Revision as of 16:09, 21 May 2015 edit173.209.211.227 (talk)No edit summaryTags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 21:21, 23 December 2024 edit undoPeterpol89 (talk | contribs)76 edits →Pedagogical approaches to Spanglish: The entire first paragraph has nothing to do with the supposed reference to Webster Spanglish https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Spanglish. I searched the entire page for a single reference on what that first paragraph was talking about. Nothing I repeat nothing referenced anything it said. Here’s what the Webster reference actually referred to: Spanglish noun Span·glish ˈspaŋ-glish -lish : Spanish marked by numerous borrowings from English b...Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit | ||
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{{Short description|Hybrid language of Spanish and English}} | |||
Hi Angel | |||
{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2023}} | |||
{{other uses}} | |||
{{Infobox language | |||
| name = Spanglish | |||
| familycolor = Mixed | |||
| family = ] ]–] (]) | |||
| script = Latin | |||
| ietf = {{ubl | en-spanglis | es-spanglis }}<ref>{{Cite web |last=Everson |first=Michael |author-link=Michael Everson |title=Registration form for 'spanglis' |url=https://www.iana.org/assignments/lang-subtags-templates/spanglis.txt |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230618023158/https://www.iana.org/assignments/lang-subtags-templates/spanglis.txt |archive-date=June 18, 2023 |access-date=March 12, 2021 |publisher=IANA |language=en |format=text |quote=A judgement call by the tagger is expected to be made concerning the base prefix to be used.}}</ref> | |||
| altname = Espanglish, Ingléspañol, Inglañol, Espanglés | |||
| map = | |||
| mapcaption = | |||
| image = Spanglish sign for mecanic.jpg | |||
| imagecaption = A sign offering free consultation from a mechanic, taken in ], Florida. | |||
}} | |||
{{Spanish language}}'''Spanglish''' (a ] of the words "Spanish" and "English") is any language variety (such as a ], ], ], or ]) that results from conversationally combining ] and ]. The term is mostly used in the ] and refers to a blend of the ]s and ] of the two languages. More narrowly, Spanglish can specifically mean a variety of Spanish with heavy use of English ]s.<ref name=":0">{{Cite Merriam-Webster|Spanglish}}</ref> | |||
Since different Spanglish arises independently in different regions of varying degrees of bilingualism, it reflects the locally spoken varieties of English and Spanish. Different forms of Spanglish are not necessarily mutually intelligible. | |||
The term ''Spanglish'' was first recorded in 1933.{{sfn|Lambert|2017|p=13}} It corresponds to the Spanish terms '''Espanglish''' (from ''Español'' + ''English'', introduced by the Puerto Rican poet ] in the late 1940s), ''Ingléspañol'' (from ''Inglés'' + ''Español''), and ''Inglañol'' (''Inglés'' + ''Español'').<ref name=":1">{{Cite web |date=November 15, 2011 |title=Salvador Tió's 100th Anniversary |url=https://repeatingislands.com/2011/11/15/salvador-tio%e2%80%99s-100th-anniversary/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210305110303/https://repeatingislands.com/2011/11/15/salvador-tio%E2%80%99s-100th-anniversary/ |archive-date=March 5, 2021 |access-date=October 22, 2019}}</ref> | |||
==Definitions== | |||
There is no single, universal definition of Spanglish. The term Spanglish has been used in reference to the following phenomena, all of which are distinct from each other:{{sfn|Lipski|2008|p=53}} | |||
* The use of integrated English loanwords in Spanish | |||
* Nonassimilated Anglicisms (i.e., with English phonetics) in Spanish | |||
* Calques and loan translations from English | |||
* Code switching, particularly intra-sentential (i.e., within the same clause) switches | |||
* Grammar mistakes in Spanish found among transitional bilingual speakers | |||
* Second-language Spanish, including poor translations | |||
* ] | |||
==History and distribution== | ==History and distribution== | ||
In the late 1940s, the Puerto Rican |
In the late 1940s, the Puerto Rican journalist, poet, and essayist ] coined the terms ''Espanglish'' for Spanish spoken with some English terms, and the less commonly used ''Inglañol'' for English spoken with some Spanish terms. | ||
After Puerto Rico became a United States territory in 1898, Spanglish became progressively more common there as the United States Army and the early colonial administration tried to impose the English language on island residents. Between 1902 and 1948, the main language of instruction in public schools (used for all subjects except for Spanish class) was English. Currently Puerto Rico is nearly unique in having both English and Spanish as its official languages<ref name=":2">{{Cite journal |last=Nash |first=Rose |year=1970 |title=Spanglish: Language Contact in Puerto Rico |journal=American Speech |volume=45 |issue=3/4 |pages=223–233 |doi=10.2307/454837 |jstor=454837}}</ref> (see also ]). Consequently, many American English words are now found in the vocabulary of Puerto Rican Spanish. ''Spanglish'' may also be known by different regional names. | |||
Spanglish does not have one unified dialect—specifically, the varieties of Spanglish spoken in New York, Florida, Texas, and California differ. Monolingual speakers of standard Spanish may have difficulty in understanding it.{{sfn|Ardila|2005|p=61}} | |||
It is common in Panama, where the 96-year (1903–1999) U.S. control of the ] influenced much of local society, especially among the former residents of the ], the ]s. | |||
Many Puerto Ricans living on the island of ] speak in informal situations a unique Spanglish-like combination of ] and the local ], which is very different from the Spanglish spoken elsewhere. A similar situation exists in the large Puerto Rican-descended populations of New York City and Boston. | |||
Spanglish is spoken commonly in the modern United States.{{Citation needed|date=December 2023}} According to the ], the population of Hispanics grew from 35.3 million to 62.1 million between 2000 and 2020.{{sfn|Funk|Lopez|2022|loc="U.S. Hispanic population reached more than 62 million in 2020" graph}} Hispanics have become the largest minority ethnic group in the US. More than 60% are of Mexican descent. Mexican Americans form one of the fastest-growing groups,{{Citation needed|date=December 2023}} increasing from 20.9 million to 37.2 million between 2000 and 2021.{{sfn|Moslimani|Noe-Bustamante|Shah|2023|loc="Mexican-origin population in the U.S., 2000–2021" graph}} Around 58% of this community chose California, especially Southern California, as their new home. Spanglish is widely used throughout the heavily Mexican-American and other Hispanic communities of Southern California.{{sfn|Rothman|Rell|2005|p=1}} | |||
Spanglish is common in the ] as the United States Army and the early colonial administration tried to impose the English language on island residents. Between 1902 and 1948, the main language of instruction in public schools (used for all subjects except Spanish language courses) was English. Actually, Puerto Rico is unique in having both English and Spanish as its official languages.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Nash|first1=Rose|title=Spanglish: Language Contact in Puerto Rico|journal=American Speech|volume=45|issue=3/4|pages=223|doi=10.2307NiggerNiggerNiggerNigger/454837}}</ref> Consequently, many American English words are now found in the Puerto Rican vocabulary. ''Spanglish'' may also be known by a regional name. | |||
The use of Spanglish has become important to Hispanic communities throughout the United States in areas such as Miami, New York City, Texas, and California. In Miami, the ] community makes use of a Spanglish familiarly known as "]," a portmanteau of the words ''Cuban'' and ''Ebonics'', a slang term for ] that is itself a portmanteau of ''Ebony'' and ''phonics''."{{sfn|Rothman|Rell|2005|p=1}} | |||
Many Mexican-Americans (''Chicanos''), immigrants and bilinguals express themselves in various forms of Spanglish. For many, Spanglish serves as a basis for self-identity, but others believe that it should not exist.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Towards New Dialects: Spanglish in the United States |url=http://homes.chass.utoronto.ca/~cpercy/courses/6362Olague2.htm |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160329123547/http://homes.chass.utoronto.ca/~cpercy/courses/6362Olague2.htm |archive-date=March 29, 2016 |access-date=March 6, 2016 |website=homes.chass.utoronto.ca}}</ref> | |||
Spanglish does not have one unified dialect and therefore lacks uniformity—specifically, Spanglish spoken in New York, Miami, Texas, and California can be different. Although not always uniform, Spanglish is so popular in many Spanish-speaking communities in the United States, especially in the ] community, that some knowledge of Spanglish is required to understand those in the area.<ref>Ardila 2005, pg. 61.</ref> | |||
Spanglish is difficult, because if the speaker learned the two languages in separate contexts, they use the ''conditioned system'', in which the referential meanings in the two languages differ considerably. Those who were literate in their first language before learning the other, and who have support to maintain that literacy, are sometimes those least able to master their second language. Spanglish is part of ''receptive bilingualism.'' Receptive bilinguals are those who understand a second language but don't speak it. That is when they use Spanglish. Receptive bilinguals are also known as ''productively bilingual'', since, to give an answer, the speaker exerts much more mental effort to answer in English, Spanish, or Spanglish.{{sfn|Rosen|2016}}{{fv|date=June 2021}} Without first understanding the culture and history of the region where Spanglish evolved as a practical matter an in depth familiarizing with multiple cultures. This knowledge, indeed the mere fact of one's having that knowledge, often forms an important part of both what one considers one's personal identity and what others consider one's identity.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Halwachs |first=Dieter |title="Poly-system repertoire and identity". |publisher=Grazer Linguistische |year=1993 |pages=39–43 71–90}}</ref> | |||
It is common in ], where the 96-year (1903–1999) U.S. control of the ] influenced much of local society, especially among the former residents of the ], the ]s. Some version of Spanglish, whether by that name or another, is likely to be used wherever speakers of both languages mix. | |||
Other places where similar mixed codes are spoken are Gibraltar ('']''), ] (''Kitchen Spanish''), ], ], and ] (along with ] and ]). {{Citation needed |date=August 2018}} | |||
Many Puerto Ricans living on the island of ] speak in informal situations a unique Spanglish-like combination of ] and the local ], which is very different from the Spanglish spoken elsewhere. The same assumption goes for the large Puerto Rican population in the state of New York and Boston. | |||
