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- Poglish abstract "Poglish, Polglish or Ponglish (in Polish, often rendered "Poglisz"), a portmanteau word combining the words "Polish" and "English," designates the product of mixing Polish- and English-language elements (morphemes, words, grammatical structures, syntactic elements, idioms, etc.) within a single speech production, or the use of "false friends" and of cognate words in senses that have diverged from those of the common etymological root.Such combining or confusion of Polish and English elements, when it occurs within a single word, term or phrase (e.g., in a hybrid word), may, inadvertently or deliberately, produce a neologism.Poglish is a common (to greater or lesser degree, almost unavoidable) phenomenon among persons bilingual in Polish and English, and its avoidance requires considerable effort and attention. Poglish is a manifestation of a broader phenomenon, that of language interference.As is the case with the mixing of other language pairs, the results of Poglish speech (oral or written) may sometimes be confusing, amusing or embarrassing.Variant names for this linguistic melange include "Polglish", "Pinglish" and "Ponglish". A term sometimes used by native Polish-speakers is "Half na pół" ("Half-and-half").".
- Poglish wikiPageExternalLink 7500077.stm.
- Poglish wikiPageID "4542102".
- Poglish wikiPageRevisionID "596185074".
- Poglish hasPhotoCollection Poglish.
- Poglish subject Category:Polish-American_culture_in_Chicago,_Illinois.
- Poglish subject Category:Polish_language.
- Poglish comment "Poglish, Polglish or Ponglish (in Polish, often rendered "Poglisz"), a portmanteau word combining the words "Polish" and "English," designates the product of mixing Polish- and English-language elements (morphemes, words, grammatical structures, syntactic elements, idioms, etc.) within a single speech production, or the use of "false friends" and of cognate words in senses that have diverged from those of the common etymological root.Such combining or confusion of Polish and English elements, when it occurs within a single word, term or phrase (e.g., in a hybrid word), may, inadvertently or deliberately, produce a neologism.Poglish is a common (to greater or lesser degree, almost unavoidable) phenomenon among persons bilingual in Polish and English, and its avoidance requires considerable effort and attention. ".
- Poglish label "Poglish".
- Poglish label "Ponglisch".
- Poglish sameAs Ponglisch.
- Poglish sameAs m.02p89xv.
- Poglish sameAs Q1240805.
- Poglish sameAs Q1240805.
- Poglish wasDerivedFrom Poglish?oldid=596185074.
- Poglish isPrimaryTopicOf Poglish.