Tok Pisin phrasebook
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Description: An open-source phrasebook at Wikitravel.
Tok Pisin phrasebook - Wikitravel Help Wikitravel grow by contributing to an article! , and is closely related to Pijin blong Solomon ( ); these Bislamic languages are descended from a pidgin which formed around 1820 or 1860. The vocabulary is 5/6 Indo-European (mostly English, some German, Portuguese, and Latin), 1/7 Malayo-Polynesian, and the rest Trans-New-Guinea and other languages. The grammar is creolized and unlike those of the source languages.
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Page title: | Tok Pisin phrasebook - Wikitravel |
Keywords: | wikitravel,wiki,travel,tourism,travel guide,hotels,restaurants,nightlife,things to do,Tok Pisin phrasebook,Tok Pisin |
Description: | WikiPedia:Tok Pisin Tok Pisin (or Pidgin) is spoken in Papua New Guinea, and is closely related to Pijin blong Solomon (Solomon Islands), Bislama (Vanuatu), and Ailan Tok (Torres Strait); these Bislamic languages are descended from a pidgin which formed around 1820 or 1860. The vocabulary is 5/6 Indo-European (mostly English, some German, Portuguese, and Latin), 1/7 Malayo-Polynesian, and the rest Trans-New-Guinea and other languages. The grammar is creolized and unlike those of the source languages. |
IP-address: | 98.158.195.136 |