Hong Kong’s Top 10 : Peoples and Cultures in Hong Kong

  1. Chinese

    With
    a history of revolution, migration, organized crime and incessant
    trading, the witty and streetwise Cantonese are the New Yorkers of
    China, and make up the majority of Hong Kong’s population. There are
    also large communities of Shanghainese, Hakka (Kejia) and Chiu Chow
    (Chaozhou) people.




    Chinese fisherman



    Chinese chequers

  2. British

    Colonial
    power may have vanished, but a large British population remains,
    including a small but influential community of native-born. Influences
    are everywhere, from street names (“Lambeth Walk”, “Rutland Quadrant”)
    to school blazers.

  3. Eurasian

    The
    traditional role of this community of mixed European and Asian descent –
    as cultural and commercial brokers between East and West – remains
    undiminished. If anyone can claim to truly embody Hong Kong’s intriguing
    duality, it is this young, wealthy and internationally-minded
    community.

  4. Portuguese

    In
    the Pearl River Delta since the arrival of traders in the 16th century,
    the Portuguese have inter-married extensively with the Cantonese. Aside
    from a clutch of surnames (da Silva, Sequeira, Remedios), a lasting
    influence has been the fostering of an addiction to egg tarts and
    pastries.

  5. Indian

    The
    history of Hong Kong’s substantial Indian population (there are Hindus,
    Muslims and Sikhs) dates from the arrival of the British in 1841. Like
    the Eurasians, young Indians have rejected purely Western or Asian
    notions of identity, pioneering instead a synthesis of both.

  6. Jewish

    Hong
    Kong has one of the oldest Jewish communities in east Asia, producing
    patrician business dynasties (the Sassoons, the Kadoories) and one of
    the most colourful colonial governors (Sir Matthew Nathan, 1903–1906).

  7. Russian

    A
    few now elderly descendants are all that is left of the former émigré
    community. Hong Kong’s White Russians were once numerous, and you still
    find borsch on the menu of every takeaway and coffee shop.

  8. Overseas Chinese

    The
    surging growth in British, American- and Canadian-born Chinese
    (nicknamed BBCs, ABCs and CBCs respectively) has been a characteristic
    of the last two decades, as the well-educated children of emigrants
    return in search of roots and white-collar work.

  9. Filipino

    Most
    members of the largest ethnic minority stoically perform the low-paid
    occupations that Hong Kongers shun, working as domestic servants,
    drivers, waiting staff and bar room musicians, and remitting most of
    their income back home to the Philippines. Filipinas promenade in their
    thousands every Sunday at Statue Square .

  10. Australian

    Working
    mostly in business and the media, the size of this community is
    reflected in the fact that it boasts the largest Australian Chamber of
    Commerce outside of Australia, and one of only two Australian
    International Schools in the world.


Top 10 Patois and Lingo in Hong Kong

  1. Chinglish

    The local patois, which freely uses sinicized English words like sahmunjee (sandwich), bahsee (bus), lumbah (number) and kayleem (cream).

  2. Portuguese

    Many borrowings, including praya (waterfront road), joss (a corruption of deus, or god) and amah (maid).

  3. Anglo-Indian/Persian

    Several words, including shroff (cashier), nullah (channel or watercourse) and tiffin (lunch).

  4. Mo Lei Tau

    The impenetrable slang used by young Cantonese. Based on surreal and seemingly nonsensical phrasing.

  5. “Jaihng”

    All-purpose slang term meaning “cool”, “excellent”. (As used in the Hollywood film Wayne’s World.)

  6. “Yau Mehr Liu?”

    Translates roughly as “What’s your talent?” but used as a streetwise greeting; a bit like “what’s up?” or “wassup?”

  7. “Godown”

    Hong Kong English for warehouse or storage facility; a contraction of “go put your load down”.

  8. “Whiskey Tangos”

    Hong Kong police slang for “white trash”.

  9. “Aiyah!”

    The universal exclamation of disappointment, surprise or regret.

  10. “Ah-”

    Prefix added to names when denoting affection, as in “Ah-Timothy”, “Ah-Belinda”.