Step 1: Understanding pidgins.
Pidgins are simplified languages that develop in contact situations where speakers of different native languages need a common language for communication. They usually have simplified grammar and vocabulary.
Step 2: Analyzing the options.
- (A) Pidgins have complex grammatical rules: This is incorrect. Pidgins are characterized by simplified, not complex, grammatical rules.
- (B) Pidgins do NOT have grammatical rules: This is incorrect. While pidgins have simplified rules, they do indeed have a basic grammatical structure.
- (C) Pidgin phonology is rule based: This is correct. Pidgin languages have a simplified but rule-governed phonological system.
- (D) Pidgins are passed on from one generation to the other: This is correct. Pidgins can develop into creoles if they are passed down to the next generation as a native language, with grammatical structures becoming more complex over time.
Step 3: Conclusion.
The correct answers are (C) and (D), as they are directly supported by the nature of pidgin languages.