AAVE Explained: A Dialect That Transcends Internet Culture

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  • čas přidán 1. 06. 2024
  • Unlock the richness of AAVE (African-American Vernacular English) in this Babbel Explains episode.
    Discover what AAVE is, its speakers, and its cultural impact, beyond being labeled as 'internet slang.' Learn about its history, grammar, and get examples of AAVE words.
    #AAVEExplained #WhatIsAAVE #internetslang
    Host: Sierra Boone ➡️ / sieboone
    💡 / babbel
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Komentáře • 1,2K

  • @BabbelUSA
    @BabbelUSA  Před 2 lety +134

    What is something new you learned about AAVE from this video? 💭

    • @Passion84GodAlways
      @Passion84GodAlways Před 2 lety +17

      I've learned that Babbel USA just taught in this video what I had to minor in African-American Studies to learn because even in college the rich history of those of African descent was breezed over in my "Global" Studies class and over 90% of that semester was SOLELY focused on Europe.
      THANK YOU and BRAVO to Babbel and the host Sierra Boone! 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾❤️🖤💚

    • @BabbelUSA
      @BabbelUSA  Před 2 lety +3

      Thanks so much for watching!

    • @Passion84GodAlways
      @Passion84GodAlways Před 2 lety +6

      @@BabbelUSA - Thank YOU for such QUALITY and EDUCATIONAL content! 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾

    • @kyocerii1924
      @kyocerii1924 Před 2 lety +9

      I’ve learned y’all are a bunch of snowflakes✌🏾

    • @wet_jojo1015
      @wet_jojo1015 Před 2 lety +18

      @@kyocerii1924 I’ve learned that the people who call other’s snowflakes are the real motherfuckin snowflakes. Exit to the left.

  • @tonilou
    @tonilou Před 2 lety +97

    As a non-english-native I heard about aave SO late. When you just pick up English phrases from people in the internet, you don't get any of the cultural nuance

    • @conundrum2u
      @conundrum2u Před rokem

      no, this is actually political woke garbage. some people use some of these words and constructions but to say it's African American is disingenuous at best because it doesn't apply solely to black people and it never did. if anything it tries to erase post-emancipation people's struggles and put it under one umbrella for pride

    • @ptbro3334
      @ptbro3334 Před 11 měsíci

      It's not even a culture, it's just language used by illiterate folks

    • @cobaltpterodactyl
      @cobaltpterodactyl Před dnem

      Gotta be honest, most white Americans don't even recognize it. It's a shame.

  • @calmakisushi
    @calmakisushi Před 2 lety +572

    thanks a lot for this. honestly, as an asian woman, i wasnt fully aware of the words roaming around the internet and the context behind those. it’s true that social media has influenced the culture in many different ways and i just want to sincerely apologize to all the people i have been offended if i ever told some inappropriate words in the past. what we can and must do now is to EDUCATE people and to spread awareness, especially on the internet. and as we’re in the modern times now, canceling people is not a solution, rather teach them to respect and appreciate other’s cultures. i have seen so many ebonics on social media platforms, and thinking some are internet slangs, but clearly are not. maybe some are just adapting it with appreciation but mostly are possibly being ignorant. again, we all have to be responsible and mindful. thank you for being informative once again and i shall spread this message on the internet. ☺️

    • @Joe-ww5qf
      @Joe-ww5qf Před 2 lety +29

      That's some quality virtue signalling.

    • @Ruhuhi
      @Ruhuhi Před 2 lety +11

      The same had happened to me, I’m also glad that I’m now educated!!

    • @Set4LifeYT
      @Set4LifeYT Před 2 lety +5

      If u a horrible person just say dat

    • @zorubark
      @zorubark Před 2 lety +7

      I'm Brazilian and I had this problem too, I didn't know vibe check was AAVE until this video!

    • @jaxthewolf4572
      @jaxthewolf4572 Před 2 lety +1

      @kombucha. what

  • @onlyDoti
    @onlyDoti Před rokem +22

    when she said nadine be shopping i was like, “Nadine DO be shopping”

    • @DeadlyV1RU5
      @DeadlyV1RU5 Před rokem +5

      Nadine be like that 🤷‍♂️

    • @Tc-rn8lh
      @Tc-rn8lh Před rokem +1

      Hahaha, good ol’ Nadine

    • @roxyjackson4204
      @roxyjackson4204 Před měsícem

      OMG - lol. I was like, Nadine do be shoppin' 'noh .

  • @mizzmini45
    @mizzmini45 Před rokem +250

    I’m a black American female and I remember they use to tell us that we don’t speak a language. They use to mock us and clown us. We even had to code switch our words as best we could and accent. Now everyone wants to be us. It’s a joke

    • @woah2850
      @woah2850 Před rokem +4

      Hi! I have a question, I’ve recently been seeing people saying that slay is a part of AAVE, and wanted to know if it was ok for me, a white person, to say it? I never use it to mock people I usually say it to uplift people, like if someone said “your amazing!” Or “you killed this! 💕” or I just say it when something gets awkward bc I’m just a very awkward person. If it is bad, I’ll definitely stop! I would never mean to offend people. I just really wanna know, bc I don’t want people to think I’m being rude, when I don’t know. My worst fear is offending people by accident. 💀 It would be great if you responded lol, but ofc you don’t have to. 👍

    • @00droo00
      @00droo00 Před rokem +5

      @@woah2850 I think “slay” was developed by black queer folk, as a lot of popular AAVE-to-internet slang terms are. I am a white queer woman, and I have heard that some people in the lgbt community don’t like white people to say it and other words credited to black queer folk. But I would like to hear from a black person’s perspective.

    • @gamingwithjay8118
      @gamingwithjay8118 Před rokem +8

      @@00droo00I as a black person have no problem with y’all using the word slay it is word we use to uplift people actions and etc so it’s no problem for y’all to use it as well

    • @Amsidkdnsls
      @Amsidkdnsls Před rokem +5

      You was not those slaves that dont got anything to do with you

    • @shinypooka
      @shinypooka Před rokem +16

      We still have to code switch in "professional settings" without being judged, it gets exhausting sometimes.

  • @poni677rex8
    @poni677rex8 Před 2 lety +291

    As a non-black person and non-native english speaker, my entire immerssion for learning english has been unconsiously aave based, so I've always known that the phrases and pronuntiations I've been using come from black culture. I really hope im not insulting anyone by using it.

