Site Navigation
Categories:
English-based pidgins and creoles
Languages of the British Virgin Islands
Languages of the United States Virgin Islands

Summary Of: Virgin Islands Creole

Virgin Islands Creole is not to be confused with... Virgin Islands Creole was formed when... Virgin Islands Creole was spoken on... Virgin Islands Creole had also been developing in the present... Virgin Islands Creole exists today as the native dialect of both the U... Virgin Islands Creole is spoken with slight variations from island... Virgin Islands Creole does not have the status of an... to the constant contact between standard English and Virgin Islands Creole in local society... Virgin Islands Creole has different forms that vary by the age of the speaker... The variant of Virgin Islands Creole spoken on St... Virgin Islands Creole is generally unwritten... The prevailing sentiment is that Virgin Islands Creole cannot be learned like a standard language... Virgin Islands Creole has a smaller set of pronouns than English... Another common pattern found in Virgin Islands Creole is the absence of the letter... The vowel pronunciation of Virgin Islands Creole can widely differ from Standard English... the Virgin Islands Creole form of the standard English adverb... the Virgin Islands Creole spoken on St... the form of Virgin Islands Creole spoken on St...

Encyclodia Page On: Virgin Islands Creole

These Are Links To Other Documents
U.S. Virgin Islands | British Virgin Islands | Virgin Islands | diaspora | Language family | Creole language | English Creole | ISO 639-1 | ISO 639-2 | ISO 639-3 | English-based creole | Virgin Islands | Caribbean | Negerhollands | Dutch | Danish West Indies | U.S. Virgin Islands | enslaved | Africans | West Africa | languages | English | dialect | St. Thomas | St. John | Dutch | extinct language | British | Charlotte Amalie | St. Croix | St. Thomas | St. John | British Virgin Islands | Dutch | Tortola | Virgin Gorda | Virgin Islands culture | official language | American English | British English | post-creole speech continuum | acrolect | basilect | mesolects | African-American | Jamaican | rap | reggae | dancehall music | Spanish | Puerto Rican | linguistic | University of Puerto Rico | United States | social mobility | St. Lucian | Dominican | Haitian | conjugations | Standard English | Leeward Islands | Belize | Anglophone Caribbean | dental fricatives | Irish | Saint Kitts Creole | Antiguan Creole | Trinidadian Creole English | Bajan | Guyanese Creole | Belizean Creole | Jamaican Patois | Bahamian Creole | Bermudian English | Caribbean English | Nigerian Pidgin English | Krio language | v | d | Caribbean | English-based creole languages | Anguilla | Antigua and Barbuda | Bahamas | Barbados | Belize | Cayman Islands | Grenada | Guyana | Jamaica | Limón, Costa Rica | Montserrat | Mosquito Coast | Panama | Rama Cay | Roatán | Saint Kitts and Nevis | Saint Martin | San Andrés-Providence | Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | Tobago | Trinidad | Turks and Caicos Islands | Categories | English-based pidgins and creoles | Languages of the British Virgin Islands | Languages of the United States Virgin Islands |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Virgin Islands Creole".