In ], forms of Spanglish are used among Spanish-speaking migrants and ]. In particular, ] frequently use ]/phrases from ],{{Citation needed |date=August 2024}} in conversations that are otherwise in Spanish; examples include "''el'' ]", "''la'' vacuum cleaner", "''el'' ]", "''el'' toilet", "''vivo en un'' ] ''pequeño''", "''voy a correr con mis'' ]", and "''la librería de la'' city ''es grande''". Similar phenomena occur amongst native ].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Taonga |first=New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage Te Manatu |title=Latin Americans – Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand |url=https://teara.govt.nz/en/latin-americans |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190410080853/https://teara.govt.nz/en/latin-americans |archive-date=April 10, 2019 |access-date=April 10, 2019 |website=teara.govt.nz}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Taonga |first=New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage Te Manatu |title=1. – Latin Americans – Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand |url=https://teara.govt.nz/en/latin-americans/page-1 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190410080849/https://teara.govt.nz/en/latin-americans/page-1 |archive-date=April 10, 2019 |access-date=April 10, 2019 |website=teara.govt.nz}}</ref> | |||
Spanglish is found commonly in the modern United States, reflecting the growing Hispanic-American demographic due to immigration. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the population of Hispanics grew from 35.3 million to 53 million between 2000 and 2012.<ref name="Guzman, B. 2000 & US Census 2012">Guzman, B. 2000 & US Census 2012</ref> This larger Hispanic Demographic reflects the largest American minority, with a large portion being of Mexican descent. The Mexican community is one of the fastest growing groups, increasing from 20.6 million to 34.5 million between 2000 and 2012.<ref name="Guzman, B. 2000 & US Census 2012"/> Around 58% of this community chose California, especially Southern California, as their new home. Spanglish usage is found widely throughout the heavily Mexican-American and Hispanic-American communities of Southern California.<ref name="Rothman, Jason pg. 1">Rothman, Jason & Rell, Amy Beth, pg. 1</ref> | |||
The usage of Spanglish and understanding of it, has become of vital importance to members of communities in largely influenced areas such as Miami, New York, Texas, and California. In Miami, for example, they have their own similar form of Spanglish that many colloquially term 'Cubonics.' <ref name="Rothman, Jason pg. 1"/> | |||
==Usage== | ==Usage== | ||
===Spanglish patterns=== | ===Spanglish patterns=== | ||
Spanglish is informal |
Spanglish is informal, although speakers can consistently judge the grammaticality of a phrase or sentence. From a linguistic point of view, Spanglish often is mistakenly labeled many things. Spanglish is not a ] or ] of Spanish because, though people claim they are native Spanglish speakers, Spanglish itself is not a language on its own, but speakers speak English or Spanish with a heavy influence from the other language. The definition of Spanglish has been unclearly explained by scholars and linguists despite being noted so often. Spanglish is the fluid exchange of language between English and Spanish, present in the heavy influence in the words and phrases used by the speaker.{{sfn|Montes-Alcalá|2000|p=98}} | ||
Spanglish is currently considered a hybrid language practice by linguists–many actually refer to Spanglish as "Spanish-English ]", though there is some influence of ] as well.<ref>Individuals "communicate their thoughts and ideas using a combination of Spanish and English, often referring to this hybrid language practice as Spanglish". {{Cite journal |last=Martínez |first=Ramón Antonio |date=November 2010 |title='Spanglish' as Literacy Tool: Toward an Understanding of the Potential Role of Spanish-English Code-Switching in the Development of Academic Literacy |journal=Research in the Teaching of English |publisher=National Council of Teachers of English |volume=45 |issue=2 |pages=124–149 |doi=10.58680/rte201012743 |jstor=40997087}}</ref> | |||
The inception of Spanglish is due to the influx of ] people into |
The inception of Spanglish is due to the influx of native Spanish speaking ] people into North America, specifically the United States of America.{{sfn|Morales|2002|p=9}} As mentioned previously, the phenomenon of Spanglish can be separated into two different categories: ], and ].{{sfn|Ardila|2005}} Code-switching has sparked controversy because it is seen "as a corruption of Spanish and English, a 'linguistic pollution' or 'the language of a "raced", underclass people'".<ref>Bonnie Urciuoli, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231007005957/https://books.google.com/books?id=faAfAAAAQBAJ&q=raced |date=October 7, 2023 }} (Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1996), p. 38, cited by Arlene Dávila, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231007005959/https://books.google.com/books?id=2E0rPRGz_bgC&q=raced |date=October 7, 2023 }} (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2012), p. 168, and quoted in turn by Viviana Rojas and Juan Piñón, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151126055755/http://www.internationalhispanicmedia.org/spanish-english-spanglish-media-strategies-corporate-struggles-reach-second-later-generations-of-latinos/ |date=November 26, 2015 }} International Journal of Hispanic Media. N.p., Aug. 2014. Web. October 4, 2015.</ref> For example, a fluent bilingual speaker addressing another bilingual speaker might engage in code-switching with the sentence, "I'm sorry I cannot attend next week's meeting ''porque tengo una obligación de negocios en Boston, pero espero que'' I'll be back for the meeting the week after"—which means, "I'm sorry I cannot attend next week's meeting because I have a business obligation in Boston, but I hope to be back for the meeting the week after". | ||
===Calques=== | ===Calques=== | ||
] are translations of entire words or phrases from one language into another. They represent the simplest forms of Spanglish, as they undergo no lexical or grammatical structural change. |
] are translations of entire words or phrases from one language into another. They represent the simplest forms of Spanglish, as they undergo no lexical or grammatical structural change.{{sfn|Stavans|2000b}}{{Page needed|date=December 2023}} The use of calques is common throughout most languages, evident in the calques of Arabic exclamations used in Spanish.{{sfn|Montes-Alcalá|2000|p=107}} | ||
Examples: | Examples: | ||
* "to call back" → {{lang|es-spanglis|llamar pa'trás}} (llamar pa' atrás, llamar para atrás) ({{lang|es|volver a llamar}}, {{lang|es|llamar de vuelta}}) | |||
* "To call back" → “llamar pa´trás” | |||
* "It's up to you." → |
* "It's up to you." → {{lang|es-spanglis|Está pa'rriba de ti.}} (Está pa' arriba de ti, Está para arriba de ti) ({{lang|es|Depende de ti. decide}} (You decide)) | ||
* "to be up to ..." → {{lang|es-spanglis|estar pa'rriba de ...}} (estar pa' arriba de ..., estar para arriba de ...) (depender de ... or X decida (X decides)) | |||
* "To run for governor" → “correr para gobernador” <ref name="Montes-Alcala, pg. 107"/> | |||
* "to run for governor" → {{lang|es-spanglis|correr para gobernador}} ({{lang|es|presentarse para gobernador}}){{sfn|Montes-Alcalá|2000|p=107}} | |||
==== {{lang|es-spanglis|pa'trás}} ==== | |||
A well-known calque is {{lang|es-spanglis|pa'trás}} or {{lang|es-spanglis|para atrás}} in expressions such as {{lang|es-spanglis|llamar pa'trás}} 'to call back'. Here, {{lang|es-spanglis|pa'trás}} reflects the particle ''back'' in various ].{{sfn|Lipski|1986}} | |||
Expressions with {{lang|es-spanglis|pa'trás}} are found in every stable English-Spanish contact situation:{{sfn|Lipski|2008|p=229}} the United States,{{sfn|Lipski|1986|p=88}} including among the isolated ]{{sfn|Lipski|1986|pp=88–91}} and ] communities,{{sfn|Lipski|1987|p=124}} ],{{sfn|Lipski|1986|pp=92–93}} and sporadically in ] and along the Caribbean coast of Central America where the local English varieties are heavily creolized.{{sfn|Lipski|1986|pp=91–92}} Meanwhile, they're unattested in | |||
non-contact varieties of Spanish.{{sfn|Lipski|1986|p=93}} | |||
{{lang|es-spanglis|Pa'trás}} expressions are unique as a calque of an English verbal particle, since other phrasal verbs and particles are almost never calqued into Spanish.{{sfn|Lipski|2008|p=229}} | |||
Because of this, and because they're consistent with existing Spanish grammar, {{Harvp|Otheguy|1993}} argues they are likely a result of a conceptual, not linguistic loan. | |||
That is, the notion of "backness" has been expanded in these contact varieties.{{sfn|Otheguy|1993}} | |||
===Semantic extensions=== | ===Semantic extensions=== | ||
Semantic extension or reassignment refers to a phenomenon where speakers |
Semantic extension or reassignment refers to a phenomenon where speakers use a word of language A (typically Spanish in this case) with the meaning of its cognate in language B (typically English), rather than its standard meaning in language A. In Spanglish this usually occurs in the case of "]" (similar to, but technically not the same as ]), where words of similar form in Spanish and English are thought to have like meanings based on their cognate relationship.{{sfn|Montes-Alcalá|2000|p=105}} | ||
Examples: | Examples: | ||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
* "Carpeta" in place of "moqueta" or "alfombra" (carpet) | |||
|- | |||
* "Aplicación” in place of "solicitud" (application) | |||
! Spanglish | |||
* "Rentar" in place of "alquiler" (to rent) | |||
! English basis and meaning | |||
* "Remover" in place of "quitar" (to remove) <ref name="Montes-Alcala, pg. 105"/> | |||
! Standard Spanish | |||
* "Chequear" in place of "comprobar" or "verificar" (to check) | |||
! Meaning of Spanglish word in standard Spanish | |||
* "Parquear" in place of "estacionar" or "aparcar" (to park) | |||
|- | |||
* "Actualmente" (means 'present') for "actually" | |||
| ''actualmente'' | |||
* "Bizarro" (meaning 'fetched') for "bizarre" | |||
| actually | |||
| ''en realidad, realmente, de verdad, verdaderamente, de hecho'' | |||
| currently | |||
|- | |||
| ''aplicación'' | |||
| application (written request) | |||
| ''solicitud, postulación'' | |||
| application (of paint, etc.) | |||
|- | |||
| ''bizarro'' | |||
| bizarre | |||
| ''estrambótico'' | |||
| valiant, dashing | |||
|- | |||
| ''carpeta'' | |||
| carpet | |||
| ''alfombra'', ''moqueta'' | |||
| folder | |||
|- | |||
| ''chequear/checar'' | |||
| to check (verify) | |||
| ''comprobar'', ''verificar'' | |||
| — | |||
|- | |||
|''eventualmente'' | |||
|eventually | |||
|''finalmente, al final, por fin'' | |||
|possibly | |||
|- | |||
| ''librería'' | |||
| library | |||
| ''biblioteca'' | |||
| bookstore | |||
|- | |||
| ''mapear'' | |||
| to mop, to wash with a mop | |||
| ''trapear, pasar la fregona'' | |||
| to map | |||
|- | |||
| ''parquear'' | |||
| to park | |||
| ''estacionar'', ''aparcar'' | |||
| — | |||
|- | |||
| ''realizar'' | |||
| to realize | |||
| ''darse cuenta'' | |||
| to carry out, to perform, to fulfill | |||
|- | |||
| ''recordar'' | |||
| to record | |||
| ''grabar'' | |||
