Gullah-Geechee
[aka Geechee, Gullah, Sea Island Creole]Classification: English-based
·endangered
Classification: English-based
·endangered
Geechee, Gullah, Sea Island Creole |
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English-based, Afro-Indigenous creole |
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ISO |
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gul |
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As csv |
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Information from: “Personal communication regarding Geechee-Gullah” . Walt Wolfram (2021)
Information from: “Gullah” (470-471) . T. Hopkins (2006) , Keith Brown and Sarah Ogilvie · Elsevier Ltd.
Information from: “Gullah” (69-71) . Tracey L. Weldon (2006) , Michael Montgomery and Ellen Johnson · University of North Carolina Press
English
Information from: “Gullah Geechee culture: Respected, understood and striving: Sixty years after Lorenzo Dow Turner's masterpiece, Africanisms in the Gullah Dialect ” (77-84) . Emory S. Campbell (2011) Taylor & Francis, Ltd.
English
Information from: “Personal Communication re: Gullah-Geechee” . Sunn m'Cheux (2021)
Components of this language came from the Guinea Coast and Sierra Leone, colonial American English, and Indigenous communities of the region. It is mutually intelligible with Bahamian Creole, due to shared ancestry, particularly of European and African resettlement from South Carolina to the Bahamas in the late 18th century.