    • @BFSarthur
      @BFSarthur Před rokem

      Just as long as you aren't white

    • @poni677rex8
      @poni677rex8 Před rokem +7

      @@BFSarthur Im from latin america but i have identity issues, so I dont really know if Im white. Although I think I might have race privilege, Im not entirely white

    • @42yearold
      @42yearold Před rokem +3

      same thing here

    • @akeminakajima449
      @akeminakajima449 Před rokem +3

      @Liz Muschinski Now explain black

    • @justinwantou9145
      @justinwantou9145 Před rokem +31

      No, you're not insulting. As long as you're not incorporating any stereotypical movements, offensive immigrations, or insensitive physical characteristics of African Americans when you're speaking it. Like, rolling your eyes, "acting black", etc. After all, the entire South speaks AAVE even though they won't admit it. Southern whites speak AAVE and not their ancestors true language, which is standard American English. Lol.

  • @christinadodson6804
    @christinadodson6804 Před rokem +56

    As a kid who went to a nearly all-black school and lived in an almost all-black neighborhood this is the type of language my siblings and I would use. Everybody used it. I remember one of the schoolteachers, a black lady, who was frustrated at how we kids spoke and she was going to teach us how to speak the "King's English" (in St. Louis, LOL!). But as we grew up and eventually moved out of the area, we lost touch with AAVE and what AAVE is now has no relation to what it was then even though I remembered the examples and how they were used.

    • @kenmtb
      @kenmtb Před rokem +6

      I applaud your teacher for trying.

    • @ProteoEuthismos
      @ProteoEuthismos Před 5 měsíci

      RedNeck Moment

    • @BlueRain508
      @BlueRain508 Před 4 měsíci +1

      I grew up in the hood so AAVE was basically what I grew up speaking. My mother made fun of me for it and said I was trying to be black, everyone used to say I sounded like a black girl, and I was exposed to a lot of different cultures once I started traveling more. But can I still slip into the dialect around the right people? Hell yeah and that's how I feel more comfortable speaking if I'm going to be honest. Now I just feel like everyone would give me the side eye if I spoke like that because I'm white.

  • @omjup7972
    @omjup7972 Před 2 lety +13

    When I lived in Texas, whenever someone was about to do something, they would say something like, “I’m fixin’ to go….” Then I moved to NYC and it’d be something like, “I’m bout to go….”. I moved to Florida and I hear, “I’m finna go….”.

  • @IAMDPP
    @IAMDPP Před 2 lety +108

    During slavery, a slave was severely beating or even killed if he or she was trying to learn or gain an education. AAVE was a tool of survival during slavery. Think about it, if the slave was perceived ignorant, he or she isn’t a perceived threat to the general population at that time. AAVE is a mixture of African native languages, Aboriginal indigenous languages, & poor US Southern English.
    A lot people, did not realize, we code switch base on environment in which we find ourselves. My child will continue to embrace both SAE and AAVE.

    • @______xxfunky_space_panda4183
      @______xxfunky_space_panda4183 Před rokem +3

      It’s words

    • @dfredankey
      @dfredankey Před rokem +10

      @@______xxfunky_space_panda4183 yea let’s act like words don’t have meaning or history 😵😵😵

    • @______xxfunky_space_panda4183
      @______xxfunky_space_panda4183 Před rokem

      @@dfredankey bet, I’ll start by burning all the Bible’s

    • @Maya-yt
      @Maya-yt Před rokem

      @@______xxfunky_space_panda4183 ok

    • @politereminder6284
      @politereminder6284 Před rokem +9

      You are bring your _own_ baggage into this comment.
      Speaking AAVE has nothing do with "education" or being perceived as "ignorant". It's a creole, with African grammar rules.
      Speaking AAVE does not mean one is poor or ignorant🙄
      Also, southern America English is solely regional- has nothing to do with poverty.
      Code switching is a natural thing that happens across the world. It's not bad. It is always a way to fit in, survive , or express something with more intensity.

  • @swatis7594
    @swatis7594 Před 2 lety +151

    I had NO CLUE this was a dialect and any of the origins of it. Thank you so much for the video. I wish this was included in school instead of learning about it by pure happenstance. I literally just opened an email and had my world expanded 10x. Thank you Babbel team!

    • @take1842
      @take1842 Před rokem +10

      It’s not bro this shit a joke ngl

    • @Fari-100
      @Fari-100 Před rokem +10

      @Take 1 you say as you speaking it! 🤣🤣🤣 can't make this shit up 😅

    • @gokusamm
      @gokusamm Před rokem

      its just shitty english lmao

    • @take1842
      @take1842 Před rokem +4

      @@Fari-100 exactly it’s just slang terms idk why they’re trying to coin it as some kind of African American dialect thing

    • @take1842
      @take1842 Před rokem

      @@gokusamm exactly

  • @jathebest2835
    @jathebest2835 Před 2 lety +231

    As a Korean who is passionate about learning the English language, I learned more about AAVE from this video~! Thanks👍

    • @muhammadisaac07
      @muhammadisaac07 Před 2 lety +8

      I am learning English for understand the vast internet 🥰🥰🇧🇩🇧🇩

    • @muhammadisaac07
      @muhammadisaac07 Před 2 lety +2

      @@LevRiv
      Thank you so much 🥰🥰

    • @MrHowardMoon
      @MrHowardMoon Před rokem +19

      I'd steer well away from AAVE if you're trying to learn English. It's an abhorrent dialect that sounds poorly educated and vulgar.

    • @jamescarter9208
      @jamescarter9208 Před rokem

      @@MrHowardMoon I could not agree more. You cannot learn the language properly if you learn from idiots.

    • @jaxthewolf4572
      @jaxthewolf4572 Před rokem +12

      @@MrHowardMoon Lol, "poorly educated" I bet you feel the same about patois 🤣

  • @MariaEduarda-nr2fe
    @MariaEduarda-nr2fe Před 9 měsíci +36

    thanks for this, i'm a brazilian english teacher and this was a very educational video that helped a lot to create better classes! I'll be showing it to my students

    • @BabbelUSA
      @BabbelUSA  Před 9 měsíci +3

      🧡

    • @juliaalvessoares
      @juliaalvessoares Před 7 měsíci +1

      Oi Maria Eduarda, nice to meet you :) Também sou prof de inglês independente por aqui, explorando esse tópico e trazendo ele pras aulas. O que você acha de marcarmos uma chamada pra trocar ideia sobre como estamos fazendo nossos preparos? Penso que poderia ser muito interessante e útil pras duas. It's always great partnering with another dedicated teacher 🌼

    • @ProteoEuthismos
      @ProteoEuthismos Před 5 měsíci

      Mam, Why would you use redneck speach in your clases?

  • @justinwantou9145
    @justinwantou9145 Před rokem +81

    Most "slang" terms like "shade" and "tea" are specifically terms created out of the LGBTQ+ culture of African Americans. Slang isn't a dialect, as much as it's a linguistic expression to communicate. They both contribute to AAVE language.

