pidgin

noun
/ˈpɪ.d͡ʒɪn/UK/ˈpɪ.d͡ʒən/US

Etymology

From pidgin English, from a Chinese Pidgin English pronunciation of English business during trade in the Far East. All attestations of pidgin from the first half of the nineteenth century given in the third edition of the Oxford English Dictionary mean “business; an action, occupation, or affair” (the earliest being from 1807). Other suggested derivations include: * Hebrew פִּדְיוֹן (pidyón, “exchange; trade; redemption”) * Chinese pronunciation of Portuguese ocupação (“occupation; business”) * South Seas pronunciation of beach * Portuguese baixo (“low”)

  1. derived from baixo
  2. derived from ocupação
  3. borrowed from פִּדְיוֹן — “exchange; trade; redemption
  4. derived from business

Definitions

  1. An amalgamation of two disparate languages, used by two populations having no common…

    An amalgamation of two disparate languages, used by two populations having no common language as a lingua franca to communicate with each other, lacking formalized grammar and having a small, utilitarian vocabulary and no native speakers.

    • ‘I didnʼt know you can speak pidgin,’ he said and laughed.
  2. A person's business, occupation, work, or trade (also spelt as pigeon).

    • Forget money. That's my pidgin.
    • It's up to the detective sergeant to ask his own questions, that's not my pidgin. But I did wonder if either of you gentlemen had an idea of the exact time of the shot.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for pidgin. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA