- Habitual be
Habitual be is the nonstandard use of
zero copula or an invariant "be" inAfrican American Vernacular English andCaribbean English to mark habitual or extended actions in the present tense, instead of using the Standard English inflected forms of "be", such as "is" and "are". This usage leads to sentences like:"I be singing" instead of the Standard English "I am singing."
"The coffee be cold" signifies the coffee is always cold, whereas "The coffee cold" would mean the coffee is cold right now.
The use of habitual be is most commonly used by working-class speakers and young persons. Younger speakers tend to restrict their use to progressive verb forms (as in "He be dancing") whereas their parents use it with progressives, adjectives (as in "He be smart"), and expressions that refer to a location ("He be at work"). Young speakers use invariant "be" exclusively to indicate habit, whereas older speakers also tend to omit "be" forms or use present tense verb forms ("He runs") with the use of adverbs like "often" or "usually" to show habitual action.
The source of invariant "be" in AAVE is still disputed because some linguists suggest it represents influence from finite "be" in the 17th to 19th century English of British settlers. Other linguists feel that Scotch-Irish immigrants may have played a larger role since their dialects mark habitual verb forms with "be" and "do be".
References
* The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition. 2000 [http://www.bartleby.com/61/82/B0128200.html "Be"]
* The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition. 2000 [http://www.bartleby.com/61/12/Z0011225.html "Zero Copula"]
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