    • @drrd4127
      @drrd4127 Před rokem +15

      It's NOT tea! It's T!!! Short for truth!
      Spill the truth is spill the T!
      "Spill it" is a very Common expression in the UK and has been for decades upon decades and it means "say something" so spill the T is say some truth.
      Tea is a type of plant that you brew and drink.

    • @reigenlucilfer6154
      @reigenlucilfer6154 Před rokem +1

      @@drrd4127 thanks for being sane and unwoke

    • @amerika9225
      @amerika9225 Před rokem +4

      Here we go, child truth be told, lgbtqlmop needs to be called out for acting like black women

    • @yourdad587
      @yourdad587 Před rokem +7

      @@amerika9225 black women don't behave in one specific way.

    • @alejandroabreha4516
      @alejandroabreha4516 Před rokem +1

      😂wtf? No bruh

  • @kaonashiyakuza
    @kaonashiyakuza Před rokem +23

    I'm from north Africa but I started learning and being interested in "english" by watching afro American shows and sitcoms cuz they felt more relatable, and how i talk rn is based from that.
    This was rather informative

    • @jaxthewolf4572
      @jaxthewolf4572 Před rokem

      Africans are our brothers and sisters anyway. ☺

    • @kay-collins
      @kay-collins Před rokem +3

      They felt more relatable to you in Africa? How did they feel more relatable? This is a genuine question btw I was just wondering how our cultures compare in that.

    • @ShahrukhKhan_OfficialYT
      @ShahrukhKhan_OfficialYT Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@kay-collinsgenerally south asians, Arabs, and Africans are raised similarly and have the same experiences abroad.

    • @kay-collins
      @kay-collins Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@ShahrukhKhan_OfficialYT huh? I’m asking them how did Black AMERICAN shows feel more relatable to them.

    • @ShahrukhKhan_OfficialYT
      @ShahrukhKhan_OfficialYT Před 7 měsíci

      @@kay-collins bc black people have a more vibrant culture similar to middle eastern / brown people i general. i think they were comparing black shows vs white shows.

  • @xchrysantha
    @xchrysantha Před rokem +71

    Maybe it's because I grew up in an area with predominantly black and Hispanic population, but I can always tell when a new internet slang is AAVE. There's just something so distinct about it. Thank you for creating this video and educating myself and all of us on the internet about this!!!💕

    • @Vid_Master
      @Vid_Master Před rokem +1

      Yea it is distinct alright!!

    • @kay-collins
      @kay-collins Před rokem +7

      You can absolutely always tell. The people saying “oh I didn’t know that was AAVE” I often wonder if they’re telling the truth bc how can you not tell?? Smh

    • @Bluebird776
      @Bluebird776 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@kay-collins personally my first language isnt english so often i learned the words from internet. This is why i generally cant tell apart if its AAVE or not. So i asumme most people who didnt know are foreginers like me .

  • @karishajohnson6537
    @karishajohnson6537 Před rokem +21

    Great video. I'd say the shaming, devaluing, and ridicule of AAVE is not only racism but also long-term xenophobia. We have to remember Black Americans were brought to America as enslaved people from other countries. Our accents, vernacular or dialect (and existence) is given the same sentiment "Speak English" and "Go back to Africa". It's not only racist but xenophobic even though we've been here hundreds of years now. Plus we're safest speaking with our natural accents and using our vernacular within our communities.

  • @semiramisbonaparte1627
    @semiramisbonaparte1627 Před 2 měsíci +8

    Lmao people are really feeding into this

  • @elimushroom8794
    @elimushroom8794 Před 2 lety +34

    THANK YOU

    • @elimushroom8794
      @elimushroom8794 Před 2 lety +4

      @PIZZA im not proud of being ignorant that’s why im learning about these topics

    • @Alex-gh1lx
      @Alex-gh1lx Před 2 lety

      @PIZZA Standard American English is a dialect, just like AAVE. It's (obviously) descended from British English. Do you think that everyone who speaks American English is also being willfully ignorant? If not, your logic is inconsistent.

    • @Alex-gh1lx
      @Alex-gh1lx Před 2 lety

      @PIZZA @PIZZA ​"Dialect: (noun)
      1. a particular form of a language which is peculiar to a specific region *or social group*.
      2. _Linguistics_. a variety of a language that is distinguished from other varieties of the same language by features of phonology, grammar, and vocabulary, and by its use by a group of speakers who are set off from others geographically *or socially*."
      From your other comments it's clear you're a racist scumbag with an agenda to push about Black people being dumb, so I don't actually expect you to critically consider your position on this. But facts don't care about your feelings, and you're incorrect.

  • @ambergreene1208
    @ambergreene1208 Před rokem +4

    Google the origins of AAVE. You will see that it actually originated in Europe in the 1600s and was brought to America by European immigrants who settled in the southern portion of North America, especially Virginia. Listen to the pronunciations of older European dialects and you will hear the accents and verbiage are extremely similar.

    • @jacklyneverage3881
      @jacklyneverage3881 Před 11 měsíci +2

      That's a lie. No it didn't. It originated with Africans learning English and still retaining certain speaking rules or grammar rules of their languages of origin. Stop being a typical lying and deceiving European! No Europeans talk like us at all.

  • @RaiderNation126
    @RaiderNation126 Před 2 lety +10

    Anybody else going down the AAVE rabbit hole right now since you found out it's a thing?

    • @Khandiee
      @Khandiee Před 2 lety +1

      I just thought that’s just how I speak. Now I’m learning Ebonics has a new name.

  • @PaytonsOwnProductions
    @PaytonsOwnProductions Před 2 lety +206

    A necessary video that should be seen by many. Good job!

    • @muhammadisaac07
      @muhammadisaac07 Před 2 lety

      This channel is extremely underrated 😔

    • @dubiouscaesar3709
      @dubiouscaesar3709 Před 2 lety +3

      @kombucha. You don't learn it, you unlearn grammar and then it just sort of comes.

  • @yelsmig9114
    @yelsmig9114 Před 2 lety +77

    Very informative video!
    As an English teacher abroad, it’s sad when teachers who speak AAVE are told that their dialect is “wrong” and should not be taught…
    Although I am not African American, I’m happy that I can introduce this dialect and its cultural influence to my students when discussing different ways English is spoken.
    Thank you again for such a great video!

    • @BonafidexDopeness
      @BonafidexDopeness Před 2 lety +2

      I don’t recommend you attempting reintroduce culture to the very people who brought it to you

    • @yelsmig9114
      @yelsmig9114 Před 2 lety +2

      @@BonafidexDopeness I don’t believe I follow you. Could you elaborate?

    • @dubiouscaesar3709
      @dubiouscaesar3709 Před 2 lety +5

      If you're an English teacher then you should realise that aave isn't a dialect, but a result of shunning literature.

