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Jamaican Patois: Di Voice a Di People
created Yesterday, 04:00 by Adam Tayseer
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235 words
51 completed
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wagwan mi bredda welcome to di world a jamaican patois
dis a di way we talk live laugh an reason every day
patois no come from school or book it come from survival
back inna di day african people dem mix dem language wid english an other tings an create dem own voice
dat voice turn into patwa an it stay strong same way till now
when a jamaican say seen it no mean dem eye work
it mean mi understand mi agree mi deh yah wid yuh
a one likkle word wid nuff power
di word ting can mean anything
a object a situation a person a vibe
context a everything in patois
an den deh word like bomboclat
whole heap a people outside jamaica curious bout it
fi keep it simple mi bredda a one strong expression
people use it fi shock excitement anger or emphasis
it no something yuh fling round careless but yuh ago hear it inna real talk
patois full a feeling
tone matter more than grammar
how yuh say a ting more important than what yuh say sometime
dat a why di language feel alive
from reggae to dancehall from street corner to yaad
patois travel di world without passport
people a foreign a chat it even if dem no fully overstand
so wagwan again bredda
patois a more than talk
a identity a history a pride
seen
dis a di way we talk live laugh an reason every day
patois no come from school or book it come from survival
back inna di day african people dem mix dem language wid english an other tings an create dem own voice
dat voice turn into patwa an it stay strong same way till now
when a jamaican say seen it no mean dem eye work
it mean mi understand mi agree mi deh yah wid yuh
a one likkle word wid nuff power
di word ting can mean anything
a object a situation a person a vibe
context a everything in patois
an den deh word like bomboclat
whole heap a people outside jamaica curious bout it
fi keep it simple mi bredda a one strong expression
people use it fi shock excitement anger or emphasis
it no something yuh fling round careless but yuh ago hear it inna real talk
patois full a feeling
tone matter more than grammar
how yuh say a ting more important than what yuh say sometime
dat a why di language feel alive
from reggae to dancehall from street corner to yaad
patois travel di world without passport
people a foreign a chat it even if dem no fully overstand
so wagwan again bredda
patois a more than talk
a identity a history a pride
seen
saving score / loading statistics ...