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Principense Creole

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Principense Creole
lunguyê
Native toSão Tomé and Príncipe
Ethnicity1,560 (1999)[1]
Native speakers
(200 cited 1999)[2]
Portuguese-based creole
  • Lower Guinea
    • Principense Creole
Language codes
ISO 639-3pre
Glottologprin1242
Linguasphere51-AAC-acb
Location of São Tomé and Príncipe

Principense Creole is a minority Portuguese-based creole language spoken in a community of some four thousand people in São Tomé and Príncipe, specifically on the island of Príncipe. It is also called by its native speakers as lunguyê creole ("creole of the island"). There are two Portuguese-based creoles on the island of São Tomé, Angolar Creole and Forro Creole, according to a 1989 study.[3] Today, younger generations of São Toméans are not likely to speak Principense, which has led to its fast decline and moribund status.[4] It is mostly spoken by the elderly (the Ethnologue entry lists 200 native speakers in total), while most of the island's community speaks noncreolized Portuguese; some also speak another, closely related creole language, Forro Creole.

Principense Creole presents many similarities with the Forro Creole on São Tomé and may be regarded as a Forro dialect. Like Forro, it is a creole language based on Portuguese with substrates of Bantu and Kwa.

References

  1. ^ Principense Creole[dead link] at Ethnologue (14th ed., 2000).
  2. ^ Principense Creole at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  3. ^ Holm, John A. (1989). Pidgins and Creoles: Reference Survey. Cambridge: Cambridge UP. p. 277. ISBN 978-0-521-35940-5.
  4. ^ Estudo do Léxico do São-Tomense com Dicionário, Carlos Fontes - Universidade de Coimbra.