    • @yelsmig9114
      @yelsmig9114 Před 2 lety

      @@dubiouscaesar3709 I understand. Thank you for your input.

    • @chanelmindyabusiness4947
      @chanelmindyabusiness4947 Před rokem +3

      @@dubiouscaesar3709 no, you’re wrong.. it is a dialect.

  • @disco_depression
    @disco_depression Před 2 lety +35

    As a queer foreigner who speaks English as a third language I love AAVE. Thanks to who??? Thanks to African American history 💚

  • @mscrowfoot
    @mscrowfoot Před 2 lety +10

    OMG! This is some amazing information and a beautiful presentation that easily leads to a new paradigm. I am one of those that has "corrected," though usually only silently to myself, the metathetical constructions such as aks for ask. Now I won't feel the need to cringe when I hear this anymore. THANK YOU!!!

  • @Golden_glow
    @Golden_glow Před 2 lety +13

    This video was HIGHLY informative! I loved it. I honestly get annoyed when people who are not black do this for views, get fame and are called creative and cool meanwhile blacks use it and are called uneducated and non creative and ghetto. It honestly annoys me like black people cant have a language for us without everyone nipping at it for a come up. Especially the tiktokers 🙄.

  • @mackdigest
    @mackdigest Před 2 lety +10

    I had no idea this is what I was speaking all my life.

  • @Kenshin6321
    @Kenshin6321 Před 4 měsíci +8

    This video feels like satire. It also feels like they are saying African American English is so devolved that it has to be put in its own category. You know, the more you single out African Americans, the more you confirm why stereotypes still exist. There's no point to this video.

    • @djaund.1ce
      @djaund.1ce Před 3 měsíci +1

      Huh? This is literally a video showing you where popular phrases in today’s culture come from. How did you get pissed? 😂 LMAOSHSISJAJKAMQKA
      Are you gonna get mad the next time someone tells you where the word hamburger comes from, or hell even modern Shakespeare 😱

    • @Kenshin6321
      @Kenshin6321 Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@djaund.1ce no, it's not showing you where it comes from, it's trying to tell you this is a legit way is speaking English. What's the actual word for this type of language? You probably don't even know. Go on, go find it, and if you don't reply within 24 hours, I'll give you the answer.

    • @djaund.1ce
      @djaund.1ce Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@Kenshin6321 Well this IS a legit way of speaking English. The same way ANY “Vernacular English” (VE) is used like how southern people say “butter me up and call me a biscuit” or how people from the west coast like to say “Im down” in reference to them being “ok” with something. Vernacular phrases has existed since the beginning of language. Also I feel like we’re mature enough to understand language transcends biases, and culture. Like do you think people get THIS mad that midwestern people call soda “pop” NO because they’re mature enough to understand and appreciate different ways of being, because that’s what makes life beautiful. The reason why black communities talked this way is because of their cultural standpoints in society same thing with their names (I advise you to do your own research). Also I THINK the word you’re looking for is Ebonics?

    • @Kenshin6321
      @Kenshin6321 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@djaund.1ce Ding ding ding ^_^. You are correct, but this is most certainly not a correct way to speak English. Never has been, never will be.

    • @tacomiester
      @tacomiester Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@djaund.1cethose things aren’t even close to being the same. A saying that exists in a particular part of the world is fine that’s not a grammatical issue nor is it wrong by any standard of English because it’s just a saying. However, using “don’t” where you should be using “doesn’t” doesn’t let you claim you just speak a dialect it’s just grammatically wrong. It’s stupid speak made by slums and assigned to a race that’s then being disguised as a dialect.

  • @robbiewilkins5353
    @robbiewilkins5353 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you so much for this video, it did really help me get a better understanding!

  • @itsmejt9283
    @itsmejt9283 Před 2 lety +7

    You learn new things every day. Thank you for such a great informative video!

  • @WorkingmanX
    @WorkingmanX Před rokem +8

    Wrong. This dialect started in southern and western England. In the 1600 and 1700s. It was brought to the southern states here by them. Read some Thomas Sowell.

    • @hannahlindemann4190
      @hannahlindemann4190 Před rokem +1

      So much for cultural appropriation. But it is an ugly slang anyway

    • @WorkingmanX
      @WorkingmanX Před rokem +3

      @@hannahlindemann4190 lol. Right? And I agree.

    • @hannahlindemann4190
      @hannahlindemann4190 Před rokem

      @@WorkingmanX Yes, these double standards. But honestly, I've always thought that this slang (whether spoken by whites, blacks, asians i don't care) sounds really awful. I can hardly take a person seriously. I don't understand how you can be proud of the fact that a certain cultural group has adopted this bad and uneducated English and then present it as something totally great and unique. But maybe it's just me

    • @WorkingmanX
      @WorkingmanX Před rokem +2

      @@hannahlindemann4190 It's not just you. I feel embarrassed for folks, when I hear them talk that way.

    • @Jujube285
      @Jujube285 Před rokem

      @@WorkingmanX
      No one gives a f*ck what you think.
      If black people breathe wrong we’re even sh*tted on for that.😂
      Mind your business & stay the f*ck out of ours.

  • @user-fx3ts7vt4n
    @user-fx3ts7vt4n Před rokem +12

    Wtf can we just talk how we wanna talk why are people entitled to a dialect when they haven’t even experienced slavery. Just because my great great grandpa was a veteran doesn’t qualify me for veterans discounts at a store even thought I am his descendant.

    • @jaxthewolf4572
      @jaxthewolf4572 Před rokem +5

      This isn't about slavery. Some use AAVE to mock or disrespect black Americans. There's also a tendency for society to think it's no longer ghetto if a white person is saying it. That's where the problem lies. I don't have an issue with non blacks using AAVE however just as long as they aren't misusing it or mocking us

    • @boundless0023
      @boundless0023 Před rokem +4

      @@jaxthewolf4572 most of the youth just use it as slang,I feel like it’s more appropriated to teens then adults

  • @chavez9116
    @chavez9116 Před 2 lety +26

    I never realized I was talking AAVE. Im not black either. I just grew up in a heavily populated AA city. My school was nothing but blacks/ hispanics. This was in the 90s so of course there was no social media. Do I just change my whole way of speaking so people dont get the wrong idea of me? But at the same time I can't change how I speak cuz once again thats how I grew up. 😟 now ima look like one of these dang kids pretending to talk a certain way cuz its "a trend" smh . 😩

    • @jaxthewolf4572
      @jaxthewolf4572 Před 2 lety +27

      Black american here, It is 100% understandable and normal to adopt a certain thing because you grew up around it. Language is something that is learned, rather than input in us. I don't think it is an issue for you to speak like this at all especially in that regard. But the people who are speaking AAVE just cause it's trendy are the real examples of people appropriating our culture, they arent being respectful. But since you aren't one of them, and it occurred naturally for you, you are good.

