![]() ![]() Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Trade languages and pidgins can also influence an established language's vernacular, especially amongst people who are directly involved in a trade where that pidgin is commonly used, which can alternatively result in a regional dialect being developed. Trade languages can eventually evolve into fully developed languages in their own right such as Swahili, distinct from the languages they were originally influenced by. Pidgins may start out as or become trade languages, such as Tok Pisin. In this context, linguists today use jargon to denote a particularly rudimentary type of pidgin however, this usage is rather rare, and the term jargon most often refers to the words particular to a given profession. The term jargon has also been used to refer to pidgins, and is found in the names of some pidgins, such as Chinook Jargon. Likewise, Hawaiian Creole English is commonly referred to by its speakers as "Pidgin". Its speakers usually refer to it simply as "pidgin" when speaking English. For example, the name of the creole language Tok Pisin derives from the English words talk pidgin. Pidgin may also be used as the specific name for local pidgins or creoles, in places where they are spoken. The word pidgin, formerly also spelled pigion, used to refer originally to Chinese Pidgin English, but was later generalized to refer to any pidgin. Ī popular false etymology for pidgin is English pigeon, a bird sometimes used for carrying brief written messages, especially in times prior to modern telecommunications. The term was coming to be used in the more general linguistic sense represented by this article by the 1870s. The term pidgin English ("business English"), first attested in 1855, shows the term in transition to referring to language, and by the 1860s the term pidgin alone could refer to Pidgin English. Pidgin derives from a Chinese pronunciation of the English word business, and all attestations from the first half of the nineteenth century given in the third edition of the Oxford English Dictionary mean "business an action, occupation, or affair" (the earliest being from 1807). Most linguists believe that a creole develops through a process of nativization of a pidgin when children of acquired pidgin-speakers learn and use it as their native language. Unlike pidgins, creoles have fully developed vocabulary and patterned grammar. Ī pidgin differs from a creole, which is the first language of a speech community of native speakers that at one point arose from a pidgin. Each pidgin has its own norms of usage which must be learned for proficiency in the pidgin. However, not all simplified or "unsophisticated" forms of a language are pidgins. Pidgins have historically been considered a form of patois, unsophisticated simplified versions of their lexifiers, and as such usually have low prestige with respect to other languages. As the lexicon of any pidgin will be limited to core vocabulary, words with only a specific meaning in the lexifier language may acquire a completely new (or additional) meaning in the pidgin. Ī pidgin may be built from words, sounds, or body language from a multitude of languages as well as onomatopoeia. A pidgin is not the native language of any speech community, but is instead learned as a second language. Linguists do not typically consider pidgins as full or complete languages.įundamentally, a pidgin is a simplified means of linguistic communication, as it is constructed impromptu, or by convention, between individuals or groups of people. ![]() ![]() It is most commonly employed in situations such as trade, or where both groups speak languages different from the language of the country in which they reside (but where there is no common language between the groups). A pidgin / ˈ p ɪ dʒ ɪ n/, or pidgin language, is a grammatically simplified means of communication that develops between two or more groups of people that do not have a language in common: typically, its vocabulary and grammar are limited and often drawn from several languages. ![]()
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