Martinique, Guadeloupe, St. Martin, St. Barthelemy
Dominica, Haiti and Saint Lucia are Caribbean countries in which French is spoken.
Additionally, French is spoken in France's two overseas departments located in the Caribbean: Guadeloupe and Martinique. It also is spoken in France's two collectivities located in the Caribbean: St Martin and St Barthélemy. Nearby is France's overseas department in South America: French Guiana.
Cuba, Dominican Republic, and Puerto Rico have Spanish as their official language; Guadeloupe, Haiti, Martinique, St. Barthelemy and St. Martin French; Aruba, Bonaire, Curacao, Saba, St. Eustatius and St. Maarten Dutch and Papiamento; Haiti 'Haitian Creole'.
Here is a partial list of important creoles from the caribbean. Some of these may be extinct.
Spanish, French and English. There are also some local languages which are not written languages.
Martinique, French guyana, La RΓ©union, and Haiti. guadaloupe, saint lucia, new orleans
A little Dutch is spoken in Aruba, Bonaire, Curacao, and St Maarten.
island of Marrtinique
French Guiana is still legally part of France, and is treated like other French departments in Europe. All of the other former colonies re now independent, although two Guyana and Suriname maintain close links with the former colonial power. Guyana is still part of the Commonwealth, like Canada and Australia. Suriname is still very intertwined with the Netherlands and with the remaining Dutch dependencies in the Caribbean.
The language is the same (English) and the climate is almost the same but St. Kitts is dryer and hotter. Tourism is much more developed and varied in St. Lucia and it is the number one destination for honeymooners.
Probably the coast line of Belize protected by the Belize Barrier Reef. Not one of the Caribbean islands but still strictly in the Carribbean.
There is a flaw in the question, because the Afrikaners did not have Dutch male progenitors only, but actually even more from the Lowlands in Northern Germany, as well as a number of French Huguenots. Most came to the Cape to work for the Dutch East Indian Company that had a "halfway house" there, to call it such, for ships sailing between the Netherlands and "India" (or the East). Many of the Europeans decided to stay on as farmers -- and their descendants eventually became what is still known today as Afrikaners. Because the everyday languages of the Dutch and the people of the German Lowlands were virtually the same (with only dialectical differences) the Dutch and Germans had little difficulty in understanding each other and the vernacular merged into what is called Afrikaans. The French spoken by the smaller number of French quickly died out.
No. Davy Jones is still there.
English was spoken in both countries. It still is.
The Dutch language in its colonies never became as dominant and generally spoken as for instance the Engish language became in Britain's colonies. It was mostly spoken by the Dutch themselves living there and by the "educated" or ruling local people, either because they had attended Dutch-language schools and universities or because of very frequent contact with the Dutch. Only in Surinam and the formerly Dutch Caribean islands - until very recently or even now part of the Dutch commonwealth - is Dutch still generally understood by the local people. Even there the spoken language is usually the local language.
Martinique does not speak Dutch. For more information about the languages of Martinique, click here.
Many of the Caribbean islands were once foreign territories or Spain, The Netherlands, France, UK, US or the Dutch. Many of the islands are still part of those nations.
New York, they called it New Amsterdam there is still a monument in New York for it. The English traded it for a few islands in the Caribbean. Parts of NY are still related to the Netherlands for example, Harlem named to the dutch city Haarlem, Brooklyn named to Breukelen.
You probably mean '....die out in certain countries' (and you need to specify the countries). Spanish is still spoken in Spain, and in many countries around the world.
Yes, Gaelic is still spoken in parts of Ireland and Scotland. In Ireland, the language is known as Irish Gaelic or simply Irish, and in Scotland, it is known as Scottish Gaelic. However, its usage has declined over the years.
Some of the islands in the Caribbean where Spanish is spoken include Cuba, the Dominican Republic, and Puerto Rico. Other islands where Spanish is spoken to some extent are Aruba, Curacao, and Bonaire.
Guiana, Dutch Guiana and French Guiana
There are no French-based creoles spoken in Latin American countries, except by immigrants from French Creole speaking countries. ----- ACTUALLY there is French Creole spoken in Central America, because Creole was started (idk if they started it but still) from the African Americans who lived there.
Sanskrit is commonly used in India and Nepal, where it has roots in ancient history and cultural significance. It is also studied and used by scholars and practitioners of Hinduism and Buddhism worldwide.
The Arawak language is still spoken today but only in some parts of South America and the Carribbean. It is native to the countries of French Guiana, Dominican Republic, Guyana, Suriname, and Venezuela.