Guinea-Bissau Kriyol
Facts
- Language: Guinea-Bissau Kriyol
- Alternate names: Guinea-Bissau Creole, Kiryol, Kriulo, Portuguese Creole
- Language code: dpovg
- Language family: Indo-European, Classical Indo-European, Italic, Latino-Faliscan, Latinic, Imperial Latin, Romance, Italo-Western Romance, Western Romance, Shifted Western Romance, Southwestern Shifted Romance, West Ibero-Romance, Galician Romance, Macro-Portuguese, Upper Guinea Portuguese
- Creole language
- Dialect of: Crioulo Upper Guinea
- Number of speakers: 600000
- Script: Latin script.
More information:
Introduction
Guinea-Bissau Creole, also known as Kiriol, is a creole language whose lexicon derives mostly from Portuguese. It is spoken in Guinea Bissau, Senegal and The Gambia. It is also called by its native speakers as guinensi, kriyol, or portuguis.
The Guinea-Bissau Kriyol Verb
The Guinea-Bissau Kriyol particles are markers placed before or after verbs to indicate tense, mood and aspect.
- na: The preverbal marker na indicates progressive aspect or an imminent future.
- ta: The preverbal marker ta indicates habitual aspect or a less imminent future.
- ba: The postverbal marker ba indicates anterior tense, i.e. a time before that in focus. It shows that the action of the verb occurred before another action that was in the past when it follows a non-stative verb and is combined with dja.
These verbal markers can be combined to signal a variety of tenses and aspects. The unmarked verb can be used alone; it usually indicates the present of stative verbs, the past of non-stative verbs, or the imperative mood.