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  2. Hawaiian Pidgin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawaiian_Pidgin

    Hawaiian Pidgin (alternately, Hawaiʻi Creole English or HCE, known locally as Pidgin) is an English -based creole language spoken in Hawaiʻi. An estimated 600,000 residents of Hawaiʻi speak Hawaiian Pidgin natively and 400,000 speak it as a second language. [2][3][4][5] Although English and Hawaiian are the two official languages of the ...

  3. Sugar plantations in Hawaii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sugar_plantations_in_Hawaii

    The Old Sugar Mill, established in 1835 by Ladd & Co., is the site of the first sugar plantation. In 1836 the first 8,000 pounds (3,600 kg) of sugar and molasses was shipped to the United States. [1] The plantation town of Koloa, was established adjacent to the mill. By the 1840s sugarcane plantations gained a foothold in Hawaiian agriculture.

  4. Native Hawaiians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_Hawaiians

    As with other Hawaii locals, Kānaka Maoli typically speak Hawaiian Creole English (referred to locally as Pidgin) in daily life. Pidgin is a creole that developed during the plantation era in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, mixing words and diction from the various ethnic groups living in Hawaii then. [24]

  5. Pidgin Hawaiian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pidgin_Hawaiian

    Pidgin Hawaiian (or Hawaii Plantation Pidgin[1]) is a pidgin spoken in Hawaii, which draws most of its vocabulary from the Hawaiian language and could have been influenced by other pidgins of the Pacific Ocean region, such as Maritime Polynesian Pidgin. Emerging in the mid-nineteenth century, it was spoken mainly by immigrants to Hawaii, and ...

  6. Da kine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Da_kine

    Da Kine Bail Bonds is a Honolulu, Hawaii -based bail bonds company owned by Duane "Dog" Chapman, the title character in the A&E reality TV series Dog the Bounty Hunter. [9] "Da Kine" is cited as the callsign meaning of KINE-FM 105.1, a Honolulu -based Hawaiian music radio station. "Da Kine" is a song from the 1999 album Shaka the Moon by ...

  7. List of pidgins, creoles, mixed languages and cants based on ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Pidgins,_Creoles...

    Turks and Caicos Creole English. Gullah language (Sea Islands Creole English) Afro-Seminole Creole. Southern. Virgin Islands Creole (Netherlands Antilles Creole English) Crucian: Spoken on Saint Croix. Saint Martin Creole English: Spoken in Saba, Sint Eustatius, Saint Martin. Leeward Caribbean Creole English.

  8. Japanese loanwords in Hawaii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_loanwords_in_Hawaii

    There is a Japanese kanji joke based on 五-四-四 "5-4-4", which can be read go-shi-shi in Japanese. Thus, “I gotta five-four-four” is a Pidgin euphemism for "I gotta go shishi". Zori: Rubber thonged slippers, often called flip-flops in the continental U.S. Also zoris (plural). Synonymous with "slippers" or "slippahs".

  9. Lois-Ann Yamanaka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lois-Ann_Yamanaka

    Website. www.yamanakanaau.com. Lois-Ann Yamanaka (born September 7, 1961) is an American poet and novelist from Hawaiʻi. Many of her literary works are written in Hawaiian Pidgin, and some of her writing has dealt with controversial ethnic issues. In particular, her works confront themes of Asian American families and the local culture of ...