Date: Fri, 14 Jul 1995 08:32:21 -0700
From: Peter McGraw pmcgraw[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]CALVIN.LINFIELD.EDU
Subject: Re: For "he says", like "he's all" or "he goes" or "he's like" (fwd)
I forwarded Jim Ague's message on this topic to my son for his amusement,
and think his response might interest some on the list. Any comment from
AAVE specialists out there? (Note: the middle school he refers to [in
Yellow Springs, Ohio] was a harmoniously integrated school in which
middle-class black students were a sizeable minority and seemed to be the
trend-setters.)
Peter McGraw
Linfield College
McMinnville, OR
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Thu, 13 Jul 95 22:02:49 PDT
From: Patrick McGraw pmcgraw[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]theory.caltech.edu
To: pmcgraw[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]linfield.edu
Subject: Re: For "he says", like "he's all" or "he goes" or "he's like" (fwd)
I suspect these usages are not originally from California, but from Black
English. Especially when I was in Middle School, people would often
follow "He's like" with not just words, but gestures indicating what
someone was doing. The phrase indicates that what follows is an
imitation. "He's all" probably has similar origins-- it can also come
before an adjective or a description, e.g., "He's all pissed 'cause I
didn't invite him." I imagine the usage with a quotation is an extension
of this.