Talk Pidgin; Speak English: Go Local; Go American

Talk Pidgin; Speak English: Go Local; Go American
Author: Wayne Kiyosaki
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 145
Release: 2014-05-13
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1496907515

Deeply traditional in their thinking but inherently pragmatic by nature, Japanese immigrants in Hawaii were driven by conviction to unite under the mantra, "For the Sake of the Children!" to commit to raising their island-born children as full-fledged Americans irrevocably committed to America's highest ideals.

Da Kine Talk

Da Kine Talk
Author: Elizabeth Ball Carr
Publisher: University of Hawaii Press
Total Pages: 212
Release: 2019-03-31
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 0824881249

Hawaii is without parallel as a crossroads where languages of East and West have met and interacted. The varieties of English (including neo-pidgin) heard in the Islands today attest to this linguistic and cultural encounter. "Da kine talk" is the Island term for the most popular of the colorful dialectal forms--speech that captures the flavor of Hawaii's multiracial community and reflects the successes (and failures) of immigrants from both East and West in learning to communicate in English.

Pidgin to Da Max

Pidgin to Da Max
Author: Douglas Simonson
Publisher: Bess Press
Total Pages: 218
Release: 2005
Genre: Humor
ISBN: 9781573062503

An alphabetical guide to words and phrases in Hawaiian Pidgin English, with comic strips illustrating usage.

Empire Builder

Empire Builder
Author: Sandra E. Bonura
Publisher: U of Nebraska Press
Total Pages: 439
Release: 2022-12
Genre:
ISBN: 1496233417

Empire Builder is the previously untold story of John D. Spreckels, the pioneer who almost singlehandedly built San Diego after creating empires in sugar, shipping, transportation, and building development up and down the coast of California and across the Pacific.

Pidgin Grammar

Pidgin Grammar
Author: Kent Sakoda
Publisher: Bess Press
Total Pages: 132
Release: 2003
Genre: Creole dialects, English
ISBN: 9781573061698

Devoted to a serious description of Pidgin origins and grammar, this work on Pidgin grammar does not require knowledge of linguistics. This reference is useful for anyone wanting to know more about this unique language of the Hawaiian Islands.

The Oxford History of English

The Oxford History of English
Author: Lynda Mugglestone
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Total Pages: 624
Release: 2012-11-29
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 0191639419

Lynda Mugglestone's hugely popular The Oxford History of English is now updated and entirely reset in a new edition featuring David Crystal's new take on the future of English in the wider world. In accounts made vivid with examples from a vast range of documentary evidence that includes letters, diaries, and private records, fifteen scholars trace the history of English from its ancient Indo-European origins to the present. They cover the language's versions, written and spoken, revel in its rich variety over fifteen centuries, and chart its varied progress nationally, regionally, and throughout the world. With scholarship at once impeccable and approachable, the authors describe and explain the constantly changing sounds, words, meanings, and grammar of English. This is a book for everyone interested in the language, present and past.

Learning, Teaching, and Community

Learning, Teaching, and Community
Author: Lucinda Pease-Alvarez
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 316
Release: 2006-04-21
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1135615314

This volume brings together established and new scholarly voices to explore how participatory and situated approaches to learning can contribute to educational innovation. The contributors' critical examinations of educational programming and engagements provide insights into how educators, youth, families, and community members understand and enact their commitments to diversity and equitable access. Collectively, these essays complicate notions of community, alerting readers to ways in which community can be constructed other than in geographical and ethnoracial terms--as alliances and collaborations of individuals joining together to accomplish or negotiate shared agendas. The focus on agency combined with social context, a dialectic to which all of the authors speak, enlarges and invigorates our sense of what is pedagogically possible in societies characterized by diversity and flux. *Part I, "Linking Pedagogy to Communities," focuses on dynamic initiatives where practitioners collaborate with community members and other professionals as they acknowledge and build on the cultural, linguistic, and intellectual resources of ethnic-minority students and their communities. *Part II, "Professional Learning for Diversity," centers on the authors' experiences in facilitating opportunities for working with prospective and practicing teachers to develop situated pedagogies, highlighting both the challenges that emerge and the transformations that occur. *Part III, "Learning in Community (and Community in Learning), illustrates how educational innovation can extend beyond the realm of schools and classrooms by elucidating ways in which individuals construct learning venues in out-of-school settings. Learning, Teaching, and Community: Contributions of Situated and Participatory Approaches to Educational Innovation is a compelling and timely text ideally suited for courses focused on teacher education and development, informal learning, equity and education, multilingual and multicultural education, language and culture, educational foundations, and school reform/educational restructuring, and will be equally of interest to faculty, researchers, and professionals in these areas.

THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI'I-HILO

THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI'I-HILO
Author: Frank T. Inouye
Publisher: University of Hawaii Press
Total Pages: 210
Release: 2001-10-31
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9780824824952

Conceived in the early 1990s by Frank T. Inouye, who served as the first director of what was to become the University of Hawai'i-Hilo, this is the history of the institution over fifty years, from 1952 to 1993.

The Reader's Encyclopedia of the American West

The Reader's Encyclopedia of the American West
Author: Howard Roberts Lamar
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1328
Release: 1977
Genre: History
ISBN:

The American West is an evocative term that conjures up images of cowboys and Indians, covered wagons, sheriffs and outlaws, and endless prairies as well as contemporary images ranging from national parks to the oil, aerospace, and film industries. In addition, the West encompasses not only the past and present of the area west of the Mississippi but also the frontier as it moved across each of the fifty American states, offering the promise of freedom and a better life to pioneers and settlers in every era. This authoritative, comprehensive encyclopedia is a rich source of information about these many characteristics of the American West, real and imaginary, old and new, stretching from coast to coast and throughout the country's history and culture.