- to by its
speakers as "
Pidgin". The term
jargon has also been used to
refer to
pidgins, and is
found in the
names of some
pidgins, such as
Chinook Jargon...
-
quickest way to do this was to
develop a
pidgin; in turn, full
creole languages developed from
these pidgins. In
addition to
creoles that have European...
-
Pidgin is
mostly considered as a
Pacific creole language rather than Atlantic, this is
further mentioned in John Holm's "An
Introduction to
Pidgins and...
-
interesting similarities between the
English pidgins and
creoles of West
Africa and the
English pidgins and
creoles of the Caribbean, as does the presence...
-
annotated list of creoles,
pidgins, and
mixed languages". In
Jacque Arends,
Pieter Muysken &
Norval Smith (ed.).
Pidgins and Creoles. John Benjamins...
- Euskaltzaindia.
Retrieved 23
October 2012.
Hualde 2014. Deen 1937, p. 104.
Pidgins and Creoles : an introduction. Amsterdam: J. Benjamins. 1995. p. 32. ISBN 9789027252364...
-
originating from a
Pidgin language.
Pidgin may also
refer to: Any one of
several particular Pidgin languages commonly called "
Pidgin".
Pidgin (software), an...
- Arabic-based
pidgins and
creoles throughout history,
including a
number of new ones
emerging today.
These may be
broadly divided into
pidgins and creoles...
-
demographically stable creole language. It did, however,
evolve from
various real
pidgins spoken as
common languages between ethnic groups in Hawaiʻi.
Although not...
- and
could have been
influenced by
other pidgins of the
Pacific Ocean region, such as
Maritime Polynesian Pidgin.
Emerging in the mid-nineteenth century...