
And the most unique words seemed to be for common things like eating, family, jobs, weather, etc. In the video I watched, they were clearly saying things in English, like "good morning" and "come in." You would get used to the accent pretty quickly, so that would only leave learning the alternate words/slang. I think this would be a Level 1 language to learn, as in the most like English, and therefore the easiest to learn. Also, a few African linguistic patterns transferred into the Southern dialect which is why sometimes we phrase things differently than the rest of America would.) (I'm from the South, so I'm used to English words that have morphed into something else, like my grandmother says "warsh" instead of "wash" and my stepfather says Ca'lina instead of Carolina.

But as it was, I only got some words here and there. And I think if they had the dialect but with a more American or British accent, a lot more of what they are saying would be understandable. Speaking without the dialect (just the accent), they are understandable. It reminds me of Jamaican English, which is both a strong accent and its own dialect. I watched a video of a man speaking to three women who speak pidgin.

I had not heard of it before, so I had to go look it up, out of curiosity.
