Guyanese Creole

Guyanese Creole

Infobox Language
name=Guyanese Creole
states=Guyana
Overseas communities:
Guyanese British
Guyanese Canadians
Guyanese Americans
speakers=Over 1 million
familycolor=Creole
fam1=Creole language
fam2=English Creole
fam3=Atlantic
fam4=Eastern
fam5=Southern
notice=nonotice
iso3=gyn

Guyanese Creole ("Creolese" by its speakers; also called Guyanese English or simply Guyanese) is a creole language spoken by more than seven hundred thousand people in Guyana. Guyanese English is based on, and strongly influenced by the English language. It is similar to other West Indian dialects, but distinctly different from Jamaican and Trinidadian Creole. It is related to Paramaccan and Aluku.

There are many sub-dialects of Guyanese Creole based on the race of the speakers and their geographical location within Guyana. For example, along the Rupununi River where the population is largely Amerindian, a distinct form of Guyanese Creole exists.

As in any language, words and phrases are elastic and can be made up, change and evolve within a very short time period. They can also be used within a very small group, until picked up by a larger community.

Different Ethnic groups of the country are also known to alter or include words from their own backgrounds. For example, the East Indian communities words may be similar to words from Indian languages with the same meaning.

A socially stratified creole speech continuum also exists between Guyanese English and English. A phrase like "I told him" may be pronounced in various parts of the continuum:

English Taught in Guyanese Schools

English taught in the schools of Guyana is based on British English.

Guyanese people speak English/Guyanese Creole while learning the English system of writing and reading in schools. It is a slightly different system of communication from the standard forms.

Grammar

It is common in Guyanese Creole to repeat adjectives for emphasis (as if saying, very or extremely). For example, "Dis wata de col col" translates into "This water is very cold"."Come now now" translates into "come right now"

Example phrases

* Girl - Gyal
* Boy - Bai (pronounced bye)
* I am on the phone - Meh deh pon a/de fone
* Who is she? - Ah who she?
* What is that? - Dah ah wha? / Ah wah ah Dah?
* I don't know - Meh nah know
* What do you want? - Wuh yuh want
* What is happening? (An every day greeting similar to What's up?) -Wappenin?
* How are you? - How yuh do?
* What are you doing?- aWa ya do?
* We are going to cook - Abee a guh cook
* No Man-Na Man
* Don't come back- Nah mek meh see yuh back here/Nah mas come back
* What's wrong with you? - Wha rong wit yuh?
* Do you understand what I am saying? - Yah understand wah meh ah seh?
* Come here - Come hay, nuh man?
* Move over - Dress down.
* Go home - Ayuh catch home
* Gone from here - Gwhan from here


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Guyanese Creole English — ISO 639 3 Code : gyn ISO 639 2/B Code : ISO 639 2/T Code : ISO 639 1 Code : Scope : Individual Language Type : Living …   Names of Languages ISO 639-3

  • Guyanese people — Ethnic group group=Guyanese people poptime = Up to 1 million popplace= flagicon|Guyana Guyana flagicon|USA United States flagicon|UK United Kingdom flagicon|Canada Canada flagicon|NED Netherlands langs=English (including Guyanese Creole, American …   Wikipedia

  • Guyanese British — Ethnic group group=Guyanese British flagicon|Guyana flagicon|UK caption= Valerie Amos, Leona Lewis, Randy Turpin poptime= Guyanese born 2001: 20,872cite web|url=http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/18/23/34792376.xls|title=Country of birth… …   Wikipedia

  • creole languages — ▪ linguistics Introduction       vernacular languages that developed in colonial European plantation settlements in the 17th and 18th centuries as a result of contact between groups that spoke mutually unintelligible languages. Creole languages… …   Universalium

  • Guyanese Creolese — is a dialect of English spoken throughout Guyana and is the mode of speech used most often by natives for informal communication. It is often considered to be a less educated mode of speech, which is why Guyanese prefer to use standard British… …   Wikipedia

  • CRÉOLE (LANGUE) — CRÉOLE LANGUE Depuis la publication de la première grammaire créole (J. M. Magens, Grammatica over det creolske sprog , Copenhague, 1770), les études portant sur le créole ont considérablement fait progresser la connaissance de cette langue. Le… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • creole — A creole is a language formed from the contact of a European language (especially English, French, or Portuguese) with another (especially African) language. Unlike a pidgin, which is an improvised language used mainly by traders who do not have… …   Modern English usage

  • English-based creole languages — Part of a series on the British African Caribbean community …   Wikipedia

  • Chinese Guyanese — Total population 2,722 Regions with significant populations Georgetown · Enterprise Languages English (Guyanese Creole) Religion …   Wikipedia

  • Afro-Guyanese — Infobox Ethnic group group=flagicon|African Union Afro Guyanese flagicon|Guyana poptime= 30.2% of Guyana s population popplace= Guyana (Georgetown) United Kingdom, Canada, United States rels= Islam and Christianity langs= Guyanese CreoleAfro… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”