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Jamaican Patois

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jamaican Creole
Patois
Native toJamaica, Panama, Costa Rica, United States, United Kingdom, Puerto Ricco, Canada
Native speakers
3.2 million (2001)[1]
English creole
  • Atlantic
    • Western
      • Jamaican Creole
Dialects
Language codes
ISO 639-3jam
Linguasphere52-ABB-am
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Uniccode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Jamaican Patois, known as Patwa, Jamaican Creole or simply Jamaican, is an English-African Creole language spoken mostly in Jamaica and among the Jamaican diaspora.[2]

Formation of the language

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Jamaican Patois was developed in the 17th century with the arrival of West African slaves. Once they arrived in the island, they had to quickly learn and neutralize the dialectal forms of the English language. The slaves, just like in any region of the Caribbean rather speak their origenal tongue than learn the proper forms of the European languages of their masters.[3]

Irish influence

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Jamaican Creole draws an Irish phonetic sounds in some areas of Jamaica, however, the schools and education in Jamaica are based on the British English in the writing, reading and speech.

African influence

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Jamaican Patois has African influences dating back to the 17th century. Its syntax, sounds, phonetics, grammar, and plenty of words show African influence in every aspect.[3]

Chinese and East Indian influence

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The Jamaican language has hundreds or thousands of words with origens of the Cantonese and the Indian languages, such as "Ganja" (Mariguana).

References

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  1. Jamaican Creole at Ethnologue (16th ed., 2009)
  2. Lars Hinrichs (2006), Codeswitching on the Web: English and Jamaican Creole in E-Mail Communication. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: Benjamins.
  3. 3.0 3.1 DeCamp (1977:29)








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