| to remember | |||
|- | |||
| ''rentar'' | |||
| to rent | |||
| ''alquilar, arrendar'' | |||
| to yield, to produce a profit | |||
|- | |||
| ''renta'' | |||
| rent | |||
| ''alquiler, arriendo'' | |||
| yield, profit | |||
|- | |||
| ''sanitizador'' | |||
| sanitizer | |||
| ''desinfectante'' | |||
| — | |||
|- | |||
|''sentencia'' | |||
|sentence (linguistics) | |||
|''frase, oración'' | |||
|sentence (court decision) | |||
|- | |||
| ''wacha'' | |||
| to watch out | |||
| ''cuidado'' | |||
| — | |||
|} | |||
An example of |
An example of this lexical phenomenon in Spanglish is the emergence of new verbs when the ] Spanish verb-making suffix ''-ear'' is attached to an English verb. For example, the Spanish verb for "to eat lunch" (''almorzar'' in standard Spanish) becomes ''lonchear'' (occasionally ''lunchear''). The same process produces ''watchear'', <!--- Include ''puchar'' here IF its meaning and English basis can be given. --> ''parquear'', ''emailear'', ''twittear'', etc.{{sfn|Rothman|Rell|2005}}{{Page needed|date=December 2023}} | ||
=== |
===Loanwords=== | ||
] occur in any language due to the presence of items or ideas not present in the culture before such as modern technology. The increasing rate of technological growth requires the |
] occur in any language due to the presence of items or ideas not present in the culture before, such as modern technology. The increasing rate of technological growth requires the use of loan words from the donor language due to the lack of its definition in the lexicon of the main language. This partially deals with the "prestige" of the donor language, which either forms a dissimilar or more similar word from the loan word. The growth of modern technology can be seen in the expressions: "hacer click" (to click), "mandar un email" (to send an email), "faxear" (to fax), "textear" (to text-message), or "hackear" (to hack). Some words borrowed from the donor languages are adapted to the language, while others remain unassimilated (e. g. "sandwich", "jeans" or "laptop"). The items most associated with Spanglish refer to words assimilated into the main morphology.{{sfn|Montes-Alcalá|2000|p=106}} Immigrants are usually responsible for "Spanishizing" English words.{{sfn|Alvarez|1997|loc=paragraph 25}} According to The New York Times, "Spanishizing" is accomplished "by pronouncing an English word 'Spanish style' (dropping final consonants, softening others, replacing M's with N's and V's with B's), and spelled by transliterating the result using Spanish spelling conventions."{{sfn|Alvarez|1997|loc=paragraph 25}} | ||
Examples |
====Examples==== | ||
*"Aseguranza" (insurance; "seguros" is insurance in standard Spanish, aseguranza is literally "assurance" which is similar to the ] company's slogan, "peace of mind") | |||
*"Taipear" (to type) | |||
*"Marqueta" (market) | |||
*"Biles" (bills) | *"Biles" (bills) | ||
*" |
*"Chorcha" (church) | ||
*"Ganga" (gang) | |||
*Lonchear/Lonchar" (to have lunch) | |||
*"Líder" (leader) – considered an established Anglicism | |||
*"Lonchear/Lonchar" (to have lunch) | |||
*"Marqueta" (market) | |||
*"Taipear/Tipear" (to type) | |||
*"Troca" (truck) – Widely used in most of northern Mexico as well | |||
*”Mitin” (meeting) – An outdoors gathering of people mostly for political purposes. | |||
*”Checar” (to check) | |||
*”Escanear” (to scan) – To digitalize (e.g. a document). | |||
*”Chatear” (to chat) | |||
*“Desorden” (disorder) – incorrectly used as “disease”. | |||
*”Condición” (condition) – incorrectly used as “sickness”. | |||
*"Viaje de las Estrellas" - "Star Trek"; the television shows such as "King of the Hill" and "MadTV" sometimes used standard Spanish but in an elementary manner. | |||
===''So''-insertion=== | |||
Within the US, the English word ''so'' is often inserted into Spanish discourse. This use of ''so'' is found in conversations that otherwise take place entirely in Spanish. Its users run the gamut from Spanish-dominant immigrants to native, balanced bilinguals to English-dominant ]s and second-language speakers of Spanish, and even people who reject the use of Anglicisms have been found using ''so'' in Spanish.{{sfn|Lipski|2008|pp=235–236}} | |||
Whether ''so'' is a simple loanword, or part of some deeper form of language mixing, is disputed. Many consider ''so'' to simply be a loanword, although borrowing short function words is quite abnormal.{{sfn|Lipski|2008|p=237}} | |||
In stressed positions, ''so'' is usually pronounced with English phonetics, and speakers typically identify it as an English word and not an established English loan such as {{lang|es|troca}}. This is unusual, since code-switched or lexically inserted words typically aren't as common and recurring as ''so'' is.{{sfn|Lipski|2008|p=238}}{{sfn|Lipski|2005}}{{Page needed|date=December 2023}} | |||
''So'' is always used as a ] in Spanish. It can be used phrase-internally, or at the beginning or end of a sentence. In Spanish discourse, ''so'' is never used to mean "in order that" as it often is in English. As a sociolinguistic phenomenon, speakers who subconsciously insert ''so'' into their Spanish usually spend most of their time speaking English. This and other facts suggest that the insertion of ''so'' and similar items such as ''you know'' and ''I mean'' are the result of a kind of "metalinguistic bracketing". That is, discourse in Spanish is circumscribed by English and by a small group of English functional words. These terms can act as punctuation for Spanish dialogue within an English-dominant environment.{{sfn|Lipski|2005}}{{Page needed|date=December 2023}} | |||
=== Fromlostiano === | === Fromlostiano === | ||
] humorously showing ''baidefeis'' instead of the Spanish ''gratis'' (free).<br>''Baidefeis'' derives from the English "by the face"; Spanish: ''por la cara'', "free". The adoption of English words is very common in Spain.]] | ] humorously showing ''baidefeis'' instead of the Spanish ''gratis'' (free).<br>''Baidefeis'' derives from the English "by the face"; Spanish: ''por la cara'', "free". The adoption of English words is very common in Spain.]] | ||
Fromlostiano is a type of artificial and humorous ] that translates Spanish ]s word-for-word into English. The name ''fromlostiano'' comes from the expression ''From Lost to the River'', which is a word-for-word translation of ''de perdidos al río''; an idiom that means that one is prone to choose a particularly risky action in a desperate situation (this is somewhat comparable to the English idiom ''in for a penny, in for a pound''). | |||
The humor comes from the fact that while the expression is completely grammatical in English, it makes no sense to a native English speaker. Hence it is necessary to understand both languages |
The humor comes from the fact that while the expression is completely grammatical in English, it makes no sense to a native English speaker. Hence it is necessary to understand both languages to appreciate the humor. | ||
This phenomenon was first noted in the book ''From Lost to the River'' in 1995.<ref>{{ |
This phenomenon was first noted in the book ''From Lost to the River'' in 1995.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Ochoa |first1=Ignacio |title=From Lost to the River |last2=Frederico López Socasau |date=1995 |publisher=Publicaciones Formativas, S.A. |isbn=978-84-920231-1-0 |location=Madrid |language=es}}</ref> The book describes six types of ''fromlostiano'': | ||
# Translations of Spanish idioms into English: ''With you bread and onion'' (''Contigo pan y cebolla''), ''Nobody gave you a candle in this burial'' (''Nadie te ha dado vela en este entierro''), ''To good hours, green sleeves'' (''A buenas horas mangas verdes''). | # Translations of Spanish idioms into English: ''With you bread and onion'' (''Contigo pan y cebolla''), ''Nobody gave you a candle in this burial'' (''Nadie te ha dado vela en este entierro''), ''To good hours, green sleeves'' (''A buenas horas mangas verdes''). | ||
# Translations of American and British celebrities' names into Spanish: ''Vanesa Tumbarroja'' (''Vanessa Redgrave''). | # Translations of American and British celebrities' names into Spanish: ''Vanesa Tumbarroja'' ('']''). | ||
# Translations of American and British street names into Spanish: ''Calle del Panadero'' (''Baker Street''). | # Translations of American and British street names into Spanish: ''Calle del Panadero'' (''Baker Street''). | ||
# Translations of Spanish street names into English: ''Shell Thorn Street'' (''Calle de Concha Espina''). | # Translations of Spanish street names into English: ''Shell Thorn Street'' (''Calle de Concha Espina''). | ||
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The use of Spanglish has evolved over time. It has emerged as a way of conceptualizing one's thoughts whether it be in speech or on paper. | The use of Spanglish has evolved over time. It has emerged as a way of conceptualizing one's thoughts whether it be in speech or on paper. | ||
== |
== Pedagogical approaches to Spanglish == | ||
{{Essay-like|section|date=April 2024}} | |||
The usage of Spanglish is often associated with an individual's association with identity (in terms of language learning) and reflects how many minority-American cultures feel toward their heritage. Commonly in ethnic communities within the United States, the knowledge of one's ] tends to assumably signify if one is truly of a member of their culture. Just as Spanish helps individuals identify with their Spanish identity, Spanglish is slowly becoming the poignant realization of the Hispanic-American's, especially Mexican-American's, identity within the United States. Individuals of Hispanic descent living in America face living in two very different worlds and need a new sense of bi-cultural and bilingual identity of their own experience. Living within the United States creates a synergy of culture and struggles for many Mexican-Americans. The hope to retain their cultural heritage/language and their dual-identity in American society is one of the major factors that lead to the creation of Spanglish. | |||
The education system in the U.S. has sustained colonialist practices through the rhetoric of an ‘academic language’. The term ‘academic language’ frames and minoritizes the Spanglish-speaking, bilingual students of America. Through teaching in a monolinguistic manner, ELA is given precedence to and places native languages or the use of bilingualism as secondary to English and the pure usage of Spanish. This allows English to be reinforced as an 'academic language,' granting white people an advantage in reaching academic success and disassociating bilingual speakers from whiteness and, therefore, 'academic language'.<ref name=":1" /> A study done on Latin American middle schoolers in East Los Angeles highlights different ways in which bilingual students utilize Spanglish to advance academic literacy. Martinez’s list of skills students exhibited when using Spanglish in educational settings include: | |||
<ref>Rothman & Rell 2005, pg. 527</ref> | |||
(1) clarify and/or reiterate utterances | |||
===Attitudes Towards Spanglish=== | |||
