释义 |
Definition of Hinglish in English: Hinglishnoun ˈhɪŋɡliʃ mass nouninformal A blend of Hindi and English, in particular a variety of English used by speakers of Hindi, characterized by frequent use of Hindi vocabulary or constructions. Example sentencesExamples - The patrons came more on zippy two wheelers, wearing dungarees, talking a combination of Kannada, Hinglish, and English.
- Research for the new edition of the Collins English Dictionary has revealed that Hinglish words are being increasingly used in English.
- In the long run, we can expect Hinglish to influence English in many fields, in the same way that Latin and French have over several centuries.
- Indian English is a much broader notion than Hinglish, applicable to the whole of India, including those regions where other languages are used.
- In this movie, important sequences of the film are in English - in fact, it's a Hinglish movie.
- Entries can be sent in any language - Marathi, Gujarati, Hindi, Urdu and, of course, Hinglish.
- Today Hinglish (English with Hindi words) or Pinglish (English with Punjabi words) is acceptable to a wide cross-section of people.
- But ouch, there comes her boyfriend with a Hinglish tongue and a punkish plucky attitude.
- Here is a magazine article on a more code-switching version of Hinglish.
- The album has an international touch with techno-beats interspersed with Punjabi folk and a fair amount of Hinglish mixed with Punjabi lyrics.
- Most Indians seem to enjoy using Hinglish and local attitudes towards imperfect English have changed.
- After all, the Indians have introduced Hinglish, a mixture of Hindi and English!
- A lad in camouflage pants bounces around on a pink plastic sofa spouting Hinglish, Hindi-English pop talk.
- It is not the Stardust [magazine] kind of Hinglish, but a conscious take from Hindi film dialogues and popular TV commercials.
- What I find particularly fascinating is that this new way of speaking, often referred to as Hinglish, is playing a growing role in advertising.
- Today, when he speaks to a top-heavy group of foreign economists and analysts in a Hinglish patois there is no trace of embarrassment.
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