Long time no see

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"Long time no see" is an English expression used as a greeting by people who have not seen each other for a while. It is vested in an unconventional grammatical garb, and is an imitation of broken or pidgin English.[1] It may derive ultimately from an English pidgin such as that spoken by Native Americans or Chinese.[citation needed]

[edit] Origin

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the earliest appearance of the phrase "long time no see" in print was in 1901 in W. F. Drannan's Thirty-One Years on the Plains and in the Mountains, in which a Native American man is recorded as greeting the narrator by saying, "Good mornin. Long time no see you."[1] This example is intended to reflect usage in American Indian Pidgin English.

An earlier use of a similar phrase, but not as a greeting, is from Lieut.-Colonel James Campbell's Excursions, Adventures, and Field-Sports in Ceylon (published 1843): "Ma-am—long time no see wife—want go to Colombo see wife."[2]

Alternately, the phrase may have derived from the Chinese Pidgin English used to facilitate communication between Chinese and English speakers. It may be compared to the Cantonese phrase 好耐冇見 (hou2 noi6 mou5 gin3) and the Mandarin phrase 好久不見/好久不见 (Hǎojiǔ bùjiàn), which can be translated literally as "long time, no see." This may have entered American English in the 19th century via Chinese immigrants and their descendants, and into British English by way of the Merchant Navy and the Royal Navy. The lexicographer Eric Partridge notes that it is akin to the phrases "no can do" and "chop chop".[3]

The phrase is a multiword expression that cannot be explained by the usual rules of English grammar due to the irregular syntax.[4]

[edit] Notes

[edit] References


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