    • @tatttoon
      @tatttoon Před 2 lety +12

      It’s not a problem at all, if this is how you talk. AS BLACK PEOPLE, we don’t like when it’s being mocked by other races or people doing it just for social media. I’m from Cali (LA), and Hispanics talk like this all the time because we all grew up around each other. I’ve never heard a Hispanic person, purposely doing it and it being cringy! It’s always them other people.

    • @itz_xavia4749
      @itz_xavia4749 Před 2 lety

      Same 😭

    • @garlicbutter8733
      @garlicbutter8733 Před rokem +3

      thanks internet strangers! now i dont feel bad about growing up with my black extended family and "stealing" their dialect!
      i'm a asian/hispanic btw, i always have to explain im not black just because my cousins are 😅

    • @PeterGriffin11
      @PeterGriffin11 Před rokem +1

      No one has a right to tell you how you can or can't speak regardless of what your race is black or white no one owns words.

  • @kiwiana6190
    @kiwiana6190 Před 2 lety +7

    I learned a lot from this, thank you so much!

  • @PremiumKibble
    @PremiumKibble Před 2 lety +136

    This is very insightful and delivered with such a warm and inclusive energy. Breaking down syntax differences between SAE and AAVE really puts me in the right frame of mind to let go of the deeply flawed and narrow definition of "proper" English that I inherited at home and in school. Time well spent.

  • @wet_jojo1015
    @wet_jojo1015 Před 2 lety +31

    Thank you for this video! Sierra’s skin looks absolutely stunning!

  • @mattiexo
    @mattiexo Před rokem +2

    People that are not of color who grow up in black communities and use it should not be blamed for using it. Just came here to learn about this from a video saying white people should not use it, when it’s not their fault they grow up with people who use it around them.

  • @davidmccarroll2280
    @davidmccarroll2280 Před rokem +2

    What do you think? Is AAVE descended from African Creole languages or from the west of England, perhaps a mix of both?

    • @tazzy4624
      @tazzy4624 Před rokem

      its just english with a few twangs in american english meaning that its not proper no similarities with african creole or whatever.

  • @mkyuigi4228
    @mkyuigi4228 Před 2 lety +43

    Thank you so much for this, I hope more people would see this and get educated 💕

    • @muhammadisaac07
      @muhammadisaac07 Před 2 lety

      I hope so

    • @dubiouscaesar3709
      @dubiouscaesar3709 Před 2 lety +9

      Sorry but aave is due to a lack of education, particularly an ignorance towards literature.

    • @conundrum2u
      @conundrum2u Před rokem +2

      this is miseducation

    • @crazylikeafox7341
      @crazylikeafox7341 Před rokem

      Get educated.
      AAVE is not derived from black culture. It comes from white people in Southern England in the 1600s

    • @AEF95
      @AEF95 Před rokem +1

      Now they also want to claim words . Lol

  • @wjatube
    @wjatube Před 2 měsíci +6

    What's next AAVE for math? The answer may not be proper so we'll just redefine numbers? What about standards? What about the majority of American blacks that don't speak AAVE, are they not black? Wow.

  • @iheartigloos
    @iheartigloos Před 2 lety +5

    This was really informative and easy to understand 👍

  • @vincentjacquelinegunn9489

    Thank you. Explained very well.

  • @allashuwa_
    @allashuwa_ Před 2 lety +45

    videos like this are much more needed, our dialect doesn't deserve to be talked down on.

    • @lolerie
      @lolerie Před rokem +3

      🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @jamescarter9208
      @jamescarter9208 Před rokem +8

      No it belongs in the trash.

    • @Goatboy12
      @Goatboy12 Před rokem +8

      @@jamescarter9208 I can't believe we as a race, are going to low that we're claiming words that are purely just slang. It's making AA culture pathetic and not at-all unique.

    • @jamescarter9208
      @jamescarter9208 Před rokem +1

      @@Goatboy12 The black community is a god damn joke

    • @glizzynocondiments
      @glizzynocondiments Před rokem

      @@Goatboy12 its ridding the world of "culture", people are getting possessive to feel special. call me crazy, but im pretty sure the entire purpose of culture is for it to be spread through humanity (regardless of color or race). its insane to live in this world lol

  • @piamae2929
    @piamae2929 Před 2 lety +3

    thank you so much for this video

  • @effmltalks
    @effmltalks Před rokem +1

    Oh my god this was BRILLIANT!! Thank you for enlightening us!!

  • @Sal.K--BC
    @Sal.K--BC Před 4 měsíci +1

    Even some old dialects of British and American English used to pronounce 'ask' as 'aks'. From a Farmville Herald article: "It derives from the Middle English form 'acsion' and was in fact used by Chaucer and later Queen Elizabeth I. Eventually speakers of the standard variety of English chose the variation 'ask' over 'aks' and 'aks' was retained only in more rural and more isolated dialects of English."

  • @lucasdotcomm
    @lucasdotcomm Před rokem +5

    Y’all petty for this one.
    Oops was ther aave

  • @user-pz6kq2tv9m
    @user-pz6kq2tv9m Před 2 lety +64

    thank you for this. i try to educate myself as much as possible to avoid disrespecting people

    • @James-lu4hb
      @James-lu4hb Před 2 lety

      @PIZZA Whyte Americans have no culture.

    • @joannaa9561
      @joannaa9561 Před 2 lety +10

      @@James-lu4hb that's disrespectful to say

    • @Fanwithnblades
      @Fanwithnblades Před rokem +2

      @PIZZA did you know when the American English dialect was coming along British speaking people were telling them they were speaking wrong?American English became a dialect much as aave so yes don't be disrespectful language change over time

    • @yourdad587
      @yourdad587 Před rokem

      @@Fanwithnblades Americans still are...

    • @Fanwithnblades
      @Fanwithnblades Před rokem +1

      @@yourdad587 still are?what? Speaking wrong?ha it's too late it's already diffrent

  • @jeffmungai4494
    @jeffmungai4494 Před 2 lety +6

    Dang this crazy, I grew up in Atl so I been talking like this lol and I’m just now realizing I’ve been using AAVE all my life

    • @trlpop7911
      @trlpop7911 Před rokem +3

      What's even crazier is that if you are black and don't talk like this your own people look at you funny...sigh. aave has literally been a thorn in my side, not because of the dialect itself but because of the ostracization if one cant speak it in the black community.

  • @ericeyerman6285
    @ericeyerman6285 Před rokem +2

    Okay, I watched this to know what AAVE means. This is just English, which has become the common language and evolution of it to type of community and locations.

