Global Information Lookup Global Information

Ghanaian Pidgin English information


Ghanaian Pidgin English
Kru Brofo (akan) "kulu blofo (Ga language)
Native toGhana
Native speakers
5 million (2011)[1]
(not clear if this number includes L2 speakers)
Language family
English Creole
  • Atlantic
    • Krio
      • Ghanaian Pidgin English
Language codes
ISO 639-3gpe
Glottologghan1244
Linguasphere52-ABB-be
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.
Faisal Ali speaking in Ghanaian Pidgin about the language's Wikipedia project

Ghanaian Pidgin English (GhaPE)[2] is a Ghanaian English-lexifier pidgin also known as Pidgin, Broken English, and Kru English (kroo brofo in Akan). GhaPE is a regional variety of West African Pidgin English[3] spoken in Ghana, predominantly in the southern capital, Accra, and surrounding towns.[2] It is confined to a smaller section of society than other West African creoles, and is more stigmatized,[2] perhaps due to the importance of Twi, an Akan dialect,[4] often spoken as lingua franca.[5] Other languages spoken as lingua franca in Ghana are Standard Ghanaian English (SGE) and Akan.[6] GhaPE cannot be considered a creole as it has no L1 speakers.[7][8]

GhaPE can be divided into two varieties, referred to as "uneducated" or "non-institutionalized" pidgin and "educated" or "institutionalized" pidgin. The former terms are associated with uneducated or illiterate people and the latter are acquired and used in institutions such as universities[2][9] and are influenced by Standard Ghanaian English.[4][10]

GhaPE, like other varieties of West African Pidgin English, is also influenced locally by the vocabulary of the indigenous languages spoken around where it developed. GhaPE's substrate languages such as Akan influenced use of the spoken pidgin in Ghana.[4][10][11] Other influencers of GhaPE include Ga, Ewe, and Nzema.[4] While females understand GhaPE, they are less likely to use it in public or professional settings.[10] Mixed-gender groups more often converse in SGE or another language.[12] Adults and children have traditionally not spoken GhaPE.[10]

In some cases, educators have unsuccessfully attempted to ban the use of pidgin.[13] Although other languages of Ghana are available to them, students, particularly males, use GhaPE as a means of expressing solidarity, camaraderie and youthful rebellion.[4][5] Today, this form of Pidgin can be heard in a variety of informal contexts, although it still carries a certain stigma.[2] Specifically, GhaPE still carries stigma in academia which may explain why "few structural or sociolinguistic descriptions of the variety have been published".[9] Contemporary GhaPE is spoken by 20% of the population with 5 million speakers.[14] In general, pidgins are spoken in a wide range of situations and occasions including: "educational institutions, work places, airports, seaports, drinking places, markets, on the radio, popular songs, and on political platforms".[4]

GhPE, like other varieties of West African Pidgin English is influenced locally by the vocabulary of the indigenous languages spoken around where it developed, in this case, as around the Greater Accra Region, largely Ga. When spoken, it can be difficult for Nigerian pidgin speakers to understand Ghanaian speakers – for instance, the words "biz" (which stands for "ask"), "kai" (which means "remember") and "gbeketii", meaning "in the evening", in the Standard Ghanaian English.[citation needed]

Also, young educated men who were raised outside Accra and Tema very often do not know it until they come into contact with others who do at boarding-school in secondary school or at university.[citation needed] But that might be changing, as Accra-born students go to cities such as Ghana's second city Kumasi to study at university and so could help gain the language new diverse speakers.[citation needed]

Over the years, some young Ghanaian writers have taken to writing literary pieces such as short stories in GhPE as an act of protest.[15] GhPE has also seen expression in songs and movies and in advertisements.

