8.8.Pidgin English
English also enters into a number of simplified languages that arose among non-English-speaking peoples. Pidgin English, spoken in the Melanesian islands, New Guinea, Australia, the Philippines, and Hawaii and on the Asian shores of the Pacific Ocean, developed as a means of communication between Chinese and English traders. The Chinese adopted many English words and a few indispensable non-English words and created a means of discourse, using a simple grammatical apparatus. Bкche-de-Mer, a pidgin spoken in the southern and western Pacific islands, is predominantly English in structure, although it includes many Polynesian words. Chinook Jargon, used as a lingua franca by the Native Americans, French, and English on the North American Pacific coast, contains English, French, and Native American words; its grammatical structure is based on that of the Chinook language. The use of pidgin is growing in Africa, notably in Cameroon, Sierra Leone, and East Africa.
- English Language
- 1.English Language.
- 2.Vocabulary
- 3.Spelling
- 4.Role of Phonemes
- 5.Stress, Pitches, and Juncture
- 7.Parts of Speech
- 8.Development of the Language
- 8.1.Old English Period
- 8.2.Middle English Period
- 8.3The Great Vowel Shift
- 8.4.Modern English Period
- 8.5.20Th-Century English
- 8.6.American English
- 8.7.Basic English
- 8.8.Pidgin English
- 9.Future of the English Language