Spanglish is a misunderstood skill because oftentimes, “pure” Spanish speakers denounce Spanglish. In fact, Spanglish is not about necessarily assimilating to English—it is about acculturating and accommodating.<ref name="The New York Times"/> Still, Spanglish has variously been accused of corrupting and endangering the “real” Spanish language, and holding kids back, though linguistically speaking, there is no such thing as a "pure" or "real" language.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Sayer|first1=Peter|title=Demystifying Language Mixing: Spanglish in School|journal=Journal of Latinos and Education|date=24 March 2008|volume=7|issue=2|pages=94–112|doi=10.1080/15348430701827030}}</ref> Presently, “Spanglish” is still viewed by most as a rather derogatory and patronizing word to its community because it seems like a “bastardized language”. In reality, Spanglish has its own culture and has a reputation of its own.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Morales|first1=Ed|title=Living in Spanglish : the search for Latino identity in America|date=2002|publisher=St. Martin's Pr.|location=New York, NY|isbn=0312262329|edition=1. ed.}}</ref> | |||
(2) quote and report speech | |||
It is commonly assumed that Spanglish is a jargon: part Spanish and part English, with neither gravitas nor a clear identity, says the author of ''Spanglish''<ref>''Spanglish: The Making of a New American Language'' (2003) ISBN 978-0-06008-776-0</ref> and proponent of Spanglish, Ilan Stavans.<ref>(Stavans, 2000b, p.b7)</ref> Use of the word Spanglish reflects the wide range of views towards the mixed language in the United States. In Latino communities, the term Spanglish is used in a positive and proud connotation by political leaders.<ref>Zentella, 2008, p. 6</ref> It is also used by Linguists and scholars promoted for use in literary writing.<ref>Stavans, 2000a, 2000b, 2003</ref> Despite the promotion of positive usage of the term by activists and scholars alike, the term is often used with a negative connotation disparagingly. People often refer to themselves as 'Spanglish speakers' if they do not speak Spanish well. The term Spanglish is also often used as a disparaging way to describe individuals that do not speak English fluently and are in the process of learning, assuming the inclusion of Spanglish as a lack of English fluency.<ref>Otherguy & Stern pg. 86</ref> | |||
(3) joke and/or tease | |||
==Examples== | |||
(4) index solidarity and intimacy | |||
;Literature | |||
* '']'', the first Spanglish novel by ], a Puerto Rican writer based in New York City; the worked debuted in 1998. | |||
'']'' by ], a Dominican-American writer, creative writing professor at ] and fiction-editor at ]. | |||
* '']'', a 2008 novel by ] | |||
* ], in his 1933 ] '']'', predicted that in the Twenty-First Century English and Spanish would "become interchangeable languages".<ref></ref> | |||
(5) shift voices for different audiences | |||
;Music | |||
Usage of Spanglish by incorporating English and Spanish lyrics into music has risen in the United States over time. In the 1980s 1.2% of songs in the ] contained Spanglish lyrics, eventually growing to 6.2% in the 2000s. The lyrical emergence of Spanglish by way of Latin-American Musicians has grown tremendously, reflective of the growing Hispanic population within the United States.<ref>Pisarek & Valenzuela 2012</ref> | |||
(6) communicate subtle nuances of meaning. | |||
In turn, the skills used when speaking Spanglish can be applied as a method in academic settings as well. <ref name=":2" /> | |||
==Identity== | |||
{{Essay-like|section|date=April 2024}} | |||
The use of Spanglish is often associated with the speaker's expression of identity (in terms of language learning) and reflects how many minority-American cultures feel toward their heritage. Commonly in ethnic communities within the United States, the knowledge of one's ] tends to assumably signify if one is truly of a member of their culture. Individuals of Hispanic descent living in America face living in two very different worlds. Spanglish is used to facilitate communication with others in both worlds. While some individuals {{Who|date=July 2021}} believe that Spanglish should not be considered a language, it is a language that has evolved and is continuing to grow and affect the way new generations are educated, culture change, and the production of media.<ref>Rojas, Viviana, and Juan Piñón. "Spanish, English or Spanglish? Media Strategies and Corporate Struggles to Reach the Second and Later Generations of Latinos." ''International Journal of Hispanic Media''. N.p., Aug. 2014. Web. October 4, 2015.</ref> Living within the United States creates a synergy of culture and struggles for many Mexican-Americans. The hope to retain their cultural heritage/language and their dual-identity in American society is one of the major factors that lead to the creation of Spanglish.{{sfn|Rothman|Rell|2005|p=527}} | |||
== Intergenerational Spanglish == | |||
{{Essay-like|section|date=April 2024}} | |||
Immigrant youth in the United States have become prevalent social actors to sociologists because of their role as moderators and translators in their homes and the community. Orellana centers the ethnographic study around youth who have worked as translators in different spheres of societal issues for their communities. It showcases the division of labor passed onto members of the immigrant population and the navigational skills obtained by those obliged to utilize their bilingualism and Spanglish as a means of survival.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Orellana |first1=Marjorie Faulstich |last2=Dorner |first2=Lisa |last3=Pulido |first3=Lucila |date=November 2003 |title=Accessing Assets: Immigrant Youth's Work as Family Translators or "Para-Phrasers" |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/sp.2003.50.4.505 |journal=Social Problems |volume=50 |issue=4 |pages=505–524 |doi=10.1525/sp.2003.50.4.505 |issn=0037-7791|url-access=subscription }}</ref> Intergenerational skills like Spanglish can then be used as a ‘Fund of Knowledge’ to promote literacy in the classroom. ‘Funds of Knowledge’ encourages the use of Spanglish and other languages between familial relations in the classroom to bridge the skills used at home and welcome them to a classroom. This allows the development of Spanglish skills passed between generations to be viewed as equally valuable at home and in academia. It dismantles the idea that specific languages need to be segregated from the educational realm of society. <ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Moll |first1=Luis C. |last2=Amanti |first2=Cathy |last3=Neff |first3=Deborah |last4=Gonzalez |first4=Norma |date=March 1992 |title=Funds of knowledge for teaching: Using a qualitative approach to connect homes and classrooms |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00405849209543534 |journal=Theory into Practice |volume=31 |issue=2 |pages=132–141 |doi=10.1080/00405849209543534 |issn=0040-5841}}</ref> | |||
==Arts and culture== | |||
=== Literature === | |||
Books that feature Spanglish in a significant way include the following:{{sfn|Stavans|2000a|pp=555–558}} | |||
* ]'s '']'' (1998) is the first Spanglish novel.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Poets |first=Academy of American |title=About Giannina Braschi {{!}} Academy of American Poets |url=https://poets.org/poet/giannina-braschi |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200928221323/https://poets.org/poet/giannina-braschi |archive-date=September 28, 2020 |access-date=November 4, 2020 |website=poets.org}}</ref>{{sfn|Aldama|O'Dwyer|Stavans|2020}}{{Page needed|date=December 2023}}<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Steinberg |first=Sybil |date=December 27, 1997 |title=Review of Yo-Yo Boing! |url=https://www.publishersweekly.com/978-0-935480-97-9 |url-status=live |journal=Publishers Weekly |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220812055332/https://www.publishersweekly.com/978-0-935480-97-9 |archive-date=August 12, 2022 |access-date=April 21, 2020}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Castillo |first=Debra A. |url=https://www.sunypress.edu/p-4042-redreaming-america.aspx |title=Redreaming America: Toward a Bilingual American Culture |publisher=www.sunypress.edu |access-date=April 21, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200225205059/http://www.sunypress.edu/p-4042-redreaming-america.aspx |archive-date=February 25, 2020 |url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
*] uses Spanglish in his performances. | |||
*]'s novel '']'' (2008) features flourishes of Spanglish. | |||
*]'s '']'' also uses Spanglish words and phrases.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Schaefer |first=Richard T. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YMUola6pDnkC&q=junot+diaz+spanglish+giannina+braschi&pg=PT1399 |title=Encyclopedia of Race, Ethnicity, and Society |date=March 20, 2008 |publisher=SAGE |isbn=978-1-4129-2694-2 |language=en |access-date=October 20, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231229061735/https://books.google.com/books?id=YMUola6pDnkC&q=junot+diaz+spanglish+giannina+braschi&pg=PT1399#v=snippet&q=junot%20diaz%20spanglish%20giannina%20braschi&f=false |archive-date=December 29, 2023 |url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
* ] wrote the poem ''El Spanglish National Anthem.'' (1993) | |||
*] ''Spanglish: The Making of a New American Language.'' (2004) | |||
*] wrote the autobiography '']'' (1967) using Spanglish phrases.{{sfn|González|2017}} | |||
*Yoss' science fiction novel ''Super Extra Grande'' (2009) is set in a future where Latin Americans have colonized the galaxy and Spanglish is the ] among the galaxy's sentient species. | |||
*]'s ] '']'' (1933) predicted that in the 21st century English and Spanish would "become interchangeable languages".<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110510075432/http://www.brownbagebook.com/eBooks/HG-Wells/Shape-Things/chapter25.html|date=May 10, 2011}}</ref> | |||
*], a Mexican comedian, (known as Tin Tan) made heavy use of Spanglish. He dressed as a ]. | |||
=== Music === | |||
==== Overview ==== | |||
The use of Spanglish by incorporating English and Spanish lyrics into music has risen in the United States over time. In the 1980s 1.2% of songs in the ] contained Spanglish lyrics, eventually growing to 6.2% in the 2000s. The lyrical emergence of Spanglish by way of Latin American musicians has grown tremendously, reflective of the growing Hispanic population within the United States.{{sfn|Pisarek|Valenzuela|2012}} | |||
* ] band ], whose members use Spanglish in their lyrics. | * ] band ], whose members use Spanglish in their lyrics. | ||
* American ] |
* American ] band ], whose song lyrics frequently switch back and forth between English and Spanish. | ||
* ] pioneers ], whose singer ] grew up in a Spanish-speaking community, released several songs in Spanglish. | |||
* '']'' is a 1999 compilation album by ], who have a slate of ] | |||
* American ] band ] frequently mix Spanish and English lyrics in their songs. | |||
* ] (born Shakira Isabel Mebarak Ripoll), a ] singer-songwriter, musician, and model. | |||
* ] (born |
* ] (born Shakira Isabel Mebarak Ripoll), a Colombian singer-songwriter, musician and model. | ||
