Belize Creole
Conjugate VerbsFacts
- Language: Belize Creole
- Alternate names: NORTHERN CENTRAL AMERICA CREOLE ENGLISH, BELIZE CREOLE ENGLISH (KRIOL, CREOLA).
- Language code: bzj
- Language family: Indo-European, Classical Indo-European, Germanic, Northwest Germanic, West Germanic, North Sea Germanic, Anglo-Frisian, Anglic, Later Anglic, Middle-Modern English, Macro-English, Guinea Coast Creole English, Caribbean English Creole, Western Caribbean Creole, Miskitoic Creole English, Belize-Miskito Creole English
- Creole language
- Number of speakers: 137000
- Script:
More information:
Introduction
Reported to be very close to Miskito coast, Rama Cay, and Islander (San Andrés) creoles, Jamaican creole is different in grammar. Historically an extension of Miskito Coast Creole. Dahufra was a creole used in the 16th to 18th centuries. Spoken by creoles and people of East Indian descent, used everywhere in most areas of life. Used in advertisements. People have a positive attitude toward Creole. There is popular support for development. Dictionary. Jamaican creole is different in orthography. Newspapers, radio programs, TV. Timber, agriculturalists, fishermen, industrial workers, construction industry, business, commerce, government, teachers.
Verblist
- ahn
- bayk
- chrai
- doz
- hyaa
- jrink
- laas
- laim
- memba
- noa
- parandyaa
- reech
- si
- toch
- wahn
- wayt
- yoostu