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 Bislama language - Definition 

Bislama, previously also spelled Bichelama and Beach-la-Mar, is a creole language spoken in Vanuatu. It is closely related to Tok Pisin of Papua New Guinea; Pijin of the Solomon Islands; and Broken of the Torres Strait, Queensland, Australia.

"Yumi, Yumi, Yumi", the Vanuatu national anthem, is in Bislama.

History

Thousands of Ni-Vanuatu were recruited to work mainly on Queensland, Australia, as well as Fiji plantations in the 1870s and 1880s. With multiple languages being spoken in these plantations, a pidgin was formed.

Over the past century or so, this language has evolved to what is currently spoken.

Related languages are Pijin of the Solomon Islands, Tok Pisin of Papua New Guinea, and the Torres Strait Creole.

Name

The name of Bislama comes from the nineteenth-century word Beach-la-Mar, which itself derives from the French "bêche de mer" sea cucumber. In the mid-1800s, sea cucumbers were also harvested and dried at the same time that sandalwood was gathered. The name came to be associated with the kind of pidgin that came to be used by the local laborers between themselves, as well as their English-speaking overseers.

External links

Wikipedia
Wikipedia articles written in this language are located at the


de:Bislama es:Bislama ru:Бислама th:ภาษาบิสลามา

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bislama language".