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mghackerlady 3 hours ago

I completely disagree. At least in the US, AAV seems to be a major cultural thing for the people who speak it

MrJohz 3 hours ago | parent [-]

But I think that national identity doesn't exist in the same way, do you know what I mean? Like, being Black/African American in the US is an important part of a person's identity, but it doesn't necessarily have the trappings of nationhood in the same way that Scottish identity does. That's not to say that the identity is any weaker, just that it manifests itself differently.

This means that AAV is culturally important, but there's not necessarily the same sense of "this is a separate language" that there is with Scots, even though in many ways it has all the same claims of being one.

mghackerlady 2 hours ago | parent [-]

I suppose, though I feel like the tie to nationalism=language is weak at best

MrJohz 11 minutes ago | parent [-]

I don't think it's nationalism per se, more just a national identity. You see independence movements across Europe (Catalan, Wales, Cornwall, some of these have more realistic prospects than others) that tightly bind the idea of nationhood to a collective language - we are all one people because we all speak the same language. And similarly, when larger countries want to suppress these independence movements, cracking down on their ability to learn or even speak that language is often a key tool used to do that.