French-based creole languages

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A French creole, more properly French-based creole language, is a creole language with substantial influence from the French language.

The main French creoles are

  • Haitian creole or Kreyol ayisyen, is a language spoken primarily in Haiti. It is the largest French-derived language in the world, with a total population of 12 million individuals speaking it fluently. French is its superstrate language, with numerous African languages and some local indigenous languages providing substrate input. Some words are also derived from English, and Spanish.
  • Michif, spoken in the Pacific Northwest, a mixture of French with Cree
Languages derived from French
see also French-based creole languages

In the Americas: Haitian Creole (kreyòl ayisyen)MichifLanc-Patuá
Antillean CreoleLouisiana Creole (kreyol lwiziyen)Chiac
In Africa: Seychellois Creole (Kreol)Mauritian CreoleRéunion Creole
In Asia: Tây Bồi

In other languages