Creole language
A creole is a language descended from a pidgin that has become the native language of a group of people. Study of Creole languages around the world (in particular by Derek Bickerton) has shown that they display remarkable similarities in grammar, lending support to the theory of a Universal Grammar. The majority of creole languages are based on English and other Indo-European languages (their superstrate language), with local or immigrant languages as substrate languages.
Pidgins are rudimentary languages improvised by non-native speakers; when pidgins creolize, however, they develop fully-formed and stable grammar structures, usually as a result of the pidgin being natively learned by children. (see Nicaraguan Sign Language.) In some cases the group of people who speak such a language are called Creoles.
Below are described some of the better-known creoles.
Arabic creoles
Nubi
An Arabic-based creole spoken by descendants of Sudanese soldiers mainly in Kenya and Uganda, formed in the nineteenth century from a Sudanese Arabic-based pidgin used for intercommunication among southern Sudanese ethnic groups. See also Varieties of Arabic.
Juba Arabic
A major language of inter-ethnic communication in Equatoria (southern Sudan), creolized from the same pidgin Arabic as Ki-Nubi.
Babalia Creole Arabic
A Shuwa Arabic-based creole spoken in 23 villages of the Chari-Baguirmi Prefecture in southwestern Chad; the substrate language was Berakou.
Cree creoles
Chinook Jargon
was used as a trade language by Native Americans prior to, and shortly after, contact with Europeans. It contains elements of Cree and many neighboring Native American languages. After European contact, it also began incorporating elements of French and English. While not strictly speaking a creole (it had no native speakers), it had well-defined grammar, phonology, and vocabulary, and thus can be placed in the category of creoles.
English Creoles
Bislama
Bislama (older Bêche-la-mar) is an English-based creole, and is the national language of Vanuatu.
Hawaiian Creole English
Hawaiian Pidgin began as a pidgin jargon used in the early European colonization of the Hawaiian Islands. English served as the superstrate language, with Chinese, Japanese, Spanish, and Hawaiian elements incorporated. Children started using it as a lingua franca, and by the 20's it had creolized and become the dominant language of Hawaii, as it still is today.
Kreyol
is spoken in Liberia, and has English and French as superstrate languages, with several Bantu languages as substrate languages.
Kriol
Also known as Roper River Creole, has become the major non-English language among Aboriginal Australians with over 10,000 first language speakers.
Pitcairnese, Norfuk
Spoken exclusively by the inhabitants of the Pitcairn Islands and Pitcairnese migrants in Norfolk Island, an 18th century dialect of English is spoken with the Tahitian language to form the Creole language known as Pitcairnese, or Norfuk in Norfolk Island.
Sranang Tongo
In Suriname.
Tok Pisin
is spoken throughout Papua New Guinea. English is the superstrate language, with various Papuan languages providing grammatical and lexical input.
Torres Strait Creole
Spoken by Torres Straits Islanders.
French Creoles
Haitian Creole
is a language spoken primarily in Haiti. French is its superstrate language, with numerous African languages and some local indigenous languages providing substrate input.
Antillean Creole
is a language spoken primarily in Dominica and St. Lucia.
Kreyol Lwiziyen
Louisiana creole, spoken mainly by African American Creoles in Louisiana.
Mauritian Creole
Spoken as the lingua franca in Mauritius
Seychellois Creole
Also known as Seselwa, Seychellois Creole is an official language, along with English and French, as well as the lingua franca of the Seychelles.
German Creoles
Unserdeutsch
or Rabaul Creol German. Unserdeutsch means "our German". It is a language spoken primarily in Papua New Guinea and the northeast of Australia and almost extinct. It was formed among the New Guinean children residing in a German-run orphanage. Only a few native speakers are still alive. ISO-Code 639-2: crp
Malay Creoles
For further information, see on Malay Creole
Portuguese Creoles
For information on Portuguese-based Creole languages, see Portuguese Creole.
There are several Portuguese Creoles:
Burgher
Also known as Sri Lanka Portuguese (Creole). Spoken in Sri Lanka, local languages are the substrate.
Creoles of Cape Verde
Spoken in Cape Verde, at least, two creoles. Some locals refer 10 different creoles, one for each inhabited island and two for the island of Santiago. Several African substrate languages.
Creoles of India
Various creoles were largely spoken in India, the remaining are under threat: Crioulo de Diu, Crioulo de Vaipim, Língua da Casa and Kristi.
Creoles of São Tomé and Príncipe
Three different Creole languages are spoken in São Tomé and Príncipe, all based in Portuguese: Forro, Lunguyê and Lungua N'golá, several African languages work as substrate. Lunga N'Golá is based on Bantu languages.
Fá d'Ambô
Language of the island of Annobón, Equatorial Guinea, related to Forro from São Tomé and Príncipe.
Kriol
Ancient creole and the first Portuguese creole. Also known as Crioulo it is spoken in Guinea-Bissau and Senegal the local African languages are the substrate. Divided into three dialectal groups. It is the Lingua franca of Guinea-Bissau.
Macaista Chapado
Spoken in Macao, China and, until early 20th century, in Hong-Kong. Chinese, Malay and Indian languages as substrate.
Papiá Kristang
Spoken in Malacca, Malaysia. Malay is substrate.
Papiamento
Spoken in Aruba, Curaçao, Bonaire, the Dutch West Indies. Spanish influenced.
Saramacano
Also known as Saramaccan. Spoken in some areas of Suriname. English influenced.
Spanish Creoles
For information on Spanish-based Creole languages see Spanish Creole.
de:Kreolsprache es:Lengua criolla fr:Créole ja:クレオール言語 pl:Języki kreolskie sl:Kreolščina fi:Kreolikieli