Abstract

This paper is intended to provide an overview of the main lexical, grammar and discourse features of the so-called Multicultural London English (MLE), a recent multiethnolect that can be regarded as a new development of London popular speech with the addition of traits from a pool of other sociolects and varieties of English, namely Caribbean and Jamaican English, and with a high proportion of young speakers. The data here analysed have been extracted from multiple sources, such as the London English Corpus (LOE), the Bergen Corpus of London Teenage Language (COLT), dictionaries, magazines, films, TV series, song lyrics and social media, mainly Twitter.
 Particular attention is paid to those grammar and discourse features which can be considered as the most innovative, such as the quotative this is + pronoun, man used as a personal pronoun, the overuse of a set of vocatives (brother, mate, boy, guy(s), bastard, dickhead), the invariant tags innit and you get me, the adjectives proper and bare used as intensifiers, a high presence of negative vernacular forms (ain’t, third person singular don’t), never as negative preterite and a high proportion of negative concord structures. As regards lexis, a wide range of borrowings and loan words from other varieties and languages are recorded together with an excessive amount of general vague nouns and general extenders.

Highlights

  • Multicultural London English (MLE) is much more than that, it can be described as the result of language contact and second language acquisition, agglutinating speakers of English from India and Africa, Caribbean creoles, learner English varieties and even local London dialects such as traditional Cockney (Mott 2012)

  • But not exclusively, in the East End of London covering the districts of Hackney, Tower Hamlets, Islington, Shoreditch, Mile End and Bow, Spitalfields, Whitechapel, Wapping, Limehouse and Millwall, which have received a high proportion of young immigrant populations, and which correspond basically to the area traditionally associated with Cockney, to the extent that this multiethnolect has received the name of the new Cockney (Fox 2015)

  • The present study aims to provide an overview of the main linguistic features of MLE, with special attention to lexis, grammar and discourse

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Summary

Introduction

Borrowing and use of words from other sociolects and languages. Lexical items form marginal sectors come to the forefront. How to cite this article: Palacios Martínez, Ignacio M. An overview of the main lexical, grammar and discourse features of Multicultural London English (MLE), in Complutense Journal of English Studies 29, 1-20

Introduction2
Review of the literature
General purpose and method used
MLE Main linguistic features
Borrowing and use of words from other sociolects and languages
Change of meaning of words
Lexical items from marginal sectors come to the forefront
Vague language
Quotatives
Address terms
Man as a new pronoun
Pragmatic markers
Intensifiers
Findings
Final words
Full Text
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