No. A creole language is a stable natural languagedeveloped from a mixture of different languages. Tagalog is not a mixture of languages.
Tagalog is not on the official list of creole languages. There is, however, a creole language, spoken in some areas of the Philippines. This creole language made it to the list of recognizable creole. The language or actually, dialect, is Chavacano.
"Definisyon" is the Tagalog word for "definition". Tagalog is a language spoken in the Philippines.
A noun in Tagalog refers to a person, place, thing, or idea. It is a part of speech that can be used to name entities and concepts in sentences. Nouns in Tagalog can be common or proper, and may also be classified as concrete or abstract.
Depends of which creole. In Martiniquean Creole and in Guadeloupean Creole, we say "zanmi".
Haiti - Haitian Creole (Kreyòl) Jamaica - Jamaican Patois Trinidad and Tobago - Trinidadian Creole (Trinidadian English Creole) Guyana - Guyanese Creole (Guyanese Creole English) Guadeloupe - Guadeloupean Creole (Guadeloupean Creole French) Martinique - Martinican Creole (Martinican Creole French)
Chavacano language was developed in Cavite City, Ternate and Ermita. Itis aSpanish-based creole languagespoken in thePhilippines.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chavacano_language
Tagalog Translation of CLASSIFIED ADS: pag-anunsyo ng mga trabaho
Tagalog Translation of CLASSIFIED ADS: pag-anunsyo ng mga trabaho
"Definisyon" is the Tagalog word for "definition". Tagalog is a language spoken in the Philippines.
A noun in Tagalog refers to a person, place, thing, or idea. It is a part of speech that can be used to name entities and concepts in sentences. Nouns in Tagalog can be common or proper, and may also be classified as concrete or abstract.
I assume you mean languages. The main one is English, next is French, others in order are Tagalog, Mandarin, Arabic, Hindi, Creole and Bengali.
Depends of which creole. In Martiniquean Creole and in Guadeloupean Creole, we say "zanmi".
Creole cuisine is food made by the creole people.
Haiti - Haitian Creole (Kreyòl) Jamaica - Jamaican Patois Trinidad and Tobago - Trinidadian Creole (Trinidadian English Creole) Guyana - Guyanese Creole (Guyanese Creole English) Guadeloupe - Guadeloupean Creole (Guadeloupean Creole French) Martinique - Martinican Creole (Martinican Creole French)
If you speak a Creole language, which is a standardized version of a Pidgin, then you are a creole.
Chavacano language was developed in Cavite City, Ternate and Ermita. Itis aSpanish-based creole languagespoken in thePhilippines.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chavacano_language
"Ari" in French Guiana Creole.
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. The most common creolized languages are Haitian Creole, Lousiana Creole, Jamaican Creole, and Tok Pisin.