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Patois

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Patois Chantal Dufreny Jessica Turral Also Known As Patwa Afro. Jamaican Jamaican Creole Creole Creoles are languages that form as a result of some human upheaval ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Patois


1
Patois
  • Chantal Dufreny
  • Jessica Turral

2
Also Known As
  • Patwa
  • Afro. Jamaican
  • Jamaican Creole

ungrammatical English ?
3
Creole
  • Creoles are languages that form as a result of
    some human upheaval which makes it impossible for
    people to use their own languages to communicate
  • Arise due to the interaction between a native
    language and a forced language
  • Result a new language comes about that has some
    characteristics of the original languages and
    also has some characteristics of its own

4
Recall the Anglo-Saxon invasion
  • Upheaval ? Changes language
  • Began in 449
  • Ruled from 5th Century until the Norman Conquest
    in 1066
  • Old English comes about
  • Anglo-Saxon language and culture viewed as more
    sophisticated
  • Celtic influences practically eradicated

5
History
  • Indigenous people called the Arawaks were
    residing in Jamaica
  • The Arawaks were a peaceful group of people who
    migrated from Venezuela at 2 separate points in
    history (650 900AD)
  • Columbus discovered Jamaica in 1494
  • Influx of Spanish-Europeans in 1510 into what is
    present-day Spanishtown

6
Slavery in Jamaica
  • 1655 Jamaica is captured by the British who
    turned to large-scale importation of Africans to
    be used on sugar plantations (until emancipation
    in 1838)
  • African slaves forced into a situation where
    English was the only common means of
    communication
  • Slavetraders and owners spoke English
  • Slaves spoke a variety of African languages
  • Slaves had to assimilate by learning English
  • More than 90 of the 2.5 million people in
    Jamaica are descendants of slaves brought from
    western Africa by the British

7
Origin of Patois
  • A lot of the words in Patois are of English
    origin
  • Some words also adopted from African languages
    especially when no equivalent English word could
    be found
  • (often for words that refer to people, plants,
    animals, activities, and religious words)
  • Note the name Jamaica is derived from the Arawak
    word Xaymaca meaning Island of springs
  • No other known traces of the Arawak exist today

8
Jamaican English Rastafarian English
  • There are two other languages often confused
    with Jamaican Creole
  • Jamaican English is a regional dialect of English
  • Rastafarian English is tied heavily to the
    religion.

9
Eastern Western Jamaican Creole
  • There are two types of Jamaican Creole Eastern
    and Western
  • Phonologically different
  • One difference Eastern dialect treats /h/ as a
    phonetic
  • Western (Like English) treats /h/ as phonemic
  • Phoneme The smallest phonetic unit in a language
    that is capable of conveying a distinction in
    meaning, as the m of mat and the b of bat in
    English

10
Status of /h/
  • Western Jamaican Creole h is phonemic meaning
    that the h sound change produces a separate word
    with a change in meaning
  • /hiit/hit and /iit/eat
  • /han/ hand and /an/
  • Ham and am
  • Eastern Jamaican Creole h is phonetic
  • There are no sound differences between the words
    with h and those that are h-less but the words
    have different meanings
  • For example pen and pin
  • /iit/hit and /iit/eat

11
English Consonants
12
Jamaican Creole Consonants (21)
13
Differences Between English and Jamaican Creole
  • Jamaican Creole is missing Dental Fricatives ?, ð
  • English ð (voiced dental fricative), e.g. in
    function words
  • they, the, those, them, father
  • Jamaican Creole
  • dey, de, dose, dem, fadda
  • English ? (voiceless dental fricative)
  • threes, with
  • Jamaican Creole
  • tri, wid
  • Also missing ? (voiced alveolar fricative)
  • Unable to pronounce the er sound in pressure
  • Becomes preh-shah

14
Vowels
15
Back Harmony
  • In English there are no restrictions on back
    harmony
  • In Jamaican Creole, high vowels have to agree on
    backness.
  • The high vowels are /i/ and /u/
  • The combinations /iu/, /ui/ are impossible
  • But /ii/ or /uu/ are possible
  • As in biini (tiny) and ziin (okay)

16
  • Backness matching doesnt matter with /a/
  • a can be paired like /ai/, /ia/, /au/, or /ua/
  • baik (bike), buat (boat), taun (town)
  • In English we do not have this restriction,
    meaning that there is not need to match on
    backness
  • Ex) intuition (the /ui/ is ok

17
Peripheral Vowel Harmony
  • Sequences of mid vowels can not follow each other
    within one symbol
  • /e/, /o/
  • However, peripheral (not mid) vowels may occur in
    sequences (/i/, /u/, /a/)
  • As in buat (boat), biak (bake)

18
Examples
  • /tri man did a suim/
  • /dem a fait fi wi/
  • /im kiann biit mi/
  • /buai/

19
Poem
  • Dah language weh yuh proud a,
  • Weh yuh honour an respec-
  • Po Mas Charlie, yuh no know se
  • Dat it spring from dialec

20
The Continuum
  • The debate surrounding the use of Patois as
    opposed to Standard English dates back to the
    times of slavery
  • During slavery, Standard English was presented as
    a superior language
  • The indigenous language was denigrated to
    inferior status
  • Many people in Jamaica are somewhere along the
    continuum between speaking British Standard
    English and the local Patois, so there is a great
    deal of linguistic flexibility
  • The middle and upper class Jamaicans often use
    Patois in social settings but not in the workplace

21
Controversy
  • Negative impact of dialect Illiteracy?
  • Many believe that the high rate of illiteracy in
    Jamaica is due to the presence of the two
    languages
  • Children are taught to read and write in Standard
    English
  • Yet they speak Patois
  • There are those who strongly support the
    formalization of its use in Jamaican society
    while there are those who strongly opposite it

22
Effect of Jamaican Patois on Education
  • Jamaican students who grew up in a
    Patois-speaking household sometimes report that
    they felt their success on the verbal section of
    the SAT was hindered
  • Different vocabulary many of the words you are
    expected to know for the SAT are never used in
    your house

23
Presence of Patois outside of Jamaica
  • Not only through the spread of reggae music which
    is highly popular around the world
  • There are also large communities of people from
    Jamaica living in other countries
  • Many go to England (which is to be expected since
    they were under British rule for many years)
  • In the years following WWII the US and the UK
    were in need of reconstruction and expansion of
    their economies.
  • Following 1944 there was tremendous migration of
    Jamaican immigrants (esp in London and NY)

24
Patois in the US
  • New York has the largest population of Jamaican
    immigrants (439,400)
  • One of the largest communities of
    Jamaican-Americans in NY is in Queens where there
    is a population of 93,153
  • Those who are born in the US but born of Jamaican
    heritage usually dont acquire the ability to
    master Patois
  • Patois is lost in first generation Americans
    because it is not taught, or even allowed, in
    American schools.

25
Sources
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamaican_Creole
  • http//www.reggaemovement.com/History/patois.htm
  • http//www.nyu.edu/classes/blake.map2001/jamaica.h
    tml
  • Jamaican Creole
  • Otelemate G. Harry
  • Department of Language, Linguistics Philosophy
  • University of the West Indies, Mona Campus
  • Journal of the IPA (2006) 36/1
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