Haitian = haïtien(ne)
She is Haitian = Elle est haïtienne
You can't say i love you in Haitian. There's no such language. It has to be in Haitian Creole or French. In French = je t'aime) In Haitian Creole = mwe reme ou a lot in French = beaucoup a lot in Haitian Creole = enpile
In Haitian Creole, you say "Mèsi" to say thank you.
Both Quebecois and Haitian creole derive from French, but they evolved separately. The Haitian strand has been influenced by the language and pronounciation of slaves, while Canadian French could be related more to 17-century French, keeping to this day many French words that were lost in mainland French. For us (mainland) French, we don't consider Canadian French as a dialect but just as (a good) French language, in the same way we would for other regional variations.
"Maman" is how you say mom in Haitian Creole.
Yes, Haitian Creole is influenced by French due to historical colonization. It shares some vocabulary and grammatical structures with French, but they are distinct languages with separate origins and rules of grammar.
You can't say i love you in Haitian. There's no such language. It has to be in Haitian Creole or French. In French = je t'aime) In Haitian Creole = mwe reme ou a lot in French = beaucoup a lot in Haitian Creole = enpile
la cuisine haitienne
Haitian Creole tends to use the pure French term: "mariage homosexuel."
byen venu (haitian version of original french greeting) Source: 40 years a missionary in Haiti.
In Haitian Creole, you say "Mèsi" to say thank you.
If you mean Haitian Creole French, it is the same as in English. Ben.
yes he's haitian his last name is french and most haitians have french last names
Both Quebecois and Haitian creole derive from French, but they evolved separately. The Haitian strand has been influenced by the language and pronounciation of slaves, while Canadian French could be related more to 17-century French, keeping to this day many French words that were lost in mainland French. For us (mainland) French, we don't consider Canadian French as a dialect but just as (a good) French language, in the same way we would for other regional variations.
"Maman" is how you say mom in Haitian Creole.
I would say that he's not Haitian
The Haitian Revolution was a slave revolution against their French Masters, The French Revolution was a grass roots revolution against the Monarchy.
Other that or Haitian