Portsmouth College said the popularity of the course, offered as part of a wider module, reflects an interest among students for work placements with Indian companies and that having a basic grasp of Hindi would give them a head start in the market.
"The Hinglish course finished last week and there have already been enquiries from students and adult learners about taking up this course next year," said James Watters, Head of E6 Programmes at the college.
"Movies are being watched a lot by Indian people and right from the titles to the song to the script, everything is in Hinglish," explains Hinglish teacher Viraj Shah.
An initial cohort of 18 students attended the Hinglish sessions on a regular basis, who are now being approached for their views on how the course could be further developed. It will then become a regular feature from the 2018-19 academic year as part of the Modern Business Language & Culture programme at Portsmouth College in Hampshire.
"The young people are very aware we are leaving the EU and I suppose this helps prepare them for the post-Brexit world," said Simon Barrable, the deputy principal of the college.
According to their analysis, Hinglish is easier to learn than Hindi because it is taught using Roman letters rather than the traditional Devanagari script. Some of the Hinglish words that the students were made familiar with include "prepone", or to bring forward, "airdash", or going somewhere in a hurry, and "timepass" or something that is a pass time.
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