Indo-Portuguese Creoles

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The expression Indo-Portuguese Creoles may mean any of the creole languages spoken in India or Sri Lanka which had a substantial Portuguese influence in grammar or lexicon, such as

  • Sri Lanka Indo-Portuguese language
  • Diu Indo-Portuguese language
  • Daman Indo-Portuguese language
  • Kristi language
  • Cochin Indo-Portuguese Creole (known locally as "Portuguese" or "Cochin Portuguese"), formed due to the contact between Portuguese, Malayalam and probably a host of languages spoken by various communities in ancient Cochin.[1] Cochin Indo-Portuguese Creole was probably one of the first contact languages that sprung up in Asia and was the mother tongue of part of the local Catholic community from 15th-19th century. This language developed with the formation of Catholic and Indo-Portuguese households in Malabar, and it was so vital by the time the Dutch took over (in 17th century) that it managed to thrive under them. The process of abandonment must have begun around the turn of the 19th century. William Rozario, the last speaker this creole, died on 20 August 2010 in Vypeen. In Cochin some still understand the Creole partially.

The expression Indo-Portuguese may refer not only to the Creoles but also to the ethnic groups speaking those languages.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Hugo Cardoso, The Death of an Indian-born Language, Open Magazine, October 30 2010.
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