In Haitian Creole, you can say "Kijan ou ye?" to ask "What's up?"
The answer is "Anyen". If you want to know the pronunciation, look up " how to say it means nothing" in Haitian Creole.
Sak pasé. It really means what happened?/what's going on? but this is how friends greet eachother.Kouman ou ye? (how are you)
Uncle in Haitian Creole is "ti tonton" for a younger uncle or "gran tonton" for an older uncle.
Actually, there is no such language as "Creole." The word Creole describes any language that is a stable, full-fledged language originating from a pidgin (which is a language composed of two or more unrelated languages). There are over 100 completely different creoles still spoken in the world today. Some of most common creolized languages are Haitian Creole, Louisiana Creole, Jamaican Creole, and Tok Pisin.
Haitian Creole is primarily based on French, with influences from African languages, Spanish, Taíno, and English. Its vocabulary is largely French-derived, but with simplified grammar and pronunciation that developed over time among Haiti's diverse population.
The answer is "Anyen". If you want to know the pronunciation, look up " how to say it means nothing" in Haitian Creole.
nothin boring
In Haitian Creole, uncle is tonton. The pronunciation of the o's I'm not really sure about. Look that up. ex. We are going to visit Uncle Bob soon. Nou pral vizite Tonton Bob byento.
Haitian Creole is primarily based on French, with influences from African languages, Spanish, Taíno, and English. Its vocabulary is largely French-derived, but with simplified grammar and pronunciation that developed over time among Haiti's diverse population.
Uncle in Haitian Creole is "ti tonton" for a younger uncle or "gran tonton" for an older uncle.
Actually, there is no such language as "Creole." The word Creole describes any language that is a stable, full-fledged language originating from a pidgin (which is a language composed of two or more unrelated languages). There are over 100 completely different creoles still spoken in the world today. Some of most common creolized languages are Haitian Creole, Louisiana Creole, Jamaican Creole, and Tok Pisin.
"tahst whats up" lol -_- ;)
You say whats up?
It's Haitian Creole. Sak pase - What's up N'ap boule - (most common response to sak pase) I'm ok
femin duol ou
According to Google Translate, this is either Haitian Creole or Turkish. However, Google Translate has not been able to come up with a transltion of what it means.
In Bengali, "hello, what's up" can be said as "হ্যালো, কি খবর?" (pronounced as "Hello, ki khobor?").