There's actually no such language as "Creole". The word creole refers to a type of language that results from the combination of two completely different parent languages. There are more than 100 different creolized languages in the world, so you would have to specify which one you're talking about.
If you're not sure, here is a list of the most commonly spoken Creoles in the world (one of them is even an official language):
There's actually no such language as "Creole". The word creole refers to a type of language that results from the combination of two completely different parent languages.
There are more than 100 different creolized languages in the world, so you would have to specify which one you're talking about.
If you're not sure, here is a list of the most commonly spoken Creoles in the world (one of them is even an official language):
1.Louisiana Creole French, spoken in Louisiana
2.Belizean Kriol language, spoken in Belize
3.Haitian Creole language, French-based, an official language of Haiti
4.Mauritian Creole, French-based, spoken in Mauritius
5.Cape Verdean Creole, spoken on the islands of Cape Verde
6.Krio Dayak language, spoken by Krio Dayak people in West Kalimantan, Indonesia
7.Liberian Kreyol language, spoken in Liberia
8.Seychellois Creole, French-based, spoken in the Seychelles
9.Guinea-Bissau Creole, spoken in Guinea-Bissau
10.Negerhollands, a Dutch-based creole, once spoken in the U.S. Virgin Islands
11.Bislama, an English-based creole, spoken in Vanuatu
12.Llanito, a Spanish- and English-based creole, spoken in Gibraltar
13.Bajan or Barbadian Creole, English-based, spoken in Barbados
14.Antillean Creole or Créole Martiniquais, French-based, spoken in the Lesser Antilles
15.Tok Pisin, an official language of Papua New Guinea
16.Torres Strait Creole or Brokan, spoken in Far-North-East Australia, Torres Strait, and South-West Papua
17.Patois, French based, spoken in Saint Lucia
18.Nagamese creole, based on Assamese, used in in Nagaland, India
Godfather is parrain and gomother is nanan.
le parain
Nanny
parrain
Comare is an Italian equivalent of 'godmother''. The word also may be translated as 'crony, gossip, midwife'. It's a feminine gender noun that takes as its definite article 'la' ['the'] and as its indefinite 'una' ['a, one']. It's pronounced 'koh-MAH-ray'.
madrina
La madrina means "the godmother"
a salope is a dirty or unclean person
Actually, there is no such language as "Creole." The word Creole describes any language that is a stable, full-fledged language originating from a pidgin (which is a language composed of two or more unrelated languages). There are over 100 completely different creoles still spoken in the world today. Some of most common creolized languages are Haitian Creole, Louisiana Creole, Jamaican Creole, and Tok Pisin.
Madrinha
Godmother translated into Latin is 'Matrina'
Madrina Julie
pilplo
"Bonus" is one English equivalent of the Creole French word lagniappe.Specifically, the Creole French word is a feminine noun. It may be translated as "small gift, something extra, something free." It will be heard used to this day in French-speaking areas of Louisiana in the United States of America.
Comare and madrina are Italian equivalents of the English word "godmother." Context makes clear whether informality (case 1) or formality (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "ko-MA-rey" and "ma-DREE-na" in Italian.
Creole queen is translated "reine créole" in French.
Comare is an Italian equivalent of 'godmother''. The word also may be translated as 'crony, gossip, midwife'. It's a feminine gender noun that takes as its definite article 'la' ['the'] and as its indefinite 'una' ['a, one']. It's pronounced 'koh-MAH-ray'.
Godmother --> 干妈 gan(1) ma(1)
The Haitian Creole word for grandma is "grann".
Marraine
madrina