Hawaiian Creole/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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{{r|Creolistics}} | {{r|Creolistics}} | ||
{{r|Creole (language)}} | {{r|Creole (language)}} | ||
{{r|Hawaii}} | {{r|Hawaii (U.S. state)}} | ||
==Subtopics== | ==Subtopics== | ||
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{{r|Portuguese language}} | {{r|Portuguese language}} | ||
{{r|Hawaiian language}} | {{r|Hawaiian language}} | ||
==Articles related by keyphrases (Bot populated)== | |||
{{r|Hawaii (U.S. state)}} | |||
{{r|Candida albicans}} | |||
{{r|Pidgin Hawaiian}} |
Latest revision as of 07:01, 26 August 2024
- See also changes related to Hawaiian Creole, or pages that link to Hawaiian Creole or to this page or whose text contains "Hawaiian Creole".
Parent topics
- Creolistics [r]: The study of creole and pidgin languages. [e]
- Creole (language) [r]: Native language, such as Haitian Creole, which under most definitions originated as a pidgin (a rudimentary language without native speakers, created by at least two groups of speakers as a contact language. i.e. to allow immediate communication) but became as complex as any other language through being acquired by children as a first language. [e]
- Hawaii (U.S. state) [r]: a state of the U.S. consisting of an archipelago in the Pacific Ocean. [e]
Subtopics
- Pidgin Hawaiian [r]: Extinct pidgin language spoken in Hawaii, which drew most of its vocabulary from Hawaiian; spoken mainly by immigrants to Hawaii, and died out in the early twentieth century. [e]
Sources languages
Lexifier
- English language [r]: A West Germanic language widely spoken in the United Kingdom, its territories and dependencies, Commonwealth countries and former colonial outposts of the British Empire; has developed the status of a global language. [e]
Substrate
- Chinese language [r]: Collective term for varieties of the Sino-Tibetan language family spoken in China; linguistically several different languages, but in broad cultural terms often seen as a single form. [e]
- Japanese language [r]: (日本語 Nihongo), Japonic language spoken mostly in Japan; Japonic family's linguistic relationship to other tongues yet to be established, though Japanese may be related to Korean; written in a combination of Chinese-derived characters (漢字 kanji) and native hiragana (ひらがな) and katakana (カタカナ) scripts; about 125,000,000 native speakers worldwide. [e]
- Filipino language [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Portuguese language [r]: An Iberian Romance language, of the Indo-European family. [e]
- Hawaiian language [r]: One of the two official languages in the State of Hawaii [e]
- Hawaii (U.S. state) [r]: a state of the U.S. consisting of an archipelago in the Pacific Ocean. [e]
- Candida albicans [r]: Parasitic diploid fungus, which is incapable of sexual reproduction and meiosis, and a causal agent of opportunistic oral and genital infections in humans. [e]
- Pidgin Hawaiian [r]: Extinct pidgin language spoken in Hawaii, which drew most of its vocabulary from Hawaiian; spoken mainly by immigrants to Hawaii, and died out in the early twentieth century. [e]