black english in English

noun
1
any of various nonstandard forms of English spoken by black people, especially as an urban dialect in the US.
These children come to school with a rich set of collective experiences and a particular, well-developed dialect - black English .

Use "black english" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "black english" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "black english", or refer to the context using the word "black english" in the English Dictionary.

1. Black English "English as spoken by African-Americans," is by 1969

2. Black English "English as spoken by African-Americans," is by 1969

3. Ight is a variant of Aight, itself a variant of the adjective, adverb, and interjection all right as pronounced in colloquial Black English

4. –Bantu languages –Slang –Black English (African-American Vernacular English) –Play the dozens: the "dozens" is a form of competitive poetry common among African Americans

5. It resulted from a series of what linguists call elision, or leaving out sounds.So, in colloquial Black English, all right became Aight [ah-ahyt], which was further shortened to ight

6. For example: Hey, Bruh, can you pass me the remote? While Bruh has been recorded in Black English dating back to the 1890s, Bruh spread as an interjection variously expressing surprise or dismay since at …

7. To be, the English copular verb; Be (Cyrillic), a letter of the Cyrillic alphabet be (interjection), in several languages; Be language or Ong Be, a language of northern Hainan province, China; Black English, or African-American Vernacular English, an English dialect; Music Albums

8. To Bridge Language and Communication – Students are Encouraged to maintain their family language, whether it be Black English of African Americans, Patois of the Caribbean, Hispanic or Native American Dialects of North, Central and South America, Tribal or Regional Tongues of Africa and Asia, or ‘Americanizations’ of European Languages.