There are speakers of Creole languages in more than 100 different countries.
Approximately 95% of the population of Haiti speaks Haitian Creole as either a first or second language.
Brazil, which speaks Portuguese, and Haiti, where Haitian Creole is the most widely spoken language.
He was proud to be Creole and was not afraid to let people know who he is. Creole is a person of mixed European and black descent.
There are speakers of creole languages in all 50 states
Creole languages are spoken in countries such as Haiti, Jamaica, Mauritius, and Seychelles. They also have variations in countries like Guadeloupe, Dominica, and Trinidad and Tobago.
Haiti Haiti is not the only country that speaks creole! The few that i know for sure that do speak creole are Seychelles Islands, Mauritius and Reunion Islands. Google the countries and find out. there is a country in west Africa that i came from that speaks creole, sierra Leone
Approximately 95% of the population of Haiti speaks Haitian Creole as either a first or second language.
Brazil, which speaks Portuguese, and Haiti, where Haitian Creole is the most widely spoken language.
He was proud to be Creole and was not afraid to let people know who he is. Creole is a person of mixed European and black descent.
There are speakers of creole languages in all 50 states
Creole languages are spoken in countries such as Haiti, Jamaica, Mauritius, and Seychelles. They also have variations in countries like Guadeloupe, Dominica, and Trinidad and Tobago.
Belize is the Central American country where English Creole is spoken. It is widely used as a first language by the majority of the population.
His half Haitian so he might know some words
That depends on who the practitioner is, and what language they or the Loa they are channeling speaks. But most of the time things are either said in Haitian Creole, French or English.
"Creole" is not a standard language--it's a term for a language that has developed out of the influences of multiple languages. Creoles are spoken in Hawaii, the Philippines, and Haiti, which is probably the Creole you're thinking of. There is--or was--also a Creole spoken in Louisiana.
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)
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.