Krio language

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Krio
Spoken in: Sierra Leone 
Region: West Africa
Total speakers: ca. 4 million; ca. 500,000 native speakers
Language family: Creole language
 English Creole
  Atlantic
   Krio
    Krio 
Official status
Official language in: n/a
Regulated by: no official regulation
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: kri
ISO 639-3: kri

Krio (also Creo or Creole) is the lingua franca language spoken throughout Sierra Leone. The language is native to the Sierra Leone Creole people or Krios, (a community of about 200,000 descendants of freed slaves from the West Indies, North America and Britain). The Krios live primarily in the Western Area of Sierra Leone, particularly in the capital, Freetown.

The Krio language is an offshoot of the language brought by the Nova Scotians from the American South. The vocabulary of Krio is derived primarily from English, while its sound system, grammar and sentence structure are heavily influenced by African languages ( at least 12 African languages), including aspects from the : Yoruba language of Nigeria,Twi of Ghana and the and Mende language of Sierra Leone . Krio's standard greeting kushe, for instance, is derived from the Yoruba greeting è kú işé ("greetings on your work"), while the krio word "pan" meaning (on top of/doing something) descends directly from the Jamaican patois word "pon" meaning the same thing, the krio expresion "chaka-chaka" meaning (messy/untidy) also descends from Jamaican patios this is due to the fact that some of the freed slaves were from the West Indies particularly Jamaica (Jamaican Maroons).

All sets of freed slaves the Jamaican Maroons, African Americans, Nova Scotian settlers, Sierra Leone Liberated Africans as well as Native Sierra Leoneans all influenced Krio.

Krio is distinct from Pidgin English as it is an English-based creole language but more of a language in its own right, with fixed gramatical structures and rules. Krio also draws extensively from other European languages, namely Portuguese and French; e.g., "tan", which means to behave in a way/behaviour, although debated is thought to have been derived from Spanish, and "plasas," the Krio word for sauce, is also thought to have been derived from the Portuguese word "palavra(s)".

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[edit] Language origins

The early roots of Krio are believed to go back to the Atlantic slave trade era in the 17th and 18th centuries when an English-based "pidgin" language (West African Pidgin English), also called Guinea Coast Creole English arose to facilitate the coastal trade between Europeans and Africans. This early pidgin later became the lingua franca of regional trade among West Africans themselves and spread up the river systems to the African interior. After the founding of Freetown, this preexisting pidgin was heavily influenced by the speech of the various groups of freed slaves landed in Sierra Leone between 1787 and about 1855. The pidgin gradually evolved to become a stable language, the native language of descendants of the freed slaves (which are now a distinct ethnic and cultural group, the Krios), and the national language of Sierra Leone [1].

[edit] Language usage

[edit] Krio usage in Sierra Leone

Most ethnic and cultural Krios live in and around Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone, and their community accounts for only about 3% of Sierra Leone's total population (Freetown is the province where the return slaves from London and Nova Scotia settled)[2]. However, because of their cultural influence in Sierra Leone — especially during the period of colonial rule — their language is used as the lingua franca among all the ethnic groups in Sierra Leone. Many Mendes, Temnes, and Limbas grow up in the interior of the country speaking both their native languages and Krio. Krio is also the lingua franca in Sierra Leone's major cities, and many Sierra Leoneans of mixed heritage who grow up in the cities -- and who may not fully choose to identify themselves as ethnic or cultural Krios -- also usually grow up speaking Krio as their native language. Anybody born in Freetown grows up speaking krio as their mother tongue it is the mother tongue of "Freetownians". Children born in Freetown to parents who are not ethnic Krios grow up speaking Krio and only Krio as their mother tongue.


[edit] Krio speakers abroad

The Krio people acted as traders and missionaries in other parts of West Africa during the 19th century, and as a result there are also Krio-speaking communities in The Gambia, Nigeria, Cameroon, and Equatorial Guinea, [3]. As a small number of Liberated Africans returned to the land of their origins such as the saros of Nigeria, "saros" not only took their anglo-British names with them but also krio words like "sabi" and "na" which were installed in to Nigerian Pidgin English.

[edit] Language revival

During the period of colonial rule, Sierra Leoneans were discouraged from speaking Krio; but after Independence from Great Britain in 1961, writers and educators began promoting its use. In the 1960s, Thomas Decker translated some of Shakespeare's plays into Krio, and composed original poetry in the language. In the 1980s the New Testament was translated into Krio.

While English is Sierra Leone's official language, the Ministry of Education began using Krio as the medium of instruction in some primary schools in Freetown in the 1990s. Radio stations now broadcast a wide variety of programs in Krio. Sierra Leonean politicians also routinely give public speeches in the language.

The New York City Public School system recently recognized Krio as a "home language" allowing children to be recognized as speaking Krio rather than other African languages.