    • @thechosenone172
      @thechosenone172 Před 9 měsíci +1

      It’s not just English it’s a cool way to communicate with your friends that’s why y’all copy us

    • @ericeyerman6285
      @ericeyerman6285 Před 9 měsíci

      @thechosenone172 Sorry, I think I didn't get my point across right. I was not saying that AAVE was English. I was saying English is basically a common language. While AAVE is not it specifically adapted to a group of people from one community, like people from New York have different in the way they speak and New Jersey have a difference in the way they talk.

  • @mori_analogi
    @mori_analogi Před 2 lety +11

    I love AAVE, it's structured so much cooler than other English varieties

  • @b4ng075
    @b4ng075 Před 2 lety +6

    thanks so much for the video! Very informative, really glad I watched! Hope everyone's staying safe ❤️❤️❤️

  • @paraboxorsomething4718
    @paraboxorsomething4718 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for this 😊

  • @user-mp2pt1wh7q
    @user-mp2pt1wh7q Před 2 lety +129

    I came here to educate myself on the matter and this video was really really really great! :D I really thank and respect the community and now know history for this, you guys are amazing! :D thank you!!

  • @qmsesport6965
    @qmsesport6965 Před 2 lety +5

    Good job am Egyptian and I love America thx for explain

  • @KingCease
    @KingCease Před rokem +3

    I like how she made it seem like Ebonics ain’t wrong. Lol. Like it’s a pidgin or something. Even pidgin is wrong. But I see what she’s saying. English has rules though. And AAVE doesn’t abide by those rules which makes it improper.

  • @RoseAerin
    @RoseAerin Před 3 měsíci

    This video was very informative and helpful! Thank you for creating it and sharing with the world!

  • @ScorpioMami415
    @ScorpioMami415 Před 2 měsíci

    I am very fluent in Black English and have been speaking it my whole entire life. It's a Creole mixed Caribbean dialect and people don't know that. For example listen to how our brothas and sisters in Jamaica speak AAVE has been around in our culture since the transalantic slave trade. Many Black-Americans were stripped from their languages and culture. AAVE was all Black-Americans had. This was how we communicate amongst eachother. It may be funny to most but this is actually a language and a dialect.Our mothers grandmothers uncles all speak it. On the streets in the hoods we speak it all over the world and in certain parts of the Caribbean Islands.

  • @kreiziness7485
    @kreiziness7485 Před rokem +6

    these are literally just words lmao

  • @Rylee_G
    @Rylee_G Před rokem +6

    I'm 3 minutes in and I'm realizing how much I don't know about the history. They didn't teach any of this in school. Thank you so much I have a lot more to learn!

  • @sophialicious_
    @sophialicious_ Před rokem

    Thank you for this :)

  • @annndy_ver.
    @annndy_ver. Před 6 měsíci

    woahhh, as a non-native english speaker that earned through the internet, i didn't know about this! This is super interesting and im glad i know about this! Thank you so much!

  • @Whypeoplebad
    @Whypeoplebad Před 2 lety +8

    I will use aave. For me it's English.
    Now cry to sleep. Ain't nobody got time to care

    • @Frankybeanselevators
      @Frankybeanselevators Před 2 lety +4

      Why this be racist?? My man just wrote in AAVE. Nothing wrong with that.

    • @Khandiee
      @Khandiee Před 2 lety +7

      Honestly to me it’s just a dialect that you speak. And you just wrote in it perfectly 👏🏽

    • @jaxthewolf4572
      @jaxthewolf4572 Před 2 lety +1

      Do what you want boy, but to follow up AAVE condescendingly to mock AAs, after speaking standard English is super cringe not gonna lie 🤣

    • @Khandiee
      @Khandiee Před 2 lety

      @BearyCity first of all it is real. And it wasn’t called aave in the beginning. White people chnaged the name of it. And if your African you have no room to talk because this has to do with black Americans. So stay in your lane. And I as a Black American don’t have a problem with anyone using it. I will say the gistory behind it is racist so that’s why some Black Americans get upset when others use it because in the past we were discriminated against for speaking that way naturally.

    • @Khandiee
      @Khandiee Před 2 lety

      @BearyCity unless your speaking of the first African slaves of America when they were learning to speak English that’s a stretch. It used to be called Ebonics. Look it up. Which is an American thing. Try again. And I’m not gatekeeping anything. Try reading my post again. I have never been against anyone using it but don’t try to pretend it’s not real.

  • @Kay3Kay3
    @Kay3Kay3 Před rokem +6

    As a southern, non POC who uses AAVE in daily language, Im glad that the POC communtiy is getting the recognition and credit they deserve for the amazing dialect! ❣

    • @oziatv7321
      @oziatv7321 Před rokem +7

      *black people... not "people of color"

    • @wondersmith5403
      @wondersmith5403 Před rokem +3

      @@oziatv7321 who cares

    • @SktUGLUB
      @SktUGLUB Před rokem +2

      @@wondersmith5403 because they’re two different things… I suppose on a video about language it’s important to use the correct terms… nahmean?

    • @venny7190
      @venny7190 Před rokem +2

      Nigga do NOT use aave. PERIODT.

    • @wondersmith5403
      @wondersmith5403 Před rokem +5

      @@venny7190 they can ues what they wants to

  • @otroserhumano9119
    @otroserhumano9119 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank u for the video for real

  • @JusCJay
    @JusCJay Před 2 lety +2

    She did dat💁🏽‍♀️Great video!

  • @varhah
    @varhah Před rokem +3

    This is a great short, well spoken, and well edited video. Very informative!

  • @ebsolsbeerbottle3002
    @ebsolsbeerbottle3002 Před 2 lety +44

    I hate how people are like "omg why are you gatekeeping aave, it's just internet slang☹️☹️☹️" bro... WHAT ABOUT THE "AA" PART???

    • @littlecat5293
      @littlecat5293 Před 2 lety +23

      Everyone thinks they can use AA culture without giving anything back to them.

    • @unknowns78
      @unknowns78 Před 2 lety +14

      Slangs are for everybody. And everybody is allowed to speak a certain dialect if it's not mocking someone.

    • @ebsolsbeerbottle3002
      @ebsolsbeerbottle3002 Před 2 lety +34

      @@unknowns78 another non black person trying to have an opinion on others culture, nothing new

    • @unknowns78
      @unknowns78 Před 2 lety +11

      @@ebsolsbeerbottle3002 Wow ignorant alert because I DON'T agree with you i'm not part of your culture. I'm sorry to break t to you but the world doesn't revolve around you. And you can have an opinion on something even if you're not a part of it. Sorry but mature a little (:

    • @raijongriggs2031
      @raijongriggs2031 Před 2 lety +17

      @@ebsolsbeerbottle3002 lmaoooo I never seen black folks take MULTIPLE slang words from other cultures.its always someone on the outside lmao

  • @lindalaufer2949
    @lindalaufer2949 Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks for the video! I'm researching AAVE for a school project on different cultures so this was a helpful source.

