blaccent

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

Blend of black + accent

Noun

blaccent (plural blaccents)

  1. (US) An accent characteristic of African-Americans (black Americans).
    • 2003 January 5, Eric Stewart, “the people's kitchen”, misc.activism.progressive, Usenet
      He's black, but doesn't have a trace of a blaccent.
    • 2004 February 19, Ben Zimmer, Is the slogan grammatical?, sci.lang, Usenet
      Timberlake has long sought to overcome his whiteness to perfect a "blaccent", as the kids call it these days, and the McDonald's ad campaign explicitly relies on a hiphop idiom.
    • 2005 November 15, “Eli” of Michigan, “Lord of The Dance”, The Life of a Swordfish, at swordfish22.spaces.live.com
      She spoke with a very thick blaccent...as she screamed "C'mon B!, C'mon B! C'mon B!" (she was quite persistent with this phrase, and used the actual word) "I betta neva see yo A out eating sub sammiches eva again!".
    • 2006 February 8, “Drew” of Philadelphia, “The moral's I'm immortal ”, Trapper Juan, at trapperjuan.blogspot.com
      Rothlisberger...speaks with a blaccent, which in reality is not that uncommon. The problem is his inconsistency. Sometimes, he lays it on thicker than J. Will haggling at a swap meet
    • 2009, John McWhorter quoted on The World:
      The sad thing is that for many people, the blaccent connotes lack of intelligence.
    • 2016 December 4, Jennifer Schuessler, quoting Edward McClelland, “‘How to Speak Midwestern,’ a Heartland Dialect Guide”, in The New York Times, ISSN 0362-4331:
      (Mr. McClelland notes the existence of various Midwestern “blaccents,” though he doesn’t explore them.)
    • 2020 July 21, John McWhorter, “The Biases We Hold Against the Way People Speak”, in The New York Times, ISSN 0362-4331:
      Black earnings decrease to the extent that one has a perceptible “blaccent.”

Coordinate terms

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