c ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci ck cl cm cn co cp cr cs ct cu cw cy cz

Перевод: Creole speek Creole


[существительное]
креол ; креолка


Тезаурус:

  1. Yet Tate, herself a Jamaican, found that her second-generation informants used Jamaican Creole as their in-group language, and sounded so authentic that they could pass for Jamaicans in Jamaica, in her judgement (personal communication).
  2. Terms of the following kinds are likely to be needed: for aspects of language variation: e.g. formal language, casual or colloquial language, slang; first language, second language, foreign language; accent, dialect, creole, international language, lingua franca; historical, geographical and social dialects.
  3. Entitled "La Pasin Criolla" ("Creole Passion"), the recording consists of twelve songs which take their inspiration from the scenes and activities of ordinary daily life in Argentina.
  4. Thus although the sociolinguistic profile High: Standard English/Low: Creole holds good throughout the ex-British Caribbean almost without exception, we need to make a distinction between those places where the majority speak a Creole with English-derived vocabulary, and those where most or some of the populace speak a Creole with French-derived vocabulary.
  5. I am not suggesting that white children or adolescents are generally as good at speaking Creole as black children.
  6. The object of this research is to begin analysis of the tonal system of British Jamaican Creole as spoken by British born people aged 16-19 years and living in Dudley, West Midlands.
  7. Pecan nuts, which were first popular with native Indians, have found their way into Creole cooking as pralines and in countless variations of Pecan pie.
  8. Languages: Creole (official); English and French.
  9. In spite of these inconveniences, and their exploitation by British policy, it was the collapse of Spanish authority rather than a creole revolution which began the processes by which the Empire was destroyed.
  10. The advent of Channel 4 in 1982 provided a space for more minority-orientated programmes than previously: Caribbean accents and occasional use of Creole have been regular features of situation comedies such as No Problem in the early 1980s and Desmonds in the late 1980s to early 1990s.
  11. Numerically the Jamaicans form the majority of the Caribbean community in most parts of London as well as other large centres; yet even where they do not, it is Jamaican which provides a focus for the Creole of black youth.
  12. These debates were eventually brought to a close by Williams, but by this time his fame had spread throughout the islands and had given him a mass following, especially among the lower Creole class.

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