creole
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creole
Summary
creole is a type of language[1]. creole ranks in the top 4% of type_of_language entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (4,503 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- creole's instance of is recorded as type of language[3].
- creole is a type of pidgin or creole[4].
- creole is a type of contact language[5].
- creole's Commons category is recorded as Creole languages[6].
- creole's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Creole languages[7].
- creole's topic's main Wikimedia portal is recorded as Q23729207[8].
- creole's described by source is recorded as Otto's encyclopedia[9].
- creole's different from is recorded as Creole[10].
- creole's different from is recorded as Creole[11].
- creole's different from is recorded as pidgin[12].
- creole's different from is recorded as mixed language[13].
- creole's different from is recorded as koiné language[14].
- creole's different from is recorded as lingua franca[15].
- creole's has list is recorded as list of creole languages[16].
Body
Definition and Type
creole's instance of is recorded as type of language[3]. Recorded subclass of include pidgin or creole[4] and contact language[5].
Why It Matters
creole ranks in the top 4% of type_of_language entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (4,503 views/month).[2] creole has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[17] creole is known by 69 alternative names across languages and contexts.[18]
creole has been cited as an influence by Globasa[19], an international auxiliary language[20], founded in 2019[21].
FAQs
Who did creole influence?
creole has been cited as an influence by Globasa[19].