Coo; nattily attired.
in ebonics it means freeway
Ebonics - African American vernacular English
Ebonics Grammar "Rules" 1. To all words with a contraction eliminate the apostrophe and any letters after it. a. Example: i. English: Yes, it's alright ii. Ebonics: It OK 2. To words ending in "d", substitute for "dt" or "oodt". 3. To words ending phonetically in "ore", eliminate everything after the first "o" and add and apostrophe. a. Example: i. English: I won't tell you again, please shut the door. ii. Ebonics/; I ain tellin you no mo', shet de do'! 4. For suffixes with 2 identical consonants followed by "er", eliminate the "er" and sometimes replace for the sound "ah" a. Example: i. English: My was bigger and had his finger on the trigger. ii. Ebonics: Mah was bigga and had his fingah on yo' trigga. iii. English: Tower of power iv. Ebonics: Towah of powah 5. In the case of plural, "ers" is replaced by "az".
He has written around 50 kids books
The scientific term for Ebonics is African American Vernacular English (AAVE). It is a dialect of American English spoken primarily by African Americans.
Ebonics, also known as African American Vernacular English (AAVE), is a dialect that evolved within the African American community. It was not invented by a single person, but rather emerged over time as a distinct form of English influenced by African languages and dialects.
Ebonics is a term used to refer to African American Vernacular English (AAVE), which is a unique dialect spoken by some African Americans in the United States. It includes grammar, vocabulary, and pronunciation features that differ from Standard American English. Ebonics has its own rules and structure but is often stigmatized and misunderstood by those unfamiliar with it.
Ebonics and African American Vernacular English (AAVE) are not synonymous with slang. They are dialects with their own grammar and vocabulary rules. While some terms commonly associated with these dialects may be considered slang, the dialects themselves are linguistic systems.
Ebonics
what you refer to as "ebonics" like a pinche pendejo baboso is aave (African American vernacular English). it's not a language. it is a dialect (or ethnolect, depending on your stance) of English with it's own consistent grammar and pronunciation. i can't even begin to address your ludicrous "made a language claim (languages make themselves, cabeza de mierda) except to speculate that you ascribe to the specious claim that aave is taught in schools or otherwise receives special recognition from the u.s. government. don't believe everything you read in chain emails.p.s.- vete a la vergap.p.s. the cusses were originally in English, but wikianswers' BOWDLERBOT forced me to switch to spanish
In Ebonics, "brother" is often shortened to "brotha" or referred to as "bruh."
Door hinge rhymes with orange if you pronounce like "or" instead of "ar". Ebonics revenge, avenge and scavenge
Ebonics
== == This is a problem. If you don't know ebonics you won't know what she is saying about you.
Coo; nattily attired.
Speak in English, not ebonics