[edit] Classification

Krio is an English-based creole similar in many respects to Nigerian Pidgin English and Cameroonian Pidgin English, but it has its own distinctive character. It is also similar to English-based creole languages spoken in the Americas, especially the Gullah language, Jamaican Creole or patois, and Belizean Creole. It also shares some linguistic similarities with non-English creoles, such as the French-based creole languages in the Caribbean.

[edit] Grammar

Like in English there is no grammatical gender. However, there are the hints of nominative, accusative and genitive cases. Verbs do not conjugate according to person or number but reflect their tense.

[edit] Interrogatives

The following interrogatives can be used:

  • udat - who
  • wetin - what
  • ustem - when
  • usay - where
  • wetin mek - why

In addition, like many other Creoles, a question can be asked simply by intonation. E.g. Yu de go?: 'Are you going' vs yu de go: 'you are going'

[edit] Pronouns

There is no distinction between masculine and feminine in any person and unlike English there is a 2nd person plural form.

  Ah,mi,mi:I,me,my.   Yu,yu,yu:You,You,Your.        I,am,in:he,him,his. 
  Wi,Wi,Wi:We,Us,Our. Una,Una,Unu:You pl,You,Your.  Den,Dem,Den:They,Them

[edit] Orthography

Krio uses the Latin Alphabet as used in English but without Qq and Xx and with three letters from the African reference alphabet, Ɛɛ (open E), Ŋŋ (eng), and Ɔɔ (open O). Three tones can be distinguished in Krio and are sometimes marked with grave (à), acute (á), and circumflex (â) accents over the vowels for low, high, and falling tones respectively but these accents are not employed in normal usage. An alternative orthography with Latin letters only has been devised by Thomas Decker.

The complete alphabet with digraphs follows with Decker's orthography in parentheses:

Krio letter or digraph Example word English meaning
A,a wata water
Aw, aw naw (nau) now
Ay, ay nayn (nain) nine
B, b bɔku (bohku) many, very much (< French beaucoup)
Ch, ch cham chew
D, d dia(dya) expensive (< dear)
E, e let (leyt) late
Ɛ, ɛ ɛp (ep) help
F, f fɔs (fohs) first
G, g got(goat) goat
Gb, gb gbana difficult (from <Temne)
H, h argyu/argyument (agyu/agyument) argument
I, i titi girl
J, j jomp jump
K, k kɔntri (kohntri) country
Kp, kp Don/kpatakpata completely (Done< English)
L, l liv live
M, m muv/muf move
N, n nak knock
Ny, ny nyu new
Ŋ, ŋ siŋ (sing) sing
O, o wok work
Ɔ, ɔ bɔn (bohn) born, give birth, conceive
Ɔy, ɔy ɔyl (ohyl) oil
P, p padi friend
R, r ren (reyn) rain
S, s saf soft
Sh, sh shap sharp
T, t tif steal (< thief)
U, u uman woman
V, v vot vote
W, w wes (weys) buttocks (< waist)
Y, y yala yellow
Z, z ziro zero
Zh, zh plɛzhɔ (plehzhoh) pleasure


[edit] Language samples

Below is a sample of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in Krio:

Krio English
Atikul Wan

Ɛvribɔdi bɔn fri ɛn gɛt in yon rayt, nɔn wan nɔ pas in kɔmpin. Wi ɔl ebul fɔ tink ɛn fɛnɔt wetin rayt ɛn rɔŋ pantap dat wi fɔ sabi aw fɔ liv lɛk wan big famili.

Article 1

All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.

Below are some sample sentences in Krio:

Kushe. - "Hello."
Kushe-o. - "Hello."
Wetin na yu nem? - "What is your name?"
A nem Jemz. - "My name is James."
Usai yu kɔmɔt? - "Where do you come from?"
A kɔmɔt Estinz. - "I come from Hastings."
Us wok yu de du? - "What work do you do?"
Mi na ticha. - "I am a teacher."
Na us skul yu de tich? - "At what school do you teach?"
A de tich na Prins ɔv Welz. - "I teach at Prince of Wales."
A gladi fɔ mit yu. - "I am happy to meet you."
Misɛf gladi fɔ mit yu. - "I myself am happy to meet you."
OK, a de go naw. - "OK, I am going now."
Ɔrayt, wi go si bak. - "Alright, we will see again."

[edit] Krio in films

Krio (though incorrectly) is used early in the 2006 film Blood Diamond between Danny Archer (played by Leonardo DiCaprio) and a character named Commander Zero.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Fourah Bay College, Freetown: Guide to Kreo, (held at SOAS Univ. of London Library, 195?
  2. ^ Simon Schama: Rough Crossings, London, 2007
  3. ^ A. Wyse: Kreos of Sierra Leone, London (1989)

[edit] External links