English
is the official language of The Islands Of The Bahamas. If you are
comfortable with English, you won’t
have any trouble getting around, reading street signs, ordering at
restaurants, etc. However, until you become accustomed to the region’s
dialect, you may have to ask some people to repeat what they say.
Bahamian English is a fascinating mixture of Queen's diction, African
influences, and island patois. Unfamiliar sounding words you'll hear
on our streets and beaches may be survivors from early English settlement
(true Shakespearian English!), echoes of Africa, or local coinages.
The "h" is often dropped in daily
speech ('ouse for house or t'anks for thanks). You'll find conversation easy
here - the distinctive sounds of daily speech are all part of a true-true Bahamian
experience.
Dialects differ slightly from one island to the other, and Bahamians
use idioms you probably are not familiar with. If someone says "day clean" they
mean "daybreak" and "first fowl crow" refers to the first
cry a rooster makes in the morning. These idioms are typical of the Black Bahamian
English, which is closely related to the Gullah dialect of South Carolina.
As Loyalists from the American South settled in The Islands Of The Bahamas,
they brought this language with them.