English

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Etymology

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Compare Hokkien 佗落 (tó-lo̍h ū, how is it [] ?, literally where is there). (have; there is) is rendered as got in Singlish.

Also compare Malay mana ada and dialectal Mandarin 哪裡哪里 (nǎlǐ yǒu).

Pronunciation

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  • (Singapore) IPA(key): /ˈwɛː ɡɔt/, [ˈwɛː˦ ɡɔt˨], (very rare, some older speakers) /ˈhw-/
    • IPA(key): (sentence-final alternative) /ˈwɛː ˈɡɔt/, [ˈwɛː˦ ˈɡɔt˦˧]

Phrase

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where got (Singlish, Manglish, rhetorical, idiomatic)

  1. Used to challenge the validity of an assertion.
    — Let’s not do this one. Looks damn scary.
    — This ride where got scary one?
    I don’t see how this ride is supposed to be scary.
  2. Used in questions expressing doubt about the existence or occurrence of something.
    Nowadays where got time?We don’t really have time nowadays.

References

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  • Nala Huiying Lee, Ling Ai Ping, Hiroki Nomoto (2009) “Colloquial Singapore English got: functions and substratal influences”, in World Englishes, volume 28, number 3, →DOI, pages 293-318