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Difference or Disorder?

                    Feature              AAE                   SAE               Examples
                    Questions            Invert the verb in    Use different     What it is?/ What is it?
                                         indirect questions    forms for direct
                                                               and indirect
                                                               questions



                    Conditional          Use “do” in place of   Use conditional   I wonder did she go./ I
                                         “if,” omit “if” from   “if”             wonder if she went.
                                         embedded questions
                                                                                 They asked could I go./
                                                                                 They asked if I could go.


                    Comparative and      Uses root word with   Uses –er with     This car gooder./ This
                    superlative          –er in comparative    comparative and   car is better.
                                         form and adds –est    –est with
                                         to superlative form   superlative       He is the bestest./ He is
                                                                                 the best.


                   Bland‐Stewart, 2005; Craig & Grogger, 2012; Craig, Kolenic, & Hensel, 2013; Green &
                   Stockman, 2003; Packer, M. 2001; Wikipedia, 2013; Wood & Lyngaas, 1995)




                   HOME CORNER


                          I am a speech‐language pathologist who grew up as a bi‐dialectal speaker.  My first

                   dialect is African‐American English and my second dialect is Standard American English.  I did

                   not begin speaking Standard American English until my adolescent years.  During these years,


                   I found my passion for language.  At that time I did not understand the complexities of being

                   able to speak both African‐American English and Standard American English.  Even now I am


                   amazed at how beautiful, yet complicated, it is to be bi‐dialectal in America.

                          I recall growing up in an African‐American community.  There was always a love for

                   language;  this  was  demonstrated  in  music,  poetry,  and  everyday  lingo.   It  was  a  way  to


                   connect  with  my  peers  and  family  members,  express  my  thoughts,  and  gain a sense of   99

                   belonging.  Occasionally, I would see an individual who spoke Standard American English and

                   my  peers  would  state  “they  were  talking  funny.”    Eventually  this  person  felt  a  sense  of



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