* American singer, actress, producer, director, dancer, model, and businesswoman ]. | |||
* ] (born Armando Christian Pérez), a successful ] rapper, producer, and ]-winning artist from Miami, Florida that hasNiggerNiggerNigger brought Spanglish into mainstream music through his multiple hit songs. | |||
* ] (born Sean Paul Ryan Francis Henriques), a Jamaican singer and songwriter. | |||
* ], a Spanish singer-songwriter with songs in English, Spanish, and Spanglish; Spanglish songs include ] and ]. | |||
* ] (born Enrique Martín Morales), a ] pop musician, actor and author. | |||
* ] (born Armando Christian Pérez), a successful ] rapper, producer and ]-winning artist from Miami, Florida that has brought Spanglish into mainstream music through his multiple hit songs. | |||
* ], a Spanish singer-songwriter with songs in English, Spanish and Spanglish; Spanglish songs include ] and ]. | |||
* Rapper ], famous for his song "]", recorded a version in Spanglish. | |||
* Likewise, Mexican pop rock band ] released a song called "Spanglish" in their album ]. | |||
==== History ==== | |||
The rise of Spanglish in music within the United States also creates new classifications of Latin(o) music, as well as the wider Latin(o) music genre. In some growing music scenes, it is noted that for artists go beyond music and bring in political inclinations as a way to make wider commentary.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Byrd |first=Samuel K. |date=2018 |title=Beyond Latin Night: Latinx Musicians and the Politics of Music in Charlotte |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/26510212 |url-status=live |journal=Southern Cultures |volume=24 |issue=3 |pages=125–143 |issn=1068-8218 |jstor=26510212 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210215031058/https://www.jstor.org/stable/26510212 |archive-date=February 15, 2021 |access-date=March 18, 2021}}</ref> Although Los Angeles Chicano bands from the 1960s and 1970s are often remembered as part of the Chicano-movement as agents for social chance,<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Koegel |first1=John |last2=San Miguel |first2=Guadalupe |date=2005 |editor-last=Burr |editor-first=Ramiro |editor2-last=Guerrero |editor2-first=Lalo |editor3-last=Mentes |editor3-first=Sherilyn Meece |editor4-last=Reyes |editor4-first=David |editor5-last=Waldman |editor5-first=Tom |editor6-last=Broyles-González |editor7-last=Peña |editor7-first=Manuel |editor8-last=Valdez |editor8-first=Avelardo |editor9-last=Tejeda |editor9-first=Juan |title=Mexican American Music |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/4153034 |url-status=live |journal=American Music |volume=23 |issue=2 |pages=257–274 |doi=10.2307/4153034 |issn=0734-4392 |jstor=4153034 |url-access=subscription |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210209231116/https://www.jstor.org/stable/4153034 |archive-date=February 9, 2021 |access-date=March 18, 2021}}</ref> Latin(o) music has long been a way for artists to exercise political agency, including the post-World War II jazz scene, the New York City salsa of the 1970s, and the hip-hop movement of the 80s. Some of the topics addressed in these movements include: redlining and housing policies; immigration; discrimination; and transnationalism.{{sfn|Cepeda|2017}} | |||
==== Commercialization ==== | |||
Over time, however, this more explicit show of political nature might have been lessened due to the desire to compete in the music business of the English speaking world. This however, did not stop the a change in U.S. music, where English-speaking musicians have moved towards collaborative music, and bilingual duets are growing in popularity,<ref>{{Cite web |last=Lessner |first=Justin |date=January 6, 2021 |title=Bilingual Collaborations Are Taking The Music World By Storm, These Are The Dream Collabs For 2021 |url=https://wearemitu.com/entertainment/bilingual-music-collaborations-2021/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210410222622/https://wearemitu.com/entertainment/bilingual-music-collaborations-2021/ |archive-date=April 10, 2021 |access-date=March 18, 2021 |website=mitú}}</ref> indicating an audience demand for multi-language entertainment, as well as a space for traditional Latino artists to enter the mainstream and find chart success beyond the Spanish-speaking world. This is despite the slower-growing opportunities for Latino musicians to occupy higher-up positions such as promoters, business owners, and producers.{{sfn|Cepeda|2017}} | |||
==== Present-day ==== | |||
;People | |||
With this growing demand for Spanglish duets, there has also been a rise in indie Latino artists who incorporate Spanglish lyrics in their music. One such artist is ], who combines Spanglish lyrics with music influenced by traditional corridos.<ref>{{Cite web |date=October 16, 2020 |title=Meet Omar Apollo, the blue-haired, gender-rebellious, Mexican American Prince |url=https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/music/story/2020-10-16/omar-apollo-mexican-american-prince |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201210103723/https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/music/story/2020-10-16/omar-apollo-mexican-american-prince |archive-date=December 10, 2020 |access-date=February 9, 2021 |website=Los Angeles Times |language=en-US}}</ref> Other up and coming Latino artists, such as ], ], and ], have also led to a greater prominence of Hispanic performers and lyricism in the contemporary top charts. These types of artists, also being second-generation Spanish speakers, suggest that there is less fear or feelings of intimidation of using Spanish in public spaces. Moreover, this lack of negative connotation with public use of Spanglish and heritage-language language tools point to a subconscious desire to challenge negative rhetoric, as well as the racism that may go along with it.{{sfn|Sánchez-Muñoz|Amezcua|2019}}{{Page needed|date=December 2023}} Given the fact that Spanglish has been the language of communication for a growing Hispanic-American population in the United States, its growing presence in Latino music is considered, by some scholars, a persistent and easily identifiable marker of an increasingly intersectional Latino identity.{{sfn|Cepeda|2017}} | |||
* ] writer ] wrote the Spanglish comic novel '']'' (1998). | |||
* ] performance artist ] uses Spanglish often. | |||
* ], sociolinguist, a world authority in Spanglish. | |||
* ], a ] comedian known as ] who made heavy use of Spanglish. He also dressed as a ]. | |||
* ], a ] writer poet, known for his memoir ]. | |||
* ], a ] poet and playwright.<ref>Stavans 2014</ref> | |||
==See also== | == See also == | ||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] a ] ], similar to Spanglish. | |||
* ] a ] ], similar to Spanglish | |||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* '']'' (an ] |
* '']'' (an ] vernacular unique to ]) | ||
* ], the unsystematic mixture of Portuguese with Spanish | * ], the unsystematic mixture of Portuguese with Spanish | ||
* ], ] in ] and other ] derived from English and Spanish words | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
;Categories | |||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
{{Reflist |
{{Reflist}} | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{ |
{{Refbegin|30em}} | ||
* {{Citation |title=Poets, philosophers, lovers: on the writings of Giannina Braschi |date=October 2020 |editor-last=Aldama |editor-first=Frederick Luis |series=Latinx and Latin American profiles |publisher=University of Pittsburgh Press |isbn=978-0-8229-4618-2 |editor2-last=O'Dwyer |editor2-first=Tess |editor3-last=Stavans |editor3-first=Ilan |editor-link3=Ilan Stavans}} | |||
* , Ricardo Otheguy and Nancy Stern, ''International Journal of Bilingualism'' 2011, 15(1): 85-100. | |||
* {{Citation |last=Alvarez |first=Lizette |title=It's the Talk of Nueva York: The Hybrid Called Spanglish |date=March 25, 1997 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1997/03/25/nyregion/it-s-the-talk-of-nueva-york-the-hybrid-called-spanglish.html |work=] |access-date=December 30, 2023 |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331 |url-access=limited}} | |||
* ''Spanglish: The Making of a New American Language'', ], ISBN 0-06-008776-5 | |||
*{{Citation |last=Ardila |first=Alfredo |title=Spanglish: An Anglicized Spanish Dialect |journal=Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences |volume=27 |issue=1 |pages=60–81 |year=2005 |doi=10.1177/0739986304272358 |s2cid=144307431 |author-link=Alfredo Ardila}} | |||
* ''Spanglish: The Third Way'', A Cañas. Hokuriku University, 2001. | |||
*{{Citation |last1=Belazi |first1=Hedi M. |title=Code Switching and X-Bar Theory: The Functional head Constraint |work=Linguistic Inquiry |volume=25 |pages=221–237 |year=1994 |last2=Rubin |first2=Edward J. |last3=Toribio |first3=Almeida Jacqueline}} | |||
* ''Spanish/English Codeswitching in a Written Corpus,'' by Laura Callahan, John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2004. | |||
* {{Citation |last=Betti |first=Silvia |title=La definición del spanglish en la última edición del ''Diccionario de la Real Academia'' |date=2014 |url=https://glosas.anle.us/site/assets/files/1170/la_definicion_del_spanglish.pdf |work=Glosas |volume=8 |issue=8 |trans-title=The Definition of Spanglish in the Last Edition of the ''Dictionary of the Royal Academy'' |language=es}} | |||
* ''The Dictionary of Chicano Spanish/El Diccionario del Español Chicano: The Most Practical Guide to Chicano Spanish''. Roberto A. Galván. 1995. ISBN 0-8442-7967-6. | |||
* {{Citation |last=Betti |first=Silvia |title=La imagen de los hispanos en la publicidad de los Estados Unidos |date=March 19, 2015 |url=https://cervantesobservatorio.fas.harvard.edu/es/informes/la-imagen-de-los-hispanos-en-la-publicidad-de-los-estados-unidos |work=Informes del Observatorio |language=es |doi=10.15427/OR009-03/2015SP |doi-access=free}} | |||
* ''Anglicismos hispánicos''. Emilio Lorenzo. 1996. Editorial Gredos, ISBN 84-249-1809-6. | |||
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{{Refend}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{commonscat}} | |||
* Current TV video " on Spanglish as the Nuyorican language; featuring Daddy Yankee, Giannina Braschi, Rita Moreno, and other Nuyorican icons. | |||
* Current TV video {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101120232324/http://current.com/groups/on-current-tv/88836867_nuyorican-power.htm |date=November 20, 2010 }}" on Spanglish as the Nuyorican language; featuring Daddy Yankee, Giannina Braschi, Rita Moreno, and other Nuyorican icons. | |||
* , University of California | |||
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170502083024/http://prizedwriting.ucdavis.edu/past/1995-1996/201cspanglish201d-the-language-of-chicanos |date=May 2, 2017 }}, University of California | |||
* Texas State University | |||
* Texas State University | |||
* | |||
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{{Hispanic and Latino Americans navbox}} | |||
{{Languages of the United States}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 21:21, 23 December 2024
Hybrid language of Spanish and EnglishFor other uses, see Spanglish (disambiguation).
