pidgin

Examples Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of pidgin The language is a high-modernist juxtaposition of street urchin pidgin, Yiddish English and finely observed free indirect discourse — New York’s voice is plural. New York Times, 30 June 2022 ClayRocksU excels at something similar, fusing Igbo language and local pidgin folk elements with punk rock. Ama Udofa, Rolling Stone, 19 June 2022 With the song — a feel-good tune sung in Nigerian pidgin and blending punk rock, Afrobeats, and folk — Okorocha and Co. are also attempting to challenge the negative stereotypes attached to rock music in this part of the world. Ama Udofa, Rolling Stone, 19 June 2022 But Amazon expects this person to be well connected with the Nigerian film industry, already boasting relationships with top creators, fluency in Nigerian pidgin and one or more indigenous languages. Alexander Onukwue, Quartz, 11 Apr. 2022 See all Example Sentences for pidgin 
Recent Examples of Synonyms for pidgin
Noun
  • Working across styles and idioms including classical, jazz, pop, R&B, and film scoring—and breaking ground for African American achievement in the entertainment industries—Jones has garnered the highest levels of critical and commercial acclaim.
    Jem Aswad, Variety, 19 Nov. 2024
  • The New York alto saxophonist, composer, vocalist and bandleader makes her Bay Area debut this weekend with a series of gigs, introducing a beguiling body of tunes shaped by her Chinese American heritage and deep engagement with various jazz, folk and pop idioms.
    Andrew Gilbert, The Mercury News, 6 Nov. 2024
Noun
  • This brings the show to 58 categories, and songs will only be considered if their lyrics are at least 60% written in Spanish, Portuguese or a native regional dialect.
    Kaitlyn Schwanemann, NBC News, 12 Nov. 2024
  • His father worked as a sports journalist and his mother as a dialect coach.
    Bilge Ebiri, Vulture, 9 Oct. 2024
Noun
  • Kam understood the regional colloquialism assignment!
    Cindi Andrews and Katie Wissman, The Indianapolis Star, 3 Nov. 2024
  • The fine line between being relatable to your audience and appearing unprofessional by going against consumer preferences to formality by using slang, colloquialisms, or informalities can potentially damage brand growth with both new and existing consumers.
    Gary Drenik, Forbes, 3 Sep. 2024
Noun
  • Comparatively, while New Hampshire is quiet, with a small core group of practitioners working in regional vernaculars, Maine and Vermont boast a disproportionate number of architects—Elliott Architects and Birdseye among them—engaged in custom residential equal to that of the nation’s highest.
    Richard Olsen, Forbes, 30 Oct. 2024
  • Since 2015, the term lynching, a word with 18th-century American roots, has become part of the Indian vernacular.
    Mohammad Ali, WIRED, 14 Apr. 2020
Noun
  • In Jilly Cooper’s world, men conquer, women sigh, the sun shines perpetually on pale-gold Cotswolds mansions with bluebells in bloom, and absolutely everyone is DTF, as the parlance goes.
    Sophie Gilbert, The Atlantic, 1 Nov. 2024
  • Through a melodic flow of political parlance and an impressive stable of sprightly actors, creator Debora Cahn stages a spirited play about political relationships — and relationship politics — that never feels stodgy or stupefying, despite an ungodly amount of dialogue.
    Ben Travers, IndieWire, 30 Oct. 2024
Noun
  • Casting themselves as high priests of pop culture, the duo encapsulated gay-millennial preoccupations and patois.
    Michael Schulman, The New Yorker, 16 Sep. 2024
  • But perhaps the most evident connection is a sense of individuality that’s preserved in the pockets of patois spoken across both the island and the bayou—the French Creole dialect is still alive and doing very well.
    Essence, Essence, 20 June 2024
Noun
  • Fact checked by Sarah Scott Parents of tweens and teens like me are always in need of a brush up on current slang terms, such as lala bop, and rizz.
    Melissa Willets, Parents, 1 Nov. 2024
  • Slang terms for marijuana Pot, Mary Jane, grass, reefer, green, hash, ganja and doobie are just a few of the ever-growing list of slang terms used in exchange for marijuana.
    Greta Cross, USA TODAY, 1 Nov. 2024
Noun
  • But European regionalism has always also included ethnic and cultural elements connected to Christianity and whiteness.
    Hans Kundnani, Foreign Affairs, 10 Sep. 2024
  • But regionalism in Connecticut, Yankees don’t want to hear that.
    Alison Cross, Hartford Courant, 17 June 2024

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Cite this Entry

“Pidgin.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/pidgin. Accessed 28 Nov. 2024.

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