पैटोइस Meaning in English
पैटोइस शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : patois
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
पटोमाइनपटोमाइंस
पट्रअ
पट्र पेटिका
पट्र मिट्र
पत्रा,पंचांग
पट्र पेटीई
पट्र श्रृंखला
पाट्र ताफक
पितृसंता
पितृनोस्टर
पितृवादी
कुलपिता संबंधी
पितृसत्तात्मक
पुरुषसत्तावादी
पैटोइस इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
He authored several noteworthy poems in his native patois and wrote the first grammar and dictionary devoted to the Valdôtain dialect.
These include the poet Edouard Grandel's Lexique du patois berckois (Université de Picardie, Amiens, 1980), Lucien Tétu's Glossaire du parler de Berck (Société de linguistique picarde, 1981) and his À l'écoute des Berckois : Dictons et proverbes, sobriquets (Société de linguistique picarde, 1988).
Originally it was sung in patois or French creole.
The classic War form is an eight-line stanza, the first four lines in a minor key, then modulating into the major, and returning to the minor with the refrain "santimanite" ("sans humanité" in patois, in English "without humanity").
Rimitti was one of the first to sing them in public and did so in the earthy language of the street, using a rich blend of slang and patois.
Earlier spellings have included 'Mortesna', 'Mortennam', and a patois version, 'Moutone'.
Criticism of Punjabi included the belief that it was simply a form of patois, lacking any form of standardisation, and that "would be inflexible and barren, and incapable of expressing nice shades of meaning and exact logical ideas with the precision so essential in local proceedings.
Some more minor characters have used a similar patois.
Performances generally begin with improvised solo singing in a mixture of Spanish and French patois termed kreyol cubano or patuá cubano by the lead vocalist (composé).
Traditionally on the ninth night of the deceased's death their bed and mattress are turned up against the wall, in order to encourage the spirit (Jamaican patois "duppy") to leave the house and enter the grave.
This is a book that sings: its prose, a giddy mixture of English and patois, Runyonesque flights of descriptive fantasy and the musical cadences of street-slang, is by turns rhapsodic, exhilarating and poignant," said The Telegraph.
After turning to writing novels rather than poetry for a period of time, D'Aguiar returned to the poetic mode in 1998, publishing Bill of Rights (1998): a long narrative poem about the Jonestown massacre in Guyana in 1979, which is told in Guyanese versions of English, fusing patois, Creole and Nation Language with the standard vernacular.
They spoke a Portuguese patois, which has influenced the modern Indonesian language.