Spanglish | |
---|---|
Espanglish, Ingléspañol, Inglañol, Espanglés | |
A sign offering free consultation from a mechanic, taken in Miami, Florida. | |
Language family | Mixed Spanish–English (Indo-European) |
Writing system | Latin |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | – |
IETF |
|
Spanglish (a blend of the words "Spanish" and "English") is any language variety (such as a contact dialect, hybrid language, pidgin, or creole language) that results from conversationally combining Spanish and English. The term is mostly used in the United States and refers to a blend of the words and grammar of the two languages. More narrowly, Spanglish can specifically mean a variety of Spanish with heavy use of English loanwords.
Since different Spanglish arises independently in different regions of varying degrees of bilingualism, it reflects the locally spoken varieties of English and Spanish. Different forms of Spanglish are not necessarily mutually intelligible.
The term Spanglish was first recorded in 1933. It corresponds to the Spanish terms Espanglish (from Español + English, introduced by the Puerto Rican poet Salvador Tió in the late 1940s), Ingléspañol (from Inglés + Español), and Inglañol (Inglés + Español).
Definitions
There is no single, universal definition of Spanglish. The term Spanglish has been used in reference to the following phenomena, all of which are distinct from each other:
- The use of integrated English loanwords in Spanish
- Nonassimilated Anglicisms (i.e., with English phonetics) in Spanish
- Calques and loan translations from English
- Code switching, particularly intra-sentential (i.e., within the same clause) switches
- Grammar mistakes in Spanish found among transitional bilingual speakers
- Second-language Spanish, including poor translations
- Mock Spanish
History and distribution
In the late 1940s, the Puerto Rican journalist, poet, and essayist Salvador Tió coined the terms Espanglish for Spanish spoken with some English terms, and the less commonly used Inglañol for English spoken with some Spanish terms.
After Puerto Rico became a United States territory in 1898, Spanglish became progressively more common there as the United States Army and the early colonial administration tried to impose the English language on island residents. Between 1902 and 1948, the main language of instruction in public schools (used for all subjects except for Spanish class) was English. Currently Puerto Rico is nearly unique in having both English and Spanish as its official languages (see also New Mexico). Consequently, many American English words are now found in the vocabulary of Puerto Rican Spanish. Spanglish may also be known by different regional names.
Spanglish does not have one unified dialect—specifically, the varieties of Spanglish spoken in New York, Florida, Texas, and California differ. Monolingual speakers of standard Spanish may have difficulty in understanding it. It is common in Panama, where the 96-year (1903–1999) U.S. control of the Panama Canal influenced much of local society, especially among the former residents of the Panama Canal Zone, the Zonians.
Many Puerto Ricans living on the island of St. Croix speak in informal situations a unique Spanglish-like combination of Puerto Rican Spanish and the local Crucian dialect of Virgin Islands Creole English, which is very different from the Spanglish spoken elsewhere. A similar situation exists in the large Puerto Rican-descended populations of New York City and Boston.
Spanglish is spoken commonly in the modern United States. According to the Pew Research Center, the population of Hispanics grew from 35.3 million to 62.1 million between 2000 and 2020. Hispanics have become the largest minority ethnic group in the US. More than 60% are of Mexican descent. Mexican Americans form one of the fastest-growing groups, increasing from 20.9 million to 37.2 million between 2000 and 2021. Around 58% of this community chose California, especially Southern California, as their new home. Spanglish is widely used throughout the heavily Mexican-American and other Hispanic communities of Southern California. The use of Spanglish has become important to Hispanic communities throughout the United States in areas such as Miami, New York City, Texas, and California. In Miami, the Afro-Cuban community makes use of a Spanglish familiarly known as "Cubonics," a portmanteau of the words Cuban and Ebonics, a slang term for African American Vernacular English that is itself a portmanteau of Ebony and phonics."
Many Mexican-Americans (Chicanos), immigrants and bilinguals express themselves in various forms of Spanglish. For many, Spanglish serves as a basis for self-identity, but others believe that it should not exist. Spanglish is difficult, because if the speaker learned the two languages in separate contexts, they use the conditioned system, in which the referential meanings in the two languages differ considerably. Those who were literate in their first language before learning the other, and who have support to maintain that literacy, are sometimes those least able to master their second language. Spanglish is part of receptive bilingualism. Receptive bilinguals are those who understand a second language but don't speak it. That is when they use Spanglish. Receptive bilinguals are also known as productively bilingual, since, to give an answer, the speaker exerts much more mental effort to answer in English, Spanish, or Spanglish. Without first understanding the culture and history of the region where Spanglish evolved as a practical matter an in depth familiarizing with multiple cultures. This knowledge, indeed the mere fact of one's having that knowledge, often forms an important part of both what one considers one's personal identity and what others consider one's identity.
Other places where similar mixed codes are spoken are Gibraltar (Llanito), Belize (Kitchen Spanish), Aruba, Bonaire, and Curaçao (along with Dutch and Papiamento).
In Australasia, forms of Spanglish are used among Spanish-speaking migrants and diasporic communities. In particular, Hispanophone Australians frequently use loanwords/phrases from Australian English, in conversations that are otherwise in Spanish; examples include "el rubbish bin", "la vacuum cleaner", "el mobile", "el toilet", "vivo en un flat pequeño", "voy a correr con mis runners", and "la librería de la city es grande". Similar phenomena occur amongst native Spanish speakers in New Zealand.
Usage
Spanglish patterns
Spanglish is informal, although speakers can consistently judge the grammaticality of a phrase or sentence. From a linguistic point of view, Spanglish often is mistakenly labeled many things. Spanglish is not a creole or dialect of Spanish because, though people claim they are native Spanglish speakers, Spanglish itself is not a language on its own, but speakers speak English or Spanish with a heavy influence from the other language. The definition of Spanglish has been unclearly explained by scholars and linguists despite being noted so often. Spanglish is the fluid exchange of language between English and Spanish, present in the heavy influence in the words and phrases used by the speaker. Spanglish is currently considered a hybrid language practice by linguists–many actually refer to Spanglish as "Spanish-English code-switching", though there is some influence of borrowing, and lexical and grammatical shifts as well.
The inception of Spanglish is due to the influx of native Spanish speaking Latin American people into North America, specifically the United States of America. As mentioned previously, the phenomenon of Spanglish can be separated into two different categories: code-switching, and borrowing, lexical and grammatical shifts. Code-switching has sparked controversy because it is seen "as a corruption of Spanish and English, a 'linguistic pollution' or 'the language of a "raced", underclass people'". For example, a fluent bilingual speaker addressing another bilingual speaker might engage in code-switching with the sentence, "I'm sorry I cannot attend next week's meeting porque tengo una obligación de negocios en Boston, pero espero que I'll be back for the meeting the week after"—which means, "I'm sorry I cannot attend next week's meeting because I have a business obligation in Boston, but I hope to be back for the meeting the week after".
Calques
Calques are translations of entire words or phrases from one language into another. They represent the simplest forms of Spanglish, as they undergo no lexical or grammatical structural change. The use of calques is common throughout most languages, evident in the calques of Arabic exclamations used in Spanish.
Examples:
- "to call back" → llamar pa'trás (llamar pa' atrás, llamar para atrás) (volver a llamar, llamar de vuelta)
- "It's up to you." → Está pa'rriba de ti. (Está pa' arriba de ti, Está para arriba de ti) (Depende de ti. decide (You decide))
- "to be up to ..." → estar pa'rriba de ... (estar pa' arriba de ..., estar para arriba de ...) (depender de ... or X decida (X decides))
- "to run for governor" → correr para gobernador (presentarse para gobernador)
pa'trás
A well-known calque is pa'trás or para atrás in expressions such as llamar pa'trás 'to call back'. Here, pa'trás reflects the particle back in various English phrasal verbs. Expressions with pa'trás are found in every stable English-Spanish contact situation: the United States, including among the isolated Isleño and Sabine River communities, Gibraltar, and sporadically in Trinidad and along the Caribbean coast of Central America where the local English varieties are heavily creolized. Meanwhile, they're unattested in non-contact varieties of Spanish. Pa'trás expressions are unique as a calque of an English verbal particle, since other phrasal verbs and particles are almost never calqued into Spanish. Because of this, and because they're consistent with existing Spanish grammar, Otheguy (1993) argues they are likely a result of a conceptual, not linguistic loan. That is, the notion of "backness" has been expanded in these contact varieties.
Semantic extensions
Semantic extension or reassignment refers to a phenomenon where speakers use a word of language A (typically Spanish in this case) with the meaning of its cognate in language B (typically English), rather than its standard meaning in language A. In Spanglish this usually occurs in the case of "false friends" (similar to, but technically not the same as false cognates), where words of similar form in Spanish and English are thought to have like meanings based on their cognate relationship.
Examples:
Spanglish | English basis and meaning | Standard Spanish | Meaning of Spanglish word in standard Spanish |
---|---|---|---|
actualmente | actually | en realidad, realmente, de verdad, verdaderamente, de hecho | currently |
aplicación | application (written request) | solicitud, postulación | application (of paint, etc.) |
bizarro | bizarre | estrambótico | valiant, dashing |
carpeta | carpet | alfombra, moqueta | folder |
chequear/checar | to check (verify) | comprobar, verificar | — |
eventualmente | eventually | finalmente, al final, por fin | possibly |
librería | library | biblioteca | bookstore |
mapear | to mop, to wash with a mop | trapear, pasar la fregona | to map |
parquear | to park | estacionar, aparcar | — |
realizar | to realize | darse cuenta | to carry out, to perform, to fulfill |
recordar | to record | grabar | to remember |
rentar | to rent | alquilar, arrendar | to yield, to produce a profit |
renta | rent | alquiler, arriendo | yield, profit |
sanitizador | sanitizer | desinfectante | — |
sentencia | sentence (linguistics) | frase, oración | sentence (court decision) |
wacha | to watch out | cuidado | — |
An example of this lexical phenomenon in Spanglish is the emergence of new verbs when the productive Spanish verb-making suffix -ear is attached to an English verb. For example, the Spanish verb for "to eat lunch" (almorzar in standard Spanish) becomes lonchear (occasionally lunchear). The same process produces watchear, parquear, emailear, twittear, etc.
