字幕表 動画を再生する 英語字幕をプリント Perhaps I should start this poem by informing you I'm bilingual. That the Queen’s English that I speak so eloquently before you now, is not my first language, no. My grandmother never used such diction when she spoke me up in the welfare line amongst the other dwellers, or when she called down to me from the project window for dinner no, we spoke a more southern fried English. This rhetorical recipe has been in my family for generations. Grandma say, Big Mama hid it under her tongue as she headed for northern cities during a great migration. Scholars call it African American Vernacular English. but My guys they call it Slang. The Man calls it Ebonics. I call it America’s creole, the last remaining squab birthed from a European and African pidgin. Turned into the dialect of the dough boys, the bass that appears in a rappers rhythmic rhetoric spoken everywhere from the trap house to the liquor store from the HIV testing clinic to the bus stop Ebonics is the official language of the undefined black culture the native tongue to the underrepresented black American and long before I received Liberal arts degrees and stood unimposing in academic settings I was born on the south side of Chicago, and managed to garner up enough street cred from the school of hard knocks to qualify me to teach you all a few of my languages essentials So hipsters I hope you got your note pads ready. This is Ebonics 101 Chapter 1 Any English word that holds an (in) combination, the (i) becomes an (a) like Bille Holiday couldn't just sing that girl could sang If Martin did all that walkin I wonder if him feet stank Traveled all them miles just to hear freedom rang I wonder what he was thankin Chapter 2 Any English word that holds an (or) combination the (r) sound becomes silent like Emmitt screaming Don’t beat me no mo like Rodney screaming Don’t beat me no mo like Trayvon asking What is you following me fo Chapter 3 Any English word that holds an (er) combination, well the (er) becomes an (a) like in the great quote from the linguistic scholar Ms Lauryn Hill "And even after all my logic and my theory I add a "Motherfucka" so you ignorant niggas hear me. see there's culture in these words the bended back of my speech comes from years of carrying the black experience the verbal diaspora of Africa shapes my spine we cross our t’s with the middle passage dot our i’s with strange fruit curve our s’s with mid atlantic roots, you cannot expect us to be slaves to your phonetics forever and just like our history we will defy the structure of your jim crowe grammar refuse to speak within the lines of your mason dioxin diction you can not correct this context this connotate my accomplishments see, me, be, black , male, use double negative to make positives he will write until the black story no longer subsists he will write until the clinched pen is synonymous with a clinched fist he will write until the black male is able to live be exist class dismissed.
B2 中上級 スティーブン・ウィリス「エボニックス101」(NPS 2015 (Steven Willis - "Ebonics 101" (NPS 2015)) 24 2 tinb に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日 シェア シェア 保存 報告 動画の中の単語