enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Creole peoples - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creole_peoples

    The English word creole derives from the French créole, which in turn came from Portuguese crioulo, a diminutive of cria meaning a person raised in one's house.Cria is derived from criar, meaning "to raise or bring up", itself derived from the Latin creare, meaning "to make, bring forth, produce, beget"; which is also the source of the English word "create".

  3. Creoles of color - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creoles_of_color

    Colonial documents show that the term Créole was used variously at different times to refer to white people, mixed-race people, and black people, both free-born and enslaved. [14] The addition of "-of color" was historically necessary when referring to Creoles of African and mixed ancestry, as the term "Creole" ( Créole ) did not convey any ...

  4. Louisiana Creole people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louisiana_Creole_people

    Map of North America in 1750, before the French and Indian War (part of the international Seven Years' War (1756 to 1763)). The Flag of French Louisiana. Through both the French and Spanish (late 18th century) regimes, parochial and colonial governments used the term Creole for ethnic French and Spanish people born in the New World.

  5. Belizean Creole people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belizean_Creole_people

    The term Creole denotes an ethnic culture rather than any narrow standard of physical appearance. [3] In Belize, Creole is the standard term for any person of at least partial Black African descent who is not Garinagu, or any person who speaks Kriol as a first or sole language. Thus, immigrants from Africa and the West Indies who have settled ...

  6. Belizean Creole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belizean_Creole

    Belizean Creole is the first language of some Garifunas, Mestizos, Maya, and other ethnic groups. [3] When the National Kriol Council began standardising the orthography of the language, it decided to promote the spelling Kriol , though they continue to use the spelling Creole to refer to the people themselves.

  7. French Louisianians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Louisianians

    Because of isolation, the language in the colony developed differently from that in France. It was spoken by the ethnic French and Spanish and their Creole descendants. The commonly accepted definition of Louisiana Creole today is a person descended from ancestors in Louisiana before the Louisiana Purchase by the United States in 1803. [6]

  8. Atlantic Creole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantic_Creole

    A large portion of Atlantic Creole culture was able to become mainstream due to the music culture that sprung up in California and New York mainly via hip hop but also television broadcasting. [35] Some will speak in a Creole accent or dialect mixed with Western US American English, California English and Northeastern English or New York ...

  9. Creole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creole

    Creole peoples, ethnic groups which originated from linguistic, cultural, and often racial mixing of colonial-era emigrants from Europe with non-European peoples Criollo people , the historic name of people of full or near full Spanish descent in Colonial Hispanic America and the Spanish East Indies.