Loanwords
Loanwords occur in any language due to the presence of items or ideas not present in the culture before, such as modern technology. The increasing rate of technological growth requires the use of loan words from the donor language due to the lack of its definition in the lexicon of the main language. This partially deals with the "prestige" of the donor language, which either forms a dissimilar or more similar word from the loan word. The growth of modern technology can be seen in the expressions: "hacer click" (to click), "mandar un email" (to send an email), "faxear" (to fax), "textear" (to text-message), or "hackear" (to hack). Some words borrowed from the donor languages are adapted to the language, while others remain unassimilated (e. g. "sandwich", "jeans" or "laptop"). The items most associated with Spanglish refer to words assimilated into the main morphology. Immigrants are usually responsible for "Spanishizing" English words. According to The New York Times, "Spanishizing" is accomplished "by pronouncing an English word 'Spanish style' (dropping final consonants, softening others, replacing M's with N's and V's with B's), and spelled by transliterating the result using Spanish spelling conventions."
Examples
- "Aseguranza" (insurance; "seguros" is insurance in standard Spanish, aseguranza is literally "assurance" which is similar to the Prudential Insurance company's slogan, "peace of mind")
- "Biles" (bills)
- "Chorcha" (church)
- "Ganga" (gang)
- "Líder" (leader) – considered an established Anglicism
- "Lonchear/Lonchar" (to have lunch)
- "Marqueta" (market)
- "Taipear/Tipear" (to type)
- "Troca" (truck) – Widely used in most of northern Mexico as well
- ”Mitin” (meeting) – An outdoors gathering of people mostly for political purposes.
- ”Checar” (to check)
- ”Escanear” (to scan) – To digitalize (e.g. a document).
- ”Chatear” (to chat)
- “Desorden” (disorder) – incorrectly used as “disease”.
- ”Condición” (condition) – incorrectly used as “sickness”.
- "Viaje de las Estrellas" - "Star Trek"; the television shows such as "King of the Hill" and "MadTV" sometimes used standard Spanish but in an elementary manner.
So-insertion
Within the US, the English word so is often inserted into Spanish discourse. This use of so is found in conversations that otherwise take place entirely in Spanish. Its users run the gamut from Spanish-dominant immigrants to native, balanced bilinguals to English-dominant semi-speakers and second-language speakers of Spanish, and even people who reject the use of Anglicisms have been found using so in Spanish. Whether so is a simple loanword, or part of some deeper form of language mixing, is disputed. Many consider so to simply be a loanword, although borrowing short function words is quite abnormal. In stressed positions, so is usually pronounced with English phonetics, and speakers typically identify it as an English word and not an established English loan such as troca. This is unusual, since code-switched or lexically inserted words typically aren't as common and recurring as so is.
So is always used as a coordinating conjunction in Spanish. It can be used phrase-internally, or at the beginning or end of a sentence. In Spanish discourse, so is never used to mean "in order that" as it often is in English. As a sociolinguistic phenomenon, speakers who subconsciously insert so into their Spanish usually spend most of their time speaking English. This and other facts suggest that the insertion of so and similar items such as you know and I mean are the result of a kind of "metalinguistic bracketing". That is, discourse in Spanish is circumscribed by English and by a small group of English functional words. These terms can act as punctuation for Spanish dialogue within an English-dominant environment.
Fromlostiano
Fromlostiano is a type of artificial and humorous wordplay that translates Spanish idioms word-for-word into English. The name fromlostiano comes from the expression From Lost to the River, which is a word-for-word translation of de perdidos al río; an idiom that means that one is prone to choose a particularly risky action in a desperate situation (this is somewhat comparable to the English idiom in for a penny, in for a pound). The humor comes from the fact that while the expression is completely grammatical in English, it makes no sense to a native English speaker. Hence it is necessary to understand both languages to appreciate the humor.
This phenomenon was first noted in the book From Lost to the River in 1995. The book describes six types of fromlostiano:
- Translations of Spanish idioms into English: With you bread and onion (Contigo pan y cebolla), Nobody gave you a candle in this burial (Nadie te ha dado vela en este entierro), To good hours, green sleeves (A buenas horas mangas verdes).
- Translations of American and British celebrities' names into Spanish: Vanesa Tumbarroja (Vanessa Redgrave).
- Translations of American and British street names into Spanish: Calle del Panadero (Baker Street).
- Translations of Spanish street names into English: Shell Thorn Street (Calle de Concha Espina).
- Translations of multinational corporations' names into Spanish: Ordenadores Manzana (Apple Computers).
- Translations of Spanish minced oaths into English: Tu-tut that I saw you (Tararí que te vi).
The use of Spanglish has evolved over time. It has emerged as a way of conceptualizing one's thoughts whether it be in speech or on paper.
Pedagogical approaches to Spanglish
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The education system in the U.S. has sustained colonialist practices through the rhetoric of an ‘academic language’. The term ‘academic language’ frames and minoritizes the Spanglish-speaking, bilingual students of America. Through teaching in a monolinguistic manner, ELA is given precedence to and places native languages or the use of bilingualism as secondary to English and the pure usage of Spanish. This allows English to be reinforced as an 'academic language,' granting white people an advantage in reaching academic success and disassociating bilingual speakers from whiteness and, therefore, 'academic language'. A study done on Latin American middle schoolers in East Los Angeles highlights different ways in which bilingual students utilize Spanglish to advance academic literacy. Martinez’s list of skills students exhibited when using Spanglish in educational settings include:
(1) clarify and/or reiterate utterances
(2) quote and report speech
(3) joke and/or tease
(4) index solidarity and intimacy
(5) shift voices for different audiences
(6) communicate subtle nuances of meaning.
In turn, the skills used when speaking Spanglish can be applied as a method in academic settings as well.
Identity
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The use of Spanglish is often associated with the speaker's expression of identity (in terms of language learning) and reflects how many minority-American cultures feel toward their heritage. Commonly in ethnic communities within the United States, the knowledge of one's heritage language tends to assumably signify if one is truly of a member of their culture. Individuals of Hispanic descent living in America face living in two very different worlds. Spanglish is used to facilitate communication with others in both worlds. While some individuals believe that Spanglish should not be considered a language, it is a language that has evolved and is continuing to grow and affect the way new generations are educated, culture change, and the production of media. Living within the United States creates a synergy of culture and struggles for many Mexican-Americans. The hope to retain their cultural heritage/language and their dual-identity in American society is one of the major factors that lead to the creation of Spanglish.
Intergenerational Spanglish
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Immigrant youth in the United States have become prevalent social actors to sociologists because of their role as moderators and translators in their homes and the community. Orellana centers the ethnographic study around youth who have worked as translators in different spheres of societal issues for their communities. It showcases the division of labor passed onto members of the immigrant population and the navigational skills obtained by those obliged to utilize their bilingualism and Spanglish as a means of survival. Intergenerational skills like Spanglish can then be used as a ‘Fund of Knowledge’ to promote literacy in the classroom. ‘Funds of Knowledge’ encourages the use of Spanglish and other languages between familial relations in the classroom to bridge the skills used at home and welcome them to a classroom. This allows the development of Spanglish skills passed between generations to be viewed as equally valuable at home and in academia. It dismantles the idea that specific languages need to be segregated from the educational realm of society.
Arts and culture
Literature
Books that feature Spanglish in a significant way include the following:
- Giannina Braschi's Yo-Yo Boing! (1998) is the first Spanglish novel.
- Guillermo Gómez-Peña uses Spanglish in his performances.
- Matt de la Peña's novel Mexican WhiteBoy (2008) features flourishes of Spanglish.
- Junot Díaz's The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao also uses Spanglish words and phrases.
- Pedro Pietri wrote the poem El Spanglish National Anthem. (1993)
- Ilan Stavans Spanglish: The Making of a New American Language. (2004)
- Piri Thomas wrote the autobiography Down These Mean Streets (1967) using Spanglish phrases.
- Yoss' science fiction novel Super Extra Grande (2009) is set in a future where Latin Americans have colonized the galaxy and Spanglish is the lingua franca among the galaxy's sentient species.
- H. G. Wells's future history The Shape of Things to Come (1933) predicted that in the 21st century English and Spanish would "become interchangeable languages".
- Germán Valdés, a Mexican comedian, (known as Tin Tan) made heavy use of Spanglish. He dressed as a pachuco.
Music
Overview
The use of Spanglish by incorporating English and Spanish lyrics into music has risen in the United States over time. In the 1980s 1.2% of songs in the Billboard Top 100 contained Spanglish lyrics, eventually growing to 6.2% in the 2000s. The lyrical emergence of Spanglish by way of Latin American musicians has grown tremendously, reflective of the growing Hispanic population within the United States.
- Mexican rock band Molotov, whose members use Spanglish in their lyrics.
- American progressive rock band The Mars Volta, whose song lyrics frequently switch back and forth between English and Spanish.
- Ska punk pioneers Sublime, whose singer Bradley Nowell grew up in a Spanish-speaking community, released several songs in Spanglish.
- American nu metal band Ill Niño frequently mix Spanish and English lyrics in their songs.
- Shakira (born Shakira Isabel Mebarak Ripoll), a Colombian singer-songwriter, musician and model.
- American singer, actress, producer, director, dancer, model, and businesswoman Jennifer Lopez.
- Sean Paul (born Sean Paul Ryan Francis Henriques), a Jamaican singer and songwriter.
- Ricky Martin (born Enrique Martín Morales), a Puerto Rican pop musician, actor and author.
- Pitbull (born Armando Christian Pérez), a successful Cuban-American rapper, producer and Latin Grammy Award-winning artist from Miami, Florida that has brought Spanglish into mainstream music through his multiple hit songs.
- Enrique Iglesias, a Spanish singer-songwriter with songs in English, Spanish and Spanglish; Spanglish songs include Bailamos and Bailando.
- Rapper Silentó, famous for his song "Watch Me (Whip/Nae Nae)", recorded a version in Spanglish.
