enow.com Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: how to speak pidgin hawaii chinese and japanese keyboard language

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Hawaiian Pidgin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawaiian_Pidgin

    Hawaiian Pidgin (alternately, Hawaiʻi Creole English or HCE, known locally as Pidgin) is an English-based creole language spoken in Hawaiʻi.An estimated 600,000 residents of Hawaiʻi speak Hawaiian Pidgin natively and 400,000 speak it as a second language.

  3. Kyowa-go - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyowa-go

    The term Kyowa-go/Xieheyu is derived from the Manchukuo state motto "Concord of Nationalities" (民族協和 mínzú xiéhe) promoted by the Pan-Asian Movement.The pidgin language resulted from the need of Japanese officials and soldiers and the Han and Manchu population that spoke mainly Chinese to communicate with each other.

  4. Pidgin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pidgin

    The word pidgin, formerly also spelled pigion, [9] was first applied to Chinese Pidgin English, but was later generalized to refer to any pidgin. [11] Pidgin may also be used as the specific name for local pidgins or creoles, in places where they are spoken. For example, the name of the creole language Tok Pisin derives from the English words ...

  5. Japanese Pidgin English - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_Pidgin_English

    Japanese Pidgin English is any of several English-based pidgins spoken or influenced by the Japanese. Cape York Japanese Pidgin English, spoken in the pearling area at Thursday Island; Hawaiian Pidgin English, which began as a pidgin jargon spoken by immigrant plantation workers in Hawaii; Japanese Bamboo English, a pidgin jargon used in U.S ...

  6. Japanese loanwords in Hawaii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_loanwords_in_Hawaii

    Loanwords from the Japanese language in Hawaiʻi appear in various parts of the culture. Many loanwords in Hawaiian Pidgin (or Hawaiian Creole English) derive from the Japanese language . The linguistic influences of the Japanese in Hawaiʻi began with the first immigrants from Japan in 1868 and continues with the large Japanese American ...

  7. Category:Japanese-based pidgins and creoles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Japanese-based...

    Japanese loanwords in Hawaii; J. Japanese-based creole languages; K. Kyowa-go; P. Pseudo-Chinese; Y. Yilan Creole Japanese; Yokohama Pidgin Japanese

  8. Japanese-based creole languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Japanese-based_creole_languages

    Japanese has also made a significant contribution to other pidgins and creoles: to Ogasawara Creole, with an English-based lexicon, spoken in Ogasawara Islands, [5] to the Chinese-based Xieheyu spoken in Manchukuo, to the Bamboo English of occupied Japan, and to the Hawaiian Pidgin which became a creole spoken in Hawaii.

  9. Pidgin Hawaiian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pidgin_Hawaiian

    As Hawaiian was the main language of the islands in the nineteenth century, most words came from this Polynesian language, though many others contributed to its formation. In the 1890s and afterwards, the increased spread of English favoured the use of an English-based pidgin instead, which, once nativized as the first language of children ...

  1. Ad

    related to: how to speak pidgin hawaii chinese and japanese keyboard language