  1. ^ Ghanaian Pidgin English at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ a b c d e Huber, Magnus (1 January 1999). Ghanaian Pidgin English in its West African Context. Varieties of English Around the World. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company. doi:10.1075/veaw.g24. ISBN 978-90-272-4882-4.
  3. ^ McArthur, Tom (23 April 1998). The English Languages (1 ed.). Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9780511621048.008. ISBN 978-0-521-48130-4.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Amoako, Joe K.Y.B. (1992). "Ghanaian Pidgin English: In Search of Synchronic, Diachronic, and Sociolinguistic Evidence" (Ph.D. Dissertation). University of Florida at Gainesville.
  5. ^ a b Dako, Kari (24 February 2004). "Student Pidgin (SP): the Language of the Educated Male Elite". Research Review of the Institute of African Studies. 18 (2): 53–62. doi:10.4314/rrias.v18i2.22862. ISSN 0855-4412. S2CID 146536980.
  6. ^ Yakpo, Kofi (1 January 2016). ""The only language we speak really well": the English creoles of Equatorial Guinea and West Africa at the intersection of language ideologies and language policies". International Journal of the Sociology of Language. 2016 (239). doi:10.1515/ijsl-2016-0010. ISSN 0165-2516. S2CID 147057342.
  7. ^ Huber, Magnus (19 December 2008). "Ghanaian Pidgin English: Morphology and Syntax". In Kortmann, Bernd; Schneider, Edgar W. (eds.). A Handbook of Varieties of English: A Multimedia Reference Tool. Vol. 2. Berlin, Boston: Mouton de Gruyter. pp. 866–878. doi:10.1515/9783110197181-123. ISBN 978-3-11-019718-1. S2CID 241854285.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  8. ^ Huber, Magnus (1 January 1995). "Ghanaian Pidgin English: An Overview". English World-Wide. 16 (2): 215–249. doi:10.1075/eww.16.2.04hub. ISSN 0172-8865.
  9. ^ a b Huber, Magnus (2008). "Ghanaian Pidgin English: Phonology". In Kortmann, Bernd; Schneider, Edgar W. (eds.). A Handbook of Varieties of English: A Multimedia Reference Tool. Vol. 1. Berlin, Boston: Mouton de Gruyter. pp. 866–873. doi:10.1515/9783110197181-053. S2CID 243085546.
  10. ^ a b c d Ewusi, Kelly Jo Trennepohl (2015). "Communicational Strategies in Ghanaian Pidgin English: Turn-Taking, Overlap and Repair" (Ph.D. Dissertation). Indiana University.
  11. ^ Amoako, Joe (2011). Ghanaian Pidgin English: Diachronic, Synchronic and Sociolinguistic Perspectives. New York: Novinka. ISBN 978-1-5361-1284-9.
  12. ^ Huber (1999), p. 150.
  13. ^ Huber, Magnus (1999). Ghanaian Pidgin English in its West African context: A Sociohistorical and Structural Analysis. Amsterdam, Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company. p. 150. ISBN 978-1-55619-722-2.
  14. ^ Michaelis, Susanne; Philippe Maurer; Martin Haspelmath; Magnus Huber, eds. (2013). The atlas of Pidgin and Creole language structures. [Oxford], United Kingdom: APiCS Consortium. ISBN 978-0-19-969139-5. OCLC 839396764. Retrieved 25 October 2021.
  15. ^ flashfictiongh (8 April 2016). "'Ebi Time' by Fui Can-Tamakloe". Flash Fiction GHANA. Retrieved 11 March 2020.

and 24 Related for: Ghanaian Pidgin English information

Request time (Page generated in 1.0689 seconds.)

Ghanaian Pidgin English

Last Update:

Ghanaian Pidgin English (GhaPE) is a Ghanaian English-lexifier pidgin also known as Pidgin, Broken English, and Kru English (kroo brofo in Akan). GhaPE...

Word Count : 2211

West African Pidgin English

Last Update:

Nigerian Pidgin, Ghanaian Pidgin English, Cameroonian Pidgin English, Liberian Pidgin English, the Aku dialect of Krio, and Pichinglis. West African Pidgin English...

Word Count : 1570

Languages of Ghana

Last Update:

of Ghana Ghanaian English "Language and Religion". Ghana Embassy. Archived from the original on 1 March 2017. Retrieved 8 January 2017. English is the official...

Word Count : 1533

Kick the bucket

Last Update:

Anglophone Creole item kekrebu, American English 30/3, 1985, pp. 281–283. Magnus Huber, Ghanaian Pidgin English in Its West African Context, John Benjamins...

Word Count : 879

Ghana

Last Update:

official language. Ghanaian Pidgin English, also known as Kru English (or in Akan, kroo brofo), is a variety of West African Pidgin English spoken in Accra...