- Likewise, Mexican pop rock band Reik released a song called "Spanglish" in their album Secuencia.
History
The rise of Spanglish in music within the United States also creates new classifications of Latin(o) music, as well as the wider Latin(o) music genre. In some growing music scenes, it is noted that for artists go beyond music and bring in political inclinations as a way to make wider commentary. Although Los Angeles Chicano bands from the 1960s and 1970s are often remembered as part of the Chicano-movement as agents for social chance, Latin(o) music has long been a way for artists to exercise political agency, including the post-World War II jazz scene, the New York City salsa of the 1970s, and the hip-hop movement of the 80s. Some of the topics addressed in these movements include: redlining and housing policies; immigration; discrimination; and transnationalism.
Commercialization
Over time, however, this more explicit show of political nature might have been lessened due to the desire to compete in the music business of the English speaking world. This however, did not stop the a change in U.S. music, where English-speaking musicians have moved towards collaborative music, and bilingual duets are growing in popularity, indicating an audience demand for multi-language entertainment, as well as a space for traditional Latino artists to enter the mainstream and find chart success beyond the Spanish-speaking world. This is despite the slower-growing opportunities for Latino musicians to occupy higher-up positions such as promoters, business owners, and producers.
Present-day
With this growing demand for Spanglish duets, there has also been a rise in indie Latino artists who incorporate Spanglish lyrics in their music. One such artist is Omar Apollo, who combines Spanglish lyrics with music influenced by traditional corridos. Other up and coming Latino artists, such as Kali Uchis, Empress Of, and Ambar Lucid, have also led to a greater prominence of Hispanic performers and lyricism in the contemporary top charts. These types of artists, also being second-generation Spanish speakers, suggest that there is less fear or feelings of intimidation of using Spanish in public spaces. Moreover, this lack of negative connotation with public use of Spanglish and heritage-language language tools point to a subconscious desire to challenge negative rhetoric, as well as the racism that may go along with it. Given the fact that Spanglish has been the language of communication for a growing Hispanic-American population in the United States, its growing presence in Latino music is considered, by some scholars, a persistent and easily identifiable marker of an increasingly intersectional Latino identity.
See also
- American literature in Spanish
- Nuyorican
- Caló (Chicano) a Mexican-American argot, similar to Spanglish
- Chicano English
- Code-switching
- Dog Latin
- Dunglish
- Franglais
- Hispanicisms in English
- Languages in the United States
- List of English words of Spanish origin
- Llanito (an Andalusian vernacular unique to Gibraltar)
- Portuñol, the unsystematic mixture of Portuguese with Spanish
- Siyokoy, hybrid words in Filipino and other Philippine languages derived from English and Spanish words
- Spanglish (film)
- Spanish language in the United States
- Spanish dialects and varieties
- Category:Forms of English
- Category:Spanglish songs
Notes
- Everson, Michael. "Registration form for 'spanglis'" (text). IANA. Archived from the original on June 18, 2023. Retrieved March 12, 2021.
A judgement call by the tagger is expected to be made concerning the base prefix to be used.
- "Spanglish". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Merriam-Webster.
- Lambert 2017, p. 13.
- ^ "Salvador Tió's 100th Anniversary". November 15, 2011. Archived from the original on March 5, 2021. Retrieved October 22, 2019.
- Lipski 2008, p. 53.
- ^ Nash, Rose (1970). "Spanglish: Language Contact in Puerto Rico". American Speech. 45 (3/4): 223–233. doi:10.2307/454837. JSTOR 454837.
- Ardila 2005, p. 61.
- Funk & Lopez 2022, "U.S. Hispanic population reached more than 62 million in 2020" graph.
- Moslimani, Noe-Bustamante & Shah 2023, "Mexican-origin population in the U.S., 2000–2021" graph.
- ^ Rothman & Rell 2005, p. 1.
- "Towards New Dialects: Spanglish in the United States". homes.chass.utoronto.ca. Archived from the original on March 29, 2016. Retrieved March 6, 2016.
- Rosen 2016.
- Halwachs, Dieter (1993). "Poly-system repertoire and identity". Grazer Linguistische. pp. 39–43 71–90.
- Taonga, New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage Te Manatu. "Latin Americans – Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand". teara.govt.nz. Archived from the original on April 10, 2019. Retrieved April 10, 2019.
- Taonga, New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage Te Manatu. "1. – Latin Americans – Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand". teara.govt.nz. Archived from the original on April 10, 2019. Retrieved April 10, 2019.
- Montes-Alcalá 2000, p. 98.
- Individuals "communicate their thoughts and ideas using a combination of Spanish and English, often referring to this hybrid language practice as Spanglish". Martínez, Ramón Antonio (November 2010). "'Spanglish' as Literacy Tool: Toward an Understanding of the Potential Role of Spanish-English Code-Switching in the Development of Academic Literacy". Research in the Teaching of English. 45 (2). National Council of Teachers of English: 124–149. doi:10.58680/rte201012743. JSTOR 40997087.
- Morales 2002, p. 9.
- Ardila 2005.
- Bonnie Urciuoli, Exposing Prejudice: Puerto Rican Experiences of Language, Race, and Class Archived October 7, 2023, at the Wayback Machine (Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1996), p. 38, cited by Arlene Dávila, Latinos Inc.: The Marketing and Making of a People Archived October 7, 2023, at the Wayback Machine (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2012), p. 168, and quoted in turn by Viviana Rojas and Juan Piñón, "Spanish, English or Spanglish? Media Strategies and Corporate Struggles to Reach the Second and Later Generations of Latinos." Archived November 26, 2015, at the Wayback Machine International Journal of Hispanic Media. N.p., Aug. 2014. Web. October 4, 2015.
- Stavans 2000b.
- ^ Montes-Alcalá 2000, p. 107.
- Lipski 1986.
- ^ Lipski 2008, p. 229.
- Lipski 1986, p. 88.
- Lipski 1986, pp. 88–91.
- Lipski 1987, p. 124.
- Lipski 1986, pp. 92–93.
- Lipski 1986, pp. 91–92.
- Lipski 1986, p. 93.
- Otheguy 1993.
- Montes-Alcalá 2000, p. 105.
- Rothman & Rell 2005.
- Montes-Alcalá 2000, p. 106.
- ^ Alvarez 1997, paragraph 25.
- Lipski 2008, pp. 235–236.
- Lipski 2008, p. 237.
- Lipski 2008, p. 238.
- ^ Lipski 2005.
- Ochoa, Ignacio; Frederico López Socasau (1995). From Lost to the River (in Spanish). Madrid: Publicaciones Formativas, S.A. ISBN 978-84-920231-1-0.
- Rojas, Viviana, and Juan Piñón. "Spanish, English or Spanglish? Media Strategies and Corporate Struggles to Reach the Second and Later Generations of Latinos." International Journal of Hispanic Media. N.p., Aug. 2014. Web. October 4, 2015.
- Rothman & Rell 2005, p. 527.
- Orellana, Marjorie Faulstich; Dorner, Lisa; Pulido, Lucila (November 2003). "Accessing Assets: Immigrant Youth's Work as Family Translators or "Para-Phrasers"". Social Problems. 50 (4): 505–524. doi:10.1525/sp.2003.50.4.505. ISSN 0037-7791.
- Moll, Luis C.; Amanti, Cathy; Neff, Deborah; Gonzalez, Norma (March 1992). "Funds of knowledge for teaching: Using a qualitative approach to connect homes and classrooms". Theory into Practice. 31 (2): 132–141. doi:10.1080/00405849209543534. ISSN 0040-5841.
- Stavans 2000a, pp. 555–558.
- Poets, Academy of American. "About Giannina Braschi | Academy of American Poets". poets.org. Archived from the original on September 28, 2020. Retrieved November 4, 2020.
- Aldama, O'Dwyer & Stavans 2020.
- Steinberg, Sybil (December 27, 1997). "Review of Yo-Yo Boing!". Publishers Weekly. Archived from the original on August 12, 2022. Retrieved April 21, 2020.
- Castillo, Debra A. Redreaming America: Toward a Bilingual American Culture. www.sunypress.edu. Archived from the original on February 25, 2020. Retrieved April 21, 2020.
- Schaefer, Richard T. (March 20, 2008). Encyclopedia of Race, Ethnicity, and Society. SAGE. ISBN 978-1-4129-2694-2. Archived from the original on December 29, 2023. Retrieved October 20, 2020.
- González 2017.
- H.G.Wells, The Shape of Things to Come, Ch. 12 Archived May 10, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
- Pisarek & Valenzuela 2012.
- Byrd, Samuel K. (2018). "Beyond Latin Night: Latinx Musicians and the Politics of Music in Charlotte". Southern Cultures. 24 (3): 125–143. ISSN 1068-8218. JSTOR 26510212. Archived from the original on February 15, 2021. Retrieved March 18, 2021.
- Koegel, John; San Miguel, Guadalupe (2005). Burr, Ramiro; Guerrero, Lalo; Mentes, Sherilyn Meece; Reyes, David; Waldman, Tom; Broyles-González; Peña, Manuel; Valdez, Avelardo; Tejeda, Juan (eds.). "Mexican American Music". American Music. 23 (2): 257–274. doi:10.2307/4153034. ISSN 0734-4392. JSTOR 4153034. Archived from the original on February 9, 2021. Retrieved March 18, 2021.
- ^ Cepeda 2017.
- Lessner, Justin (January 6, 2021). "Bilingual Collaborations Are Taking The Music World By Storm, These Are The Dream Collabs For 2021". mitú. Archived from the original on April 10, 2021. Retrieved March 18, 2021.
- "Meet Omar Apollo, the blue-haired, gender-rebellious, Mexican American Prince". Los Angeles Times. October 16, 2020. Archived from the original on December 10, 2020. Retrieved February 9, 2021.
- Sánchez-Muñoz & Amezcua 2019.
References
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- Belazi, Hedi M.; Rubin, Edward J.; Toribio, Almeida Jacqueline (1994), "Code Switching and X-Bar Theory: The Functional head Constraint", Linguistic Inquiry, vol. 25, pp. 221–237
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External links
- Current TV video "Nuyorican Power Archived November 20, 2010, at the Wayback Machine" on Spanglish as the Nuyorican language; featuring Daddy Yankee, Giannina Braschi, Rita Moreno, and other Nuyorican icons.
- Spanglish – the Language of Chicanos Archived May 2, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, University of California
- What is Spanglish? Texas State University
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