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Sranan Tongo (also Sranantongo "Surinamese tongue," Sranan, Surinaams, Surinamese, Surinamese Creole)[3] is an English-based creole language that is spoken as a lingua franca by approximately 550,000 people in Suriname.[1]

Sranan Tongo
Sranantongo
Native toSuriname
Native speakers
(130,000 cited 1993)[1]
L2 speakers: 50% of the population of Suriname (1993?)[2]
Language family
English Creole
  • Atlantic
    • Suriname
      • Sranan Tongo
Writing system
Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-2srn
ISO 639-3srn
Glottologsran1240
Linguasphere52-ABB-aw

Developed originally among slaves from West Africa and English colonists, its use as a lingua franca expanded after the Dutch took over the colony in 1667, and 85% of the vocabulary comes from English and Dutch. It also became the common language among the indigenous peoples and the indentured laborers imported by the Dutch; these groups included speakers of Javanese, Sarnami Hindustani, Saramaccan, and varieties of Chinese.


Origins


Message written in Sranan Tongo in the guestbook in the Land of Hayracks, an open-air museum in Slovenia (April 2016)
Message written in Sranan Tongo in the guestbook in the Land of Hayracks, an open-air museum in Slovenia (April 2016)

The Sranan Tongo words for "to know" and "small children" are sabi and pikin (respectively derived from Portuguese saber and pequeno). The Portuguese were the first European explorers of the West African coast. A trading pidgin language developed between them and Africans, and later explorers, including the English, also used this creole.

Based on its lexicon, Sranan Tongo has been found to have developed originally as an English-based creole language, because of the early influence of English colonists here in what was then part of English colony of Guiana, who imported numerous Africans as slaves for the plantations. After the Dutch takeover in 1667 (in exchange for ceding the North American eastern seaboard colony of New Netherland to the English), a substantial overlay of words were adopted from the Dutch language.

Sranan Tongo's lexicon is a fusion of mostly English grammar[4] and Dutch vocabulary (85%), plus some vocabulary from Spanish, Portuguese and West African languages. It began as a pidgin spoken primarily by enslaved Africans from various tribes in Suriname, who often did not have an African language in common. Sranan Tongo also became the language of communication between the slaves. So the slave owners could not understand the slaves, the slaves would often make escaping plans in Sranan Tongo. Under Dutch rule, the slaves were not permitted to learn or speak Dutch. As other ethnic groups, such as East Indians and Chinese, were brought to Suriname as indentured workers, Sranan Tongo became a lingua franca.


Phonology and orthography


Maroons being taught in the outdoors, 1943. At the top of the blackboard is Santa Teresia begi foe wi, Saint Teresa, pray for us in Sranan Tongo.
Maroons being taught in the outdoors, 1943. At the top of the blackboard is Santa Teresia begi foe wi, "Saint Teresa, pray for us" in Sranan Tongo.

Until the middle of the 20th century, most written texts in Sranan, seen at the time as a low-prestige language,[5] used a spelling that was not standardized but based on Dutch orthography, recording an approximation of how Sranan words sound to Dutch ears. In view of the considerable differences between the phonologies of Sranan and Dutch, this was not a satisfactory situation.

With the emergence of a movement striving for the emancipation of Sranan as a respectable language, the need for a phonology-based orthography was felt. A more suitable orthography developed as an informal consensus from the publications of linguists studying Sranan and related creoles. For every-day use, the Dutch-based spelling remained common, while some literary authors adopted (variants of) the linguistic spelling.

To end this situation, the Surinamese government commissioned a committee of linguists and writers to define a standard spelling, which was adopted and came into force in 1986.[6] This standard basically followed the linguistic consensus. However, as the language is not taught in schools, while Dutch is, many speakers are not clearly aware of the principles on which this spelling is based and keep using a Dutchish, variant spelling.


Modern use


Although the formal Dutch-based educational system repressed the use of Sranan Tongo, in the past pejoratively dismissed as Taki Taki (literally meaning "talk talk" or "say say"),[7] it gradually became more accepted by the establishment and wider society to speak it. During the 1980s, this language was popularized by publicly known speakers, including president Dési Bouterse, who often delivered national speeches in Sranan Tongo.