Word Count : 14714

GPE

Last Update:

General Precision Equipment, a former American manufacturing company Ghanaian Pidgin English Global Partnership for Education Global Peace Exchange, at Florida...

Word Count : 154

Gh hip hop

Last Update:

because it involves local dialects such as Twi, Ga, Ewe, Hausa and Ghanaian Pidgin English. Some hip-hop musicians in the early era were Reggie Rockstone...

Word Count : 467

List of lingua francas

Last Update:

national lingua franca (Nigerian Pidgin, as well as Ghana (Ghanaian Pidgin English) and Cameroon (Cameroonian Pidgin English), mainly the two anglophone regions...

Word Count : 9537

Coz Ov Moni 2

Last Update:

Ghanaian filmmaker King Luu. The film is a musical entirely spoken in Ghanaian Pidgin English, but subtitles are shown. M3NSA Wanlov the Kubolor Yaa Pono Efya...

Word Count : 252

List of Wikipedias

Last Update:

variants. For example, the English Wikipedia includes most modern varieties of English including American English and British English. Similarly, the Spanish...

Word Count : 950

Szczecin paprikash

Last Update:

(Paper 669): 8–9. Retrieved 2016-05-21. Huber, Magnus (1999). Ghanaian Pidgin English in its West African Context: A sociohistorical and structural analysis...

Word Count : 1468

English language

Last Update:

to African languages spoken by the slaves who had to develop a pidgin or Creole English to communicate with slaves of other ethnic and linguistic origins...

Word Count : 23187

List of dialects of English

Last Update:

Transatlantic English American English-based hybrid languages (creoles or pidgins) Afro-Seminole Creole Gullah language/Sea Island Creole English, South-East...

Word Count : 1910

Mr Eazi

Last Update:

magazine, Mr Eazi described the song as a "fusion". He said he spoke Ghanaian pidgin on the delivery and used Nigerian melodies. In August 2016, Nigerian...

Word Count : 3998

Kojo Laing

Last Update:

April 2017) was a Ghanaian novelist and poet, whose writing is characterised by its hybridity, whereby he uses Ghanaian Pidgin English and vernacular languages...

Word Count : 1300

Scots Wikipedia

Last Update:

Patois Wikipedia, the Sranan Tongo Wikipedia, the Nigerian Pidgin Wikipedia, and the Ghanaian Pidgin Wikipedia. In August 2020, the wiki received scrutiny...

Word Count : 869

Coz Ov Moni

Last Update:

and directed by independent Ghanaian filmmaker King Luu. The film is a musical entirely spoken in Ghanaian Pidgin English, but subtitles are shown. On...

Word Count : 477

2019 local electoral calendar

Last Update:

despite 'aponkye' social media hype". BBC News Pidgin. 17 December 2019. (in Ghanaian Pidgin English) "Congress scores big in Chhattisgarh, wins all...

Word Count : 7791

Mugeez

Last Update:

are in Twi and Ghanaian Pidgin English and their music is a mixture of Afrobeats and Hiplife, a Ghanaian music style that fuses Ghanaian culture and Hip...

Word Count : 1018

Nigerian English

Last Update:

Nigerian English: Hausa English (spoken by the Hausa), Igbo English (spoken by the Igbo) and Yoruba English (spoken by the Yoruba). Nigerian Pidgin English is...

Word Count : 2490

Liberian English

Last Update:

variety spoken by most Liberian speakers of English. It is the Liberian descendant of the West African Pidgin English that developed all along the West African...

Word Count : 1438

Nativization

Last Update:

on prior nativization of a pidgin as a stage in achieving creoleness. This is true for Hall's (1966) notion of the pidgin-creole life cycle as well as...

Word Count : 1962

Wanlov the Kubolor

Last Update:

Ghana that he "is considering making a third installment to his Ghanaian Pidgin-English musical Coz Ov Moni". 2007 -"Green Card" 2010 - "Yellow Card -...

Word Count : 938

Ibrahim Adam

Last Update:

insinuated that they were covering up for Jerry Rawlings, using the Ghanaian Pidgin English phrase, "monkey dey work, baboon dey chop". On his release from...

Word Count : 713

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net