Black English
English
    
    Proper noun
    
- Any of several varieties of English spoken by or associated with Black people, especially people of African origin or in Africa.[1]
-  1977, David Ola Oke, “The genesis of New World Black English”, in Caribbean Quarterly, volume 23, page 65:- Sranan-Tongo is a New World Black language form produced by the same processes that gave rise to Afro-American and Afro-Caribbean Black English.
 
-  1997, Rajend Mesthrie, “A sociolinguistic study of topicalisation phenomena in South African Black English”, in Manfred Görlach and Edgar W. Schneider, editors, Englishes Around the World, volume 2, page 119:- There is little doubt that an African variety of English is very much part of the communicative economy of the new South Africa (for which I shall use the conventional label South African Black English, in short SABE).
 
 - (US) Synonym of African-American English (“AAE”), sometimes specifically African-American Vernacular English (“AAVE”).
-  2021 November 16, John McWhorter, “‘Woke’ Went the Way of ‘P.C.’ and ‘Liberal’”, in The New York Times, →ISSN:- Perhaps Black English will yield a new neutral term for wokeness.
 
 
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- (UK) Synonym of Multicultural London English (“MLE”)
- (Canada) Synonym of Greater Toronto English (“MTE”)
 
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References
    
- Tom McArthur (1998) Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language
Further reading
    
 African-American English on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia African-American English on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia
 African-American Vernacular English on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia African-American Vernacular English on  Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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