Sranan Tongo remains widely used in Suriname and in Dutch urban areas populated by immigrants from Suriname. They especially use it in casual conversation, often freely mixing it with Dutch. Written code-switching between Sranan Tongo and Dutch is also common in computer-mediated communication.[8] People often greet each other in Sranan Tongo by saying, for example, fa waka (how are you), instead of the more formal Dutch hoe gaat het (how is it going).

In 2021, Sranan Tongo appeared for the first time in the Eurovision Song Contest in Jeangu Macrooy's song, "Birth of a New Age".


Literature


As a written language, Sranan Tongo has existed since the late 18th century. The first publication in Sranan Tongo was in 1783 by Hendrik Schouten who wrote a part Dutch, part Sranan Tongo poem, called Een huishoudelijke twist (A Domestic Tiff).[9] The first important book was published in 1864 by Johannes King, and relates to his travels to Drietabbetje for the Moravian Church.[10]

Early writers often used their own spelling system.[11] An official orthography was adopted by the government of Suriname on July 15, 1986, in Resolution 4501. A few writers have used Sranan in their work, most notably the poet Henri Frans de Ziel ("Trefossa"), who also wrote God zij met ons Suriname, Suriname's national anthem, whose second verse is sung in Sranan Tongo.[12]

Other notable writers in Sranan Tongo are Eugène Drenthe, André Pakosie, Celestine Raalte, Michaël Slory, and Bea Vianen.


See also



References


  1. Sranan Tongo at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. Sranan Tongo at Ethnologue (14th ed., 2000).
  3. "Sranan | language | Britannica".
  4. Sherriah, A (2019). A tale of two dialect regions: Sranan's 17th-century English input (pdf). Berlin: Language Science Press. doi:10.5281/zenodo.2625403. ISBN 978-3-96110-155-9.
  5. For example, school children could be punished for speaking Sranan Tongo.
  6. Resolutie van 15 juli 1986 No. 4501, inzake vaststelling officiële spelling voor het Sranantongo.
  7. "Sranan". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  8. Radke, Henning (2017-09-01). "Die lexikalische Interaktion zwischen Niederländisch und Sranantongo in surinamischer Onlinekommunikation". Taal en Tongval (in German). 69 (1): 113–136. doi:10.5117/TET2017.1.RADK.
  9. "The History of Sranan". Linguistic Department of Brigham Young University. Retrieved 25 May 2020..
  10. "Johannes King (1830-1898)". Werkgroup Caraïbische Letteren (in Dutch). Retrieved 24 May 2020.
  11. "Suriname: Spiegel der vaderlandse kooplieden". Digital Library for Dutch Literature (in Dutch). 1980. Retrieved 24 May 2020.
  12. "Trefossa en het volkslied van Suriname". Star Nieuws (in Dutch). Retrieved 19 May 2020.

Sources





На других языках


[de] Sranantongo

Sranantongo (auch kurz Sranan, Niederländisch: Surinaams), früher auch als Negerengels (Negerenglisch) oder Taki-Taki (so viel wie „Blabla“) bezeichnet, ist eine in Suriname gesprochene Kreolsprache.
- [en] Sranan Tongo

[es] Sranan tongo

Sranan tongo (Sranantongo) o sranang tongo (Sranan) (literalmente «lengua de Surinam»), también llamada en forma peyorativa «Takki Takki», es una lengua criolla hablada de forma nativa por unas 300 000 personas en Surinam.[1]

[fr] Sranan

Le sranan (forme courte, également sranan tongo ou sranantongo « langue du Suriname », appelé aussi créole surinamien ; en néerlandais Surinaams ; en anglais Surinamese ou Surinamese Creole) est un ensemble de créoles, rassemblant deux langues constituées à partir de bases lexicales empruntées pour l'une à l'anglais, pour l'autre au portugais.

[it] Lingua sranan tongo

Lo sranan tongo è una lingua creola parlata da circa 500 000 individui madrelingua nel Suriname. Al di fuori del Paese, lo sranan tongo è anche noto come taki taki (dall'inglese talk talk, letteralmente parla parla).

[ru] Сранан-тонго

Сранан-тонго (Sranan Tongo — «суринамский язык») — креольский язык, являющийся родным для примерно 400 000 человек, проживающих в Суринаме.



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