Children's Marking of Verbal –s by Nonmainstream English Dialect and Clinical Status

Author:

Cleveland Lesli H.1,Oetting Janna B.2

Affiliation:

1. Eastern Washington University, Cheney

2. Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge

Abstract

Purpose Children's marking of verbal –s was examined by their dialect (African American English [AAE] vs. Southern White English [SWE]) and clinical status (specific language impairment [SLI] vs. typically developing [TD]) and as a function of 4 linguistic variables (verb regularity, negation, expression of a habitual activity, and expression of historical present tense). Method The data were language samples from 57 six-year-olds who varied by their dialect and clinical status (AAE: SLI = 14, TD = 12; SWE: SLI = 12, TD = 19). Results The AAE groups produced lower rates of marking than did the SWE groups, and the SWE SLI group produced lower rates of marking than did the SWE TD group. Although low numbers of verb contexts made it difficult to evaluate the linguistic variables, there was evidence of their influence, especially for verb regularity and negation. The direction and magnitude of the effects were often (but not always) consistent with what has been described in the adult dialect literature. Conclusion Verbal –s can be used to help distinguish children with and without SLI in SWE but not in AAE. Clinicians can apply these findings to other varieties of AAE and SWE and other dialects by considering rates of marking and the effects of linguistic variables on marking. Supplemental Material https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.14963532

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Otorhinolaryngology

Reference51 articles.

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3. Burns, F., & Camarata, S. M. (2006, November). Morphological intervention with African American English speaking children: Verbal –s. Paper presented at the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association annual convention, Miami, FL.

4. Grade-Related Changes in the Production of African American English

5. Cukor-Avila, P. (2001). Co-existing grammars: The relationship between the evolution of African American and White Vernacular English in the South. InLanehart, S. L. (Ed.), Sociocultural and historical contexts of African American English (pp. 93–128). Philadelphia, PA: John Benjamins.

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