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Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders Vol.55 206-216 May 1990.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Black English in a Mississippi Prison Population

Julie H. Walton 1, Peggy McCardle 2, Thomas A. Crowe 1, and Bruce E. Wilson 3

1 The University of Mississippi, University
2 Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, D.C.
3 Michigan State University, East Lansing

Nine linguistic features unique to Black English were examined in the speech of 87 Black and 77 White inmates of a Mississippi prison population. The purpose of the study was to determine whether Black inmates could be distinguished from White inmates by their use of the present progressive, final stops, distributive be, remote aspect been, noun plurals, third person singular present tense, possessives, consonant clusters, and the copula. Results showed that use of eight of the nine features accurately predicted the ethnicity of the subjects. Only remote aspect been failed to identify ethnic differences. Identification of dialect variation among minority populations and more specifically among prison populations is an important step toward providing effective remediation programs.

Submitted on June 13, 1988
Accepted on June 19, 1989







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