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).
The most common creolized languages are Haitian Creole, Louisiana Creole, Jamaican Creole, and Tok Pisin.
hi in Filipino: Hi or Kumusta?
Hallo!
"Chim achukma" is how you say hi in Choctaw.
To say "hi" in Chinese, you can say "你好" (pronounced "nǐ hǎo").
In Portuguese, you say "hi" as "oi" or "olá".
Simple... Me be rhinoceros... Spelled horney means "that has horns"... Unless you mean horny, which means aroused... Then I don't know how you say it in Creole, not Crole...
Gerard Crole was born on 1894-06-07.
Gerard Crole died on 1965-03-31.
Anthony Crole has written: 'Practical remarks on religious profession in general: likewise, on the nature and advantages of Evangelical churches. ... By A. Crole'
David Crole has written: 'Tea' -- subject(s): Tea
in french its oui(owee, sometimes the o is silent) in creole it spelled wi
yes because he never washes his bum crole
this is how, hi!
to say hi
hola is how to say hi in cuba
Say Hi was created in 2002.
this is how you say hi in Spanish hola