28 January 2022

Start talkin' like a Looshan...


Imagine having to communicate when no one speaks your language! Especially when the dominant language changes - sometimes during your own lifetime - from French to English back to French again and again. Fourteen times depending on who was in power!

The Looshan Solooshan is Kwéyòl (Creole) - a language developed mostly from the Indigenous Peoples' language and including words from the African languages, East Indian languages, French, English and Portuguese languages

Kwéyòl words are pronounced as written.

Sometimes a Kwéyòl word combines a French preposition or an article plus a noun like the words lavi (la vie), nanj (un ange), dlo (de l’eau).
Kwéyòl has fewer vowels than French because multiple vowels in French words are often shortened to a single Kwéyòl vowel.

The sound of the vowel u in French becomes the i sound in Kwéyòl like tòti for tortue (turtle).
Also, the different sounds of r and w in French disappear in Kwéyòl like awété for arreter (to arrest) or fwè for frère.

Want to understand Looshan? Wespe! (Respect!) Here's a few phrases to start talkin' like a Looshan...
Kwéyòl: Bozu Bon jou
French: Bonjour
English: Good Morning
Kwéyòl: Boswé Bonswe
French: Bon Soir
English: Good Evening
Kwéyòl: Kommau ou ye? Sa'w fe?
French: Comment ca va? Ca va?
English: How are you?
Kwéyòl: Mwen byen
French: Je suis bien
English: I am fine
Kwéyòl: Wi
French: Oui
English: Yes
Kwéyòl: No
French: Non
English: No
Kwéyòl: Su plé
S'il vous plait
English: Please
Kwéyòl:  Mési boku
Merci beaucoup
English: Thank you very much
Kwéyòl: Padon Mwe
Pardon-moi
English: Excuse Me
Kwéyòl: Ki lé i yé?
Quelle heure est-il? Quelle heure il-est?
English: What time is it?
Kwéyòl: Sa ca fete
Q'uest-ce que fait?
What is happening?
Kwéyòl: Vini!
Venez!
Come!
Kwéyòl: Alé
Aller
Go

Kwéyòl: Ki kote au ca aller
De quel coté aller?
Where are you going?
Kwéyòl: Koté mwe?
De quel coté suis-je?
Where am I?
Kwéyòl: Ki bél péi!
Quelle bel pays!
What a lovely country!
Kwéyòl: Mwe vlé o bwé.
French: Moi veut a boire. (Je veut a boire.)
English: I want a drink.
Kwéyòl: Wum
French: Rhum
English: Rum
Kwéyòl: Mwen pa konnèt sa
French: Je ne connais pas ca
English: I don't know this
Kwéyòl: Pwéso Poisson Fish
Kwéyòl: Bef Boeuf Beef
Kwéyòl: Pul Poule (Poulet) Chicken
Kwéyòl: Sa bon
French: C'est bon
English: That's good
Kwéyòl: Listwa
French: L'histoire
English: The story
Want a smile from a stranger... here's some common Looshan proverbes

Kwéyòl: Jou ka ouvè pou tout moun
French: Le jour ouvre pour tout le monde
English: The day breaks for everyone
Don't take offense but...

Leave your shoes at the door before entering someone's home. Looshans sweep their house and entry often (usually with a tightly bound grass or branch broom).
Calling people by their skin color or the many shades of brown such as "red" "yellow" "black" or "white" man/woman is politically-correct Looshan.

Queen's Chain and the Pitons World Heritage Site

Zion Lion Farm lies between the Queen's Chain (beach) and The Pitons World Heritage Site (mountains).