pidgins

listen to the pronunciation of pidgins
English - Turkish

Definition of pidgins in English Turkish dictionary

pidgin
(Dilbilim) karma diller
pidgin
(Dilbilim) karma dil
pidgin
uluslararası dil
pidgin
tarzanca
pidgin
(isim) sorumluluk
pidgin
{i} sorumluluk
Turkish - Turkish

Definition of pidgins in Turkish Turkish dictionary

pidgin
Birbirlerinden farklı diller konuşan, kendi ana dilleri ile anlaşmayı sağlayamayan birden fazla grubun kendi aralarında iletişim kurmak için kullandıkları dilleri ifade etmek için dilbilimciler tarafından kullanılan bir terim
pidgin
Farklı diller konuşan halkların ilişkileri sonucu doğan ve bu ilişkilerde kullanılan dil
English - English
plural of pidgin
pidgin
an amalgamation of two disparate languages, used by two populations having no common language as a lingua franca to communicate with each other, lacking formalized grammar and having a small, utilitarian vocabulary and no native speakers

Middle English likely began as a pidgin between the Norman invaders and the Anglo-Saxon-speaking (Old English) occupants of Britain. Otherwise, how could they have gotten any business done?.

pidgin
{i} language made from a mixture of words and grammar from different languages; jargon
pidgin
Pidgin is a simple form of a language which speakers of a different language use to communicate. Pidgin is not anyone's first language. He's at ease speaking pidgin with the factory workers and guys on the docks
pidgin
an artificial language used for trade between speakers of different languages
pidgin
If someone is speaking their own language simply or another language badly and is trying to communicate, you can say that they are speaking, for example, pidgin English or pidgin Italian. The restaurant owner could only speak pidgin English. Language with a very limited vocabulary and a simplified grammar. Pidgins usually arise to permit communication between groups with no language in common; if a pidgin becomes established as the native language of a group, it is known as a creole. Pidgins such as Chinese Pidgin English and Melanesian Pidgin English arose through contact between English-speaking traders and inhabitants of East Asia and the Pacific islands. Other pidgins appeared with the slave trade in Africa and with the importation of West African slaves to Caribbean plantations. Most of the small vocabulary of a pidgin language (Melanesian Pidgin has only 2,000 words, Chinese Pidgin English only 700) is usually drawn from a single language (Melanesian Pidgin, for example, has an English word stock of more than 90%)