theres a girl who lives near me thats so beautiful but she doesnt speak english that well, im inspired to learn creole cause of her, my dad is haitian and never taught me but i see her as a way to get in touch with the other sides of my roots.
Very good class, sweetheart, I like that class. I am an English student and I also studied Creole or learned street skills, but now with you I am learning it the way it is or how it is. Thank you for continuing to teach me.
Thank you so much!! I lived in Haiti for 2 months in 2017 and I fell in love with the people ❤❤❤ my knowledge of French helped me with communication but we took Haitian Creole classes and I loved it!!! I now that I will be back to Haiti, I don't know when but I will. I haven't been able to practice it all these past years, however this is one of my 2020 resolutions, studying Haitian Creole to be ready when the Lord sends me back to Haiti. This channel is the BEST I Have found so far. THANK YOU SO MUCH, please keep helping us learn your beautiful language 🥰🥰🥰🥰 Greetings from Nicaragua! Gracias mi profesora (Thank you my teacher) Blessings ❤❤
Hello Valerie! