become too educated about language and have become >confused about the basic and fundamental rules of speaking and >pronouncing English correctly as it should be today in the United States Who made those rules? Who elected them? Why "should" anyone listen to them? >Even worse, you strive to find out >some excuse for many negroes having pronouncing it wrong for a few >hundred years while people from many other countries learn very quickly >how to pronounce it and do it correctly. You apparently are also quite ignorant about ESL learning. >The fact is that many negroes are just plain stupid Not as stupid as you seem to be. >Unfortunately, it will effect their whole lives a great deal. Not likely. There are numerous college professors with accents so thick that students can't understand them. Pronunciation doesn't seem to have affected them. lojbab -- lojbab [EMAIL PROTECTED] Bob LeChevalier, Founder, The Logical Language Group (Opinions are my own; I do not speak for the organization.) Artificial language Loglan/Lojban: http://www.lojban.org
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