    • @johnbattle7518
      @johnbattle7518 Před 5 měsíci

      Most blacks don't know that AAve has its origins in Northern England and Scotland

    • @djaund.1ce
      @djaund.1ce Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@johnbattle7518 Sure, Jan 😊

    • @johnbattle7518
      @johnbattle7518 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@djaund.1ceUpvoting your own comments don't make them good ones.
      White southerners come from Northern Great Britain. The word "be" he be, she be, you be. Instead of he is, she is ,you are is from Cornwell England where many pirates came from.
      "Ahoy, mateys! In case ye not be knowing, the 19th day of September"
      Now go to a corner call yourself a victim of raycis and cry about it ignant.

  • @7th_dwarf542
    @7th_dwarf542 Před rokem +1

    Not to take anything from AAVE, this is not an internet phenomenon. This is a GTA5 phenomenon.
    To the topic: very good and informative. Thank you, I learned something

  • @procrastination2204
    @procrastination2204 Před 2 lety +36

    Is it appropriate to use AAVE as a white person? And how does it differ when you don't know that something is AAVE? I'm a white guy, but I live in the South, and most of my coworkers and also a lot of my closer friends are young black people. As a result, when I hear the people around me using slang I haven't heard before, it's difficult to tell whether it is internet slang, AAVE, or slang they came up with themselves. But naturally as humans we like to copy the people around us's speaking styles. I just always feel a little weird picking up speaking styles from my black friends bc I don't know if something would be taken as offensive coming from me.
    (obligatory note that I'm not talking about obvious things like the n word but just about the types of expressions she was giving in the video that are big social media trendy phrases that originated from AAVE)

    • @joannaa9561
      @joannaa9561 Před 2 lety +3

      I wanna know too

    • @Artemis583
      @Artemis583 Před 2 lety +12

      Yes, it's cultural appropriation. Southern dialect is not exactly the same but there is overlap obviously.

    • @Gobackto4chan
      @Gobackto4chan Před 2 lety +46

      Black people usually don’t care as long as it isn’t awkward or out of context. If it sounds like a word you normally use they’ll let you rock, ask any deli owner.

    • @SnrKagemusha
      @SnrKagemusha Před 2 lety +32

      Like another commenter said, it's all on how natural you sound with it. One of my best friends of almost 20 years is a huge white guy, but he grew up living in the same area I did, and so parts of how he speaks is AAVE. It sounds super natural coming from him, like it's not put on for fun or just to say a cool thing, the usage and inflections and tone is all correct, and he'll hit you with some ooold slang that you really only know if you were speaking like that pre-social media.
      As for what words to use and not, that's tough. If you see or hear some word you want to use, treat it like any other word and ask what it means/look it up. Ask the person that used it, Google, or Urban Dictionary. I would say stay away from slang or trends that stems from recent gang culture (some are in the wider pop culture already, like the term OG, so those I guess are on the table, if a bit cringey). Personally, I stay away from slang that was super insider stuff in various queer communities (I'm part of it, but wasn't in the clubs or have a huge circle of friends to pick up on the slang from, so I don't).
      But yeah, in general if it sounds natural and correct, we don't trip. If it sounds inauthentic but otherwise correct, it's awkward. If it's inauthentic and incorrect, I personally take it like mockery and would pull up aside and have a word

    • @procrastination2204
      @procrastination2204 Před 2 lety +2

      @@SnrKagemusha Thanks for the detailed info! Part of the problem for me is that I've only been in the South for about four years so I haven't really gotten accustomed to the regional differences in speech and also wouldn't know what phrases were used pre-social media. But your explanations seem helpful!

  • @xolang
    @xolang Před 2 lety +18

    "don't" is not the conjugation of 3rd person plural. it's more like the "general conjugation" (if that's a term 😅) since in standard english "don't" is used for ALL subjects except 3rd person singular.
    nice video btw. thank you.

  • @servantofaeie1569
    @servantofaeie1569 Před 14 dny

    AAVE's history is not being erased by influencing internet slang, it's being expanded... Being the primary influence or origin of the speech on the internet is new history being written.

  • @zer0s0und
    @zer0s0und Před 28 dny +1

    You have an accent which is quite distinct for us who have English as a second language. For example, sometimes you say "impor'ant" instead of "important", where the comma stands for an almost mute "t". See it happening here 5:05. Is this part of the AAVE heritage?

  • @selfsovereign8047
    @selfsovereign8047 Před 2 lety +6

    If you grow up African American only hearing aave, you need to learn standard American English as well to be taken seriously.

    • @imushrooms4011
      @imushrooms4011 Před 2 lety +1

      We really don’t

    • @entpsshadow4455
      @entpsshadow4455 Před 2 lety

      @@imushrooms4011 lol

    • @selfsovereign8047
      @selfsovereign8047 Před 2 lety +1

      @@imushrooms4011 your a child, you’ll understand when you need a job

    • @fitzcannon
      @fitzcannon Před 2 lety +1

      Most people can code-switch from aave to standard English.

    • @selfsovereign8047
      @selfsovereign8047 Před 2 lety +5

      @@fitzcannon Thats what I was saying. You need to learn American stand English or how to code switch to be taken seriously intellectually and professionally. Also necessary to know if you’re in a debate with somebody of another race, you won’t get your point across as effective using aave or Ebonics.

  • @bradmacdonald7626
    @bradmacdonald7626 Před 2 lety +11

    Very clear breakdown, thank you.
    Also, the subjunctive use of the verb be is used by Newfoundlanders, in Canada.

  • @emilyannfrancesmay3919

    Well thought out and presented, Sierra. I agree with you all the way. Thanks for raising my awareness.

  • @wawonaeon4910
    @wawonaeon4910 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Sierra's English is easy to listen.

  • @kayalexander6435
    @kayalexander6435 Před 2 lety +5

    this video was remarkable.

    • @yourdad587
      @yourdad587 Před rokem

      Remarkably idiotic & narcissistic, pseudo-intellectual and delusory, sure

  • @nyashad4062
    @nyashad4062 Před rokem +4

    Why did she add LGBTQ to the topic regarding AAVE? White LGBTQ people are African American too? The force teaming is ridiculous, give credit where credit is due.

  • @KamzArtz
    @KamzArtz Před 2 lety

    Thanks this helps i joined a dc recently and had no idea what aave is, and this helps

  • @subz5201
    @subz5201 Před rokem +2

    So it’s “if you speak my religion’s language that is 1400 years old your racist and it takes away the meaning of my language”

  • @galaxyqueen3064
    @galaxyqueen3064 Před 2 lety +65

    AAVE is a beautiful dialect! Thank you so much for educating us on this topic.

