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Social stigma and grammatical autonomy in nonnative varieties of English

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 December 2002

BAO ZHIMING
Affiliation:
Department of English Language and Literature, National University of Singapore, Block AS5, 7 Arts Link, Singapore 117570, ellbaozm@nus.edu.sg

Abstract

The spread of English has created a rich array of varieties, which are often grouped into a tripartite division: the ENL, ESL, and EFL of Quirk, or the inner-circle, outer-circle, and expanding-circle of Kachru. These varieties, especially ESL, differ among themselves in both form and function. It is often assumed in the literature that these varieties are autonomous systems of communication. This article challenges this assumption by showing that the innovative phonological features of one ESL variety, the vernacular English spoken in Singapore, cannot be analyzed without reference to native English. These change-in-progress features fall into two types: those that originate in phonemes, and those that originate in words. Social stigma associated with them poses a formidable barrier to their stabilization and diffusion, and consequently to their autonomization. Nonnative English is grammatically dependent on native English.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Cambridge University Press

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