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  1. A French creole, or French-based creole language, is a creole for which French is the lexifier. Most often this lexifier is not modern French but rather a 17th- or 18th-century koiné of French from Paris, the French Atlantic harbors, and the nascent French colonies.

    • Creole language

      Within this theoretical framework, a French creole is a...

  2. 13. Apr. 2024 · Creole languages include varieties that are based on French, such as Haitian Creole, Louisiana Creole, and Mauritian Creole; English, such as Gullah (on the Sea Islands of the southeastern United States), Jamaican Creole, Guyanese Creole, and Hawaiian Creole; and Portuguese, such as Papiamentu (in Aruba, Bonaire, and Curaçao) and Cape Verdean; a...

  3. 24. Mai 2024 · Haitian Creole, a French-based vernacular language that developed in the late 17th and early 18th centuries. It developed primarily on the sugarcane plantations of Haiti from contacts between French colonists and African slaves.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Wikipedia gives the following definition online: “A creole language, or simply creole, is a stable natural language that has developed from a pidgin (i.e., a simplified language or simplified mixture of languages used by non-native speakers), becoming nativized by children as their first language, with the accompanying effect of a fully ...

  5. 11. Aug. 2020 · Créole languages are languages that developed in colonial European plantation settlements. They most often emerged near the coasts of the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. Créole languages result from mixing between nonstandard European languages and non-European languages.