    • @lolerie
      @lolerie Před rokem +10

      Yeah, right. 🤡

    • @perfectmoment0
      @perfectmoment0 Před rokem +3

      Galaxy Queen right and the beauty about it no other race have to like it, it’s our it’s not for them why do they always got something to say about our stuff and then they end up appropriating it 😂🤣 anyway wow! Are they jealous?🤫🤔🫢🥱

    • @yourdad587
      @yourdad587 Před rokem +2

      @@perfectmoment0 it's no black uniqueness or cultural precondition to be poorly or lacking in education in ability to communicate

  • @thomasklugh4345
    @thomasklugh4345 Před 2 lety +6

    I understand that all rules in all languages are by convention, but how far can we stretch that? Isn't it possible that someone could say something to someone else, and it's taken in a way the original speaker didn't intend?

  • @Mia11223
    @Mia11223 Před rokem

    Just one question:
    Is speaking or using the terms that you mentioned in the video like "shade" or "period" offensive??
    Like should you use them or not? Can I use those words after I know the origin or is it still nah??
    Please, I need answers..

    • @roscspctals
      @roscspctals Před rokem +3

      you shouldn’t use them in the context she displayed them. using the word, “period” as example to talk about the punctuation mark or as a menstrual term is ok.

  • @janiiahbryant5156
    @janiiahbryant5156 Před rokem +2

    Oh so I technically already speak this and all the black people around me. Just never knew it was called AAVE. Thank you for educating me about something I’m doing unintentionally 😊

  • @Donillini
    @Donillini Před 2 lety +46

    I’m glad this video exists so that we have a good jumping off point to what this actually means.
    I think part of the problem is that English doesn’t really have accents or dialects that change grammatical rules. I took Italian in High School and learned that there are some very heavy dialects that change words and grammar. I’m thinking this is a similar situation. However, like in my Italian class, we need to make sure that children are learning the universal English rules.
    As for people using it, I understand the historical background, but America does take ideas and phrases from all cultures and make it their own. I do see a little bit of a silver lining that it’s being accepted by the general public which keeps it alive

    • @patrikvavro1611
      @patrikvavro1611 Před rokem +2

      English definitely has, as you put it, very heavy dialects that change words and grammar, some of which are only partially mutually intelligible with standard forms of English. Have you ever heard someone from rural Cumbria or Munster speak their local dialect of English?

    • @Breezegod
      @Breezegod Před rokem +3

      “English doesn’t really have accents or dialects that change grammatical rules.” Dude… what???? That’s just… objectively incorrect… 🤷‍♂️

  • @lewski7887
    @lewski7887 Před 2 lety +4

    thank you

  • @byronisluck
    @byronisluck Před rokem

    The explanation of ask vs aks was the eye opener for me.

  • @loveinstars
    @loveinstars Před rokem

    great video! super educational :))

  • @thatoneweirddudeinthecorner

    It was really cool to learn about how it actually works. I’m embarrassed to say I just thought it was slang lol, but now when I hear those words I know where it came from :) But I have a question; is it okay for people who aren’t black to use this dialect? Also, I’ve read somewhere that “shade” and “yas queen” are apart of queer language but it was bunched together with aave so idk which words I can use or not. (I’m trans and pansexual)

    • @wafflebutalt8903
      @wafflebutalt8903 Před 2 lety

      no. only black people can say it. not even gay non black people can.

    • @drrd4127
      @drrd4127 Před rokem +3

      "Yas queen" is in reference to drag queens.

    • @MaskedMenace94
      @MaskedMenace94 Před rokem +9

      @@drrd4127 it comes from Black American women and the Ballroom scene.

    • @TheSapphireLeo
      @TheSapphireLeo Před 5 měsíci

      No, It is not wanted, according to many of the black community, since culturally (mis)appropriated?

  • @kekeruus
    @kekeruus Před rokem +18

    lmao this shit hilarious, time to gatekeep African Americans from speaking English, since you know they weren't there when old English was written.

    • @Thatssostephie
      @Thatssostephie Před měsícem

      They weren't educated, that is why aave was created, white people DIDN'T TAKE CARE of black people, so yeah

  • @nimrodlevy
    @nimrodlevy Před rokem

    So interesting! Thanks for bringing this forward, as none native English speaker i now understand. Thank you very much.

  • @dannorman3501
    @dannorman3501 Před 3 měsíci

    I love this!

  • @anthonyscott5612
    @anthonyscott5612 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Why don't black people in England use AAVE? They all speak English clearly.

    • @XxxXxx-oh2wc
      @XxxXxx-oh2wc Před 3 měsíci

      No they the youth Talking a mixture from Nigerian/jamaivan english

  • @Frankybeanselevators
    @Frankybeanselevators Před 2 lety +6

    At heart, Black English is a mixture of the nonstandard English dialects spoken by the British settlers of the American South and the indentured servants who often worked alongside them. These dialects are the source of not just some but most of its features. Odd as it seems, the main wellspring of African Americans’ home dialect is not the kingdoms of West Africa but the hinterlands of Britannia and their environs, just as with all of the other English dialects in America.

    • @joed180
      @joed180 Před rokem +2

      That's the Dialect Divergence hypothesis right... But there is also the Creole Origin hypothesis. Those are the two main theories. Is the latter now not popular?

  • @zanpaithepyrokat611
    @zanpaithepyrokat611 Před rokem +1

    I used to say library as “lie-berry” and was corrected. I always thought I was saying it right, but I eventually just stopped saying it that way.

  • @knowingtheunknown4923
    @knowingtheunknown4923 Před 2 lety

    Very interesting,
    Thank you for sharing,

  • @evcorporation
    @evcorporation Před rokem +3

    Thank you! Now I'm more educated Ong frfr

    • @bluerose1613
      @bluerose1613 Před 6 měsíci

      You thought you did something with that corny wannabe AAVE didn’t you??💀

  • @cultofdumbpling4699
    @cultofdumbpling4699 Před rokem +6

    i'm so happy that i found this because i now know the history of AAVE and whenever i see it or say it I can remember and respect the rich history of the dialect.

    • @yourdad587
      @yourdad587 Před rokem +1

      One man's treasure is an other man's trash

    • @Shanx317
      @Shanx317 Před rokem +1

      @@yourdad587 you're so wise dad

    • @johnmachenzie1613
      @johnmachenzie1613 Před rokem +1

      @@Shanx317 You're so high your highest.

    • @Shanx317
      @Shanx317 Před rokem +1

      @@johnmachenzie1613 indeed, that is why they call me that.

  • @billyb6001
    @billyb6001 Před 11 měsíci

    She speaks so well