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beanglish 

A portmanteau of "Beaner" and "English." This is the hard to distinguish English spoken by many Hispanic immigrants who can speak some English, but with a heavy accent.
I couldn't understand the Beanglish coming out of the janitor's mouth.
beanglish by seans April 28, 2007
Related Words

Cadel Daglish 

Cadel Daglish has a chode and can't pull any females at all and is friend-zoned with 3/4 of the female population. P.s he's Jewish
bro 1 "bro did you see Cadel Daglish got in the sleepover"
bro 2 "how, isn't he straight"
bro 1 " he is?"
Too say a soppy remark, usually resulting in humiliation, or complete lack of success.
Guy: Your smile makes my day.
Girl: Eww, go away, freak, that's well deanish.
Deanish by donkerz January 18, 2010
A crude fusion of the English language and the German language
(Deutsche), usually spoken by English students that are inept at speaking German. Formed by speaking in German and substituting unknown words with english ones.
Someone speaking in Deunglish: "Kann ich habe die...bread..?"
Deunglish by Xopher Blades March 26, 2007
A combination of Dutch and English, humorously referencing towards the shitty result.

It is seen a lot in computer applications or websites where (un)intentionally a combination of both languages are found.
"This error message is in Dunglish."

E.g.: "Error: Onbekende fout"
Dunglish by Phirox January 30, 2009

denglish 

Denglish is actually the term used by linguists, mainly based in Germany, to describe incorrect English as spoken by Germans whose sole contact with English is at school. It results in something that might in some case sound English but in fact is not or is used in a differnet sense than in normal English usage. Modern German features an over-use of loan words, particularly from English. Germans mistakenly think the expressions/words are correct as they use them.
Bodybag - a new Denglish word for a fashionable bag, worn over the shoulder
Last, not least - an expression used by Germans in the sense of "last, but not least"
Walking - a sport now parcticed frequently in Germany - should of course be "power walking"
denglish by Paul Thomas May 31, 2006