Jump to content

African American Vernacular English/Verbs/Copula

From Wikibooks, open books for an open world

In all dialects of English, the copula "to" be is used to state location: "I'm in Boston"; and description/equivalence "I'm America," "He's a linguist."

In MAE, this is always mandatory. In AAVE, and in many other dialects of English, not to mention other languages, different rules apply.

Conjugation

[edit | edit source]

In MAE, there are three conjugations for the present tense: am, is, are; and two for the past tense: was, were.
In AAVE, there is only one conjugation for each tense: is for the present, and was for the past.

Present Tense

[edit | edit source]

AAVE does not usually use the copula "to be" when making a statement in the present tense. One major exception is when used for emphasis.

Negation

[edit | edit source]

Questions

[edit | edit source]

Past Tense

[edit | edit source]

AAVE does use the copula "to be" in the past tense, however there is only one form: "was." Therefore "I was," "you was," "we was," etc.

"Is" as an auxiliary

[edit | edit source]

"To be" when used as an auxiliary to form the present continuous ("He is running"), follows the same rules as when used as a copula.