Yes Anglo influence in the West Indian Islands. The West Indian cricket team of the 70s and 80s were formidable opponents for us here in Oz. Surnames such as Richards, Haynes, Greenidge, Garner, Holding, Lloyd, Roberts, Marshall, Ambrose etc were feared, respected, heckled, by many Aussie crowds. (All black men, no doubt of West African descent.)
Parts of the Jamaican dialect is Irish. From the Irish indentured servants brought to the island after the African slave rebellions.
Take a look at former pussycat doll Kaya Jones is Jamaican, no one believes her until she shows the family photos. Reggae Artists Bob Marley, his dad was Irish. Most of the islands are super mixed ethnically.
Very much the same in the States, yes. Most African-Americans have English surnames, right? Jackson, James, Carson, Johnson, Jones, Davis, Lewis, and so on through numerous generations going back to the transatlantic slave days.
There is a brand of industrial sliced white bread carrying that name in France, maybe itβs her toasted nickname?π€π
Yes Anglo influence in the West Indian Islands. The West Indian cricket team of the 70s and 80s were formidable opponents for us here in Oz. Surnames such as Richards, Haynes, Greenidge, Garner, Holding, Lloyd, Roberts, Marshall, Ambrose etc were feared, respected, heckled, by many Aussie crowds. (All black men, no doubt of West African descent.)
Parts of the Jamaican dialect is Irish. From the Irish indentured servants brought to the island after the African slave rebellions.
Take a look at former pussycat doll Kaya Jones is Jamaican, no one believes her until she shows the family photos. Reggae Artists Bob Marley, his dad was Irish. Most of the islands are super mixed ethnically.
Very much the same in the States, yes. Most African-Americans have English surnames, right? Jackson, James, Carson, Johnson, Jones, Davis, Lewis, and so on through numerous generations going back to the transatlantic slave days.
Jamaica is in the Commonwealth so maybe she got that name from a Limey.π€π