pidginology
Pidginology studies pidgins, contact languages that arise when speakers of different native languages need a common means of communication. These languages typically develop in multilingual settings such as trading ports, plantations, or colonial administrations. Pidgins are characterized by reduced phonology, simplified morphology, and analytic syntax. Their lexicon is largely drawn from one or more dominant languages, known as lexifiers, with influence from local languages shaping pronunciation and semantics.
The field sits within contact linguistics and sociolinguistics and seeks to understand how pidgins form, stabilize,
Typical structural tendencies include limited inflection, relatively fixed word order, heavy reliance on particles and function
Well-known examples include Tok Pisin in Papua New Guinea, West African Pidgin English varieties such as Nigerian
Researchers employ fieldwork, descriptive documentation, corpus-based analysis, and historical-comparative methods within language contact studies to document