Read Katani's Jamaican Holiday Online
Authors: Annie Bryant
BOOK EXTRAS
Trivialicious Trivia
Katani’s Patois Dictionary
Jammin’ Jamaican Facts
Nana’s Banana Bliss Recipe
Katani’s Jamaican Adventure trivialicious trivia
ANSWERS: 1. C.
Yellow, black, and green
2. B.
He chases her out of the pen.
3. A.
a comb
4. B.
a dog
5. D.
on Ol’ Madda Bird’s veranda
6. A.
Precious
7. C.
Guava
8. A.
Chloe
9. D.
a scarf
10. B.
Cricket
Patois Words
banyan tree:
a large spreading tree. It spreads by sending down aerial roots that kids love to swing on.
bobo dread:
dressed in long robes and tight turbans, the bobo dreads are a sect within the Rastafarian community. They live apart in their own areas and make straw mats and brooms for sale.
bumptious:
presumptuous or pushy
dem:
them
dey:
they
escoveitch:
literally “pickled.” Escoveitch fish is fried, then steeped in a mixture of hot vinegar, pepper, onions, and pimento seeds.
fass:
inquisitive
favor:
resemble
fi:
for
fool-fool:
very foolish. In Jamaican patois, doubling a word increases its intensity.
gwan:
go on
gwine:
going to
irie:
okay
Jah-Jah:
the name Rastafarians use for god
mash:
smash
mek:
make
mon:
man
pappy show:
puppet show
peenie-wallies:
fireflies
pickney:
child
pickney dem:
children
plait:
braid; braided
Rastafarian:
also called just “Rasta.” Rasta, or the Rastafari movement, is a religious movement started in Jamaica.
tups:
a little
Patois Phrases
So the barrel come:
So you got something new. Many Jamaicans who live abroad regularly send home barrels of food and clothing for their families.
Me deh rock so:
I am rocking like this.
Come mek we dance and sing:
Let us dance and sing.
Mind dem own business:
Pay attention to their own problems.
They come long time?:
Have they been here long?
We just reach:
We just got here.
What gone bad a mawning, cyan come good a evening:
Something bad in the morning won’t be good in the evening.
Empty barrel mek the most noise:
Empty barrels make the
most noise. (People who know the least about something often talk the most about it.)
By and by, yuh wi si:
By and by, you will see. (You’ll find out eventually.)
To make a pappy show of someone:
to make someone look foolish
Ah fi mi pickney dese:
These are my children
Mi mek dem in mi image:
I made them in my image
Mi love dem and look out fi dem:
I love them, I take care of them
Map It!
Jamaica is the third-largest island in the Caribbean and the largest English-speaking island. It spans 4,244 square miles and sits entirely surrounded by the Caribbean Sea, ninety miles southwest of Cuba.
What’s in a Name?
The name
Jamaica
comes from the Arawak word
Xaymaca
, meaning “land of wood and water.” Words like
barbecue
,
canoe
,
hurricane
, and
tobacco
come from the language of the first colonists of Jamaica, the Arawak-speaking group of people now known as the Tainos.
Land Ho!
In the seventeenth century, Port Royal in Jamaica was the base for many notorious buccaneers and pirates. Among these were Blackbeard, Calico Jack, Anne Bonny, and Henry Morgan. Port Royal was known as the richest and wickedest city on earth until it was destroyed by a violent earthquake in 1692. Three quarters of the town sank that day!
Out of Many, One People
Jamaica’s motto, “Out of Many, One People,” reflects a rich and diverse culture. Jamaica is populated by more than two and a half million people. African and English influences dominate the culture, but the Spanish, Irish, Indians, Chinese, and Germans have all left their mark in food, speech, music, and dance. Jamaicans can tour the world without leaving their island!
Spouting Off
Ocho Rios
means “eight rivers” in Spanish, but there aren’t eight rivers near the town. Actually, the name is a corruption of the Spanish word
chorreras
, meaning “spouts” or “waterfalls.” But most Jamaicans just call it Ochi.
Tee Time
Jamaica can lay claim to the oldest golf course in the western hemisphere. Following the introduction of golf in Scotland, a nine-hole course was built in Mandeville, Jamaica, at the first country club in the New World. The Duke of Manchester opened Mandeville Golf Club in 1865—
before
many of Europe’s most famous courses were built.
Make It a Clean Sweep
In Jamaica, it’s an old custom to place a broom upside down behind a door in your house when you want an unwanted guest to go away.
Pipe Down!
Falmouth, Jamaica, had piped water before New York City! Way back in 1799, a twenty-foot waterwheel was installed on land near the Martha Brae River. This giant wheel was turned by the current of the stream and emptied about one hundred gallons of water per revolution into a wooden trough. Then the water flowed through a six-inch pipe into a large tank in the town square of Falmouth. Even today, people call this part of town Water Square.
Spice It Up
The spice that gives Jamaican jerk its special kick is called pimento. Pimento is the only spice indigenous to Jamaica, which makes Jamaican jerk a very special cuisine!
Ingredients
2 eggs, beaten well
½ cup (one stick) butter, at room temperature
4 very ripe bananas, peeled
1 ½ cups flour
1 cup sugar
¼ teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking soda
Nana’s secret ingredient: ¼ cup shredded coconut
Directions