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wcerto
Ahonui
USA
5052 Posts |
Posted - 11/06/2007 : 02:07:41 AM
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pElrghmZPq8 This video explains grammatical structure of pidgin, and how versatile one specific word is..."Wot".
Funny but teaches you in a way that you won't even realize you are being taught.
Thanks to Tita for teaching us.
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Me ke aloha Malama pono, Wanda |
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RWD
`Olu`olu
USA
850 Posts |
Posted - 11/06/2007 : 02:40:26 AM
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Wanda You would enjoy hearing "Little Red Riding Hood" in pidgin. I heard a man perform it at a Christmass event in Waialua,Oahu, when I was young kid (9). It was hillarious and I would love to find a recording of it. Does anyone know if one exists? |
Bob |
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guitarded
Ha`aha`a
USA
1799 Posts |
Posted - 11/06/2007 : 05:02:59 AM
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quote: Originally posted by Haole_Boy
Wanda You would enjoy hearing "Little Red Riding Hood" in pidgin. I heard a man perform it at a Christmass event in Waialua,Oahu, when I was young kid (9). It was hillarious and I would love to find a recording of it. Does anyone know if one exists?
You can find dat buggah right ovah heeyah on one CD by Kent Bowman a.k.a. da hilarious peedgin talking K.K. Kaumanua. |
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wcerto
Ahonui
USA
5052 Posts |
Posted - 11/06/2007 : 05:25:18 AM
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I got da buggah awready. I like da blonde malihini and da tree pua`a and da one bout Rumpledakineskin. |
Me ke aloha Malama pono, Wanda |
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RWD
`Olu`olu
USA
850 Posts |
Posted - 11/06/2007 : 06:02:02 AM
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Thanks brudda Ed These are the stories I was talking about. They take me way back in time and I got one coming. |
Bob |
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da_joka
Lokahi
361 Posts |
Posted - 11/07/2007 : 08:22:57 AM
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i wen see dat tita do dat skit befo too ... i no like da way she talks. she sounds waaaay to forced.
if i spok someting out dass fo real, I go post um sometime. |
If can, can. If no can, no can. |
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noeau
Ha`aha`a
USA
1105 Posts |
Posted - 11/07/2007 : 09:55:42 AM
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Too bad. Maybe get old Boogah Boogah or Rap Replinger stuff somewhere. But K.K. Kaumanua was the one I grew up with too. Alos sometimes Sterling Mossman would tell jokes in Pidgin too. |
No'eau, eia au he mea pa'ani wale nō. |
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RWD
`Olu`olu
USA
850 Posts |
Posted - 11/07/2007 : 10:30:20 AM
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da_Joka I think the CD sounds a little forced too, but when I heard it as a kid I remember it as being done pretty well. I don't remember any of my friends making fun of it anyway. I am just happy to hear those stories again, but if you do hear a better one let us (me) know :)
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Bob |
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da_joka
Lokahi
361 Posts |
Posted - 11/07/2007 : 10:39:58 AM
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i rembah rap replinger, he get da pidgin rhymes eh? ... i neva hea KK Kaumanua (i like da name already) befo ... I like Frank DeLima, but. |
If can, can. If no can, no can. |
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hapakid
Luna Ho`omalu
USA
1533 Posts |
Posted - 11/07/2007 : 6:27:58 PM
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There are a lot of pidgin-speaking entertainers who over do it, but I have heard several distinct variations of pidgin that might be from a certain locale, or just be associated with a person's enthusiasm for the mother tongue. On top of that, a dozen members of a single family may speak pidgin differently, some of them without a trace of the rhythm, while others are unintelligible to us mainlanders. I love it all, but choose not to speak it because it's not my language. Jesse |
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Hula Rider
Lokahi
USA
215 Posts |
Posted - 11/08/2007 : 11:54:20 PM
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quote: Originally posted by da_joka
i wen see dat tita do dat skit befo too ... i no like da way she talks. she sounds waaaay to forced.
if i spok someting out dass fo real, I go post um sometime.
She stay souning kina Kalihi-side or someting to me. But I only stay useded to Hawai`i-kine pidgin, not O`ahu-kine. She soun kina rugged.
Leilehua |
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guitarded
Ha`aha`a
USA
1799 Posts |
Posted - 11/09/2007 : 04:53:58 AM
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quote: Originally posted by Hula Rider
She stay souning kina Kalihi-side or someting to me.
She soun kina rugged.
I would hand her my lunch money in a heartbeat. No like get lickens.
And by da way, da tita's name is Kathy Collins. |
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Hula Rider
Lokahi
USA
215 Posts |
Posted - 11/09/2007 : 10:44:28 AM
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Ah - Chicago / Maui - that explains her dialect. What an interesting and accomplished woman!
Leilehua |
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alika207
Ha`aha`a
USA
1260 Posts |
Posted - 11/09/2007 : 5:19:22 PM
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The decision I have made is to not check out the lesson, as this dialect of English should be reserved for Hawaiians or Hawaiians at heart who can have conversations with people wherever they are and be understood. For me, I don't think anyone over here would be able to comprehend what I would say. I can understand some of it but no can speak it dat maika'i. Das okay. |
He kehau ho'oma'ema'e ke aloha.
'Alika / Polinahe |
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wcerto
Ahonui
USA
5052 Posts |
Posted - 11/09/2007 : 6:21:28 PM
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'Alika - it is more comedy than a language lesson. |
Me ke aloha Malama pono, Wanda |
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808bk
Akahai
82 Posts |
Posted - 11/09/2007 : 6:49:41 PM
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http://blogs.honoluluadvertiser.com/index.php?blog=5&title=ho_wot_an_den&more=1&c=1&tb=1&pb=1
This is a link to the Honolulu Advertiser blog topic on pidgeon English posted in yesterday's paper. I'm not sure if anyone cares, but this may add some insight to how the language is viewed in Hawaii.
BTW the Honolulu Advertiser has an excellent blog section. The UH sports blog regularly gets about 500 post a day! Of course I never read or post while I'm at work. |
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