Friday, August 2, 2019
Jamaican Creole vs Standard English Essay
As we can see, this is not the situation in Jamaican Creole. Case is always demonstrated by position. Any pronoun before the verb is the subject, and after the verb it is either the direct or indirect object. Other features to note are the lack of gender and absence of nominative and accusative case forms. Also lacking in Jamaican Creole are possessive pronouns like my, your, his, her, its, our, their. To demonstrate possession, Jamaican Creole either has the simple pronoun directly in front of a noun, (for example ââ¬Ëmy bookââ¬â¢ would be ââ¬Ëmi bukââ¬â¢), or adds the prefix fi-, (as in ââ¬Ëfi-mi bukââ¬â¢ also meaning ââ¬Ëmy bookââ¬â¢). Plural Marking Plural marking in Standard English is a hodgepodge of different forms borrowed and assimilated from many languages. The original Old English way of making plurals was either the addition of -n or -en or the changing of the vowel sound, as it is for Modern German. Those original Old English plural markers surviv e in a few Modern English words. For example child/children, man/men, ox/oxen, foot/feet. The Norman French way of making plurals was to add an -s, -es or an -x. Only the first two forms were borrowed into English at first, producing forms like hand/hands, eye/eyes, bus/buses. Recently the -x ending had been borrowed for words like bureau/bureaux, adieu/adieux, chateau/chateaux, but it is pronounced as if the x were an s. During the renaissance, Classical Latin and Classical Greek became fashionable, and although being extinct languages, they added a great deal both to the grammar and vocabulary of the English language, particularly in the fields of science and invention. Plurals produced at this period of time include datum/data, octopus/octopi, medium/media, index/indices, helix/helices, matrix/matrices. These plural forms cause theà most confusion not just to foreign speakers but also to a lot of people who speak English as their first language. Plural marking in Jamaican Creole is much more logical and easier to learn. In fact Jamaican Creole behaves like Japanese for the most part in that it does not generally mark the plural of nouns. To indicate plurality, animate nouns (and sometimes other nouns to be stressed) are followed by the suffix -dem. This produces structures such as ââ¬Ëdi uman-demââ¬â¢ or ââ¬Ëdi pikni-demââ¬â¢ meaning ââ¬Ëthe womenââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëthe childrenââ¬â¢ respectively. Tracing roots of Jamaican CreoleThe unique vocabulary and grammar of Jamaican Creole did not just simply spring up as an easy way for plantation slaves from different tribes to talk to one another. Many words, phrases, and structures have an interesting etymology. (Etymology is a linguistic term for the history of the development of a word). In Middle English, there was a distinction between singular ââ¬Ëthouââ¬â¢, and plural ââ¬Ëyouââ¬â¢. This distinction has been almost completely erased apart from in some North Yorkshire dialects where the singular form ââ¬Ëthaââ¬â¢ is still used. E.g. ââ¬Ëthaââ¬â¢s niceââ¬â¢ means ââ¬Ëyou are niceââ¬â¢. In some English dialects an attempt has even been made to replace the missing pronoun. In Southern States of America ââ¬Ëyââ¬â¢allââ¬â¢ is used; in Scouser (a dialect found in Liverpool) ââ¬Ëyouseââ¬â¢ or is used; and a common form in London is ââ¬Ëyou-lotââ¬â¢. In Jamaican Creole, the pronoun ââ¬Ëoonuââ¬â¢ is found and this is similar to the form it has in modern Igbo (spoken in Nigeria) which was the most likely donor language. Forms of the pronoun (such as uno, unu, unoo) can be found in widely scattered parts of Africa in the Nubian and Nilotic language families and even as far as the Negrito languages of Malaysia. The word ââ¬Ësehââ¬â¢ as in ââ¬Ëim tel mi sehâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬â¢ (he told me thatâ⬠¦) has similar origins. Wo w!!! Another interesting word commonly used is ââ¬Ëpikniââ¬â¢, meaning ââ¬Ëchildââ¬â¢. The word was borrowed originally form Portuguese ââ¬Ëpicaninniââ¬â¢. Prior to British dominance, it was used by Portuguese masters to refer to black slaves, who picked up the word and began using it to refer to their own children. In Jamaica today, despite its innocent original meaning (child), it has acquired a pejorative connotation because of its history in Jamaica. Two more interesting words that have spread across the English speaking world, but have their origins in Jamaica, are ââ¬Ëbuddyââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëcussââ¬â¢. These was a mispronunciations of ââ¬Ëbrotherââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëcurseââ¬â¢ respectively. The first recorded use of ââ¬Ëbuddyââ¬â¢ was in 17; whereas the word ââ¬Ëcussââ¬â¢ is a word that has entered our vocabulary only since theà late 1940s. The difference in age of these terms shows how much influence Jamaican Creole has on the English speaking world, The word ââ¬Ëbuddyââ¬â¢ is even found in the Oxford English Dictionary and ââ¬Ëcussââ¬â¢ is used so much among the younger generation in particular, that it is only a matter of time before it too is added to the OED. in view of the popularity of fashionable culture and music forms that have their origin in Jamaica Jamaican Creole is likely to continue to have considerable influence of English as a global language, but should it be classed as a dialect of English or should it have official recognition as a language in its own right? Language Standardisation. There are more salient differences between Jamaican Creole and English than there are between Swedish and Norwegian, yet the latter are classed as two separate distinct languages. Swedish and Norwegian people have almost no difficulty understanding one another, whereas some Englishmen will not have a clue what a Jamaican is saying. Similar cases are Czech and Slovakian, and Punjabi and Urdu, of which the spoken form is the same but only the written form is different. Many people who have stated that saying ââ¬Ëmi de a di paakââ¬â¢ as opposed to ââ¬ËI am in the parkââ¬â¢, sounds childish, are completely ignorant of the fact that ââ¬Ëmi/meââ¬â¢ is a common indigenous Niger-Kongo form of the first person pronoun. I would have been easy for early Jamaicans learning this strange alian language, to continue using ââ¬Ëmiââ¬â¢ in that position rather than switching to ââ¬ËIââ¬â¢. Also the English at that time didnââ¬â¢t exactly have schools and colleges to te ach blacks the proper way of forming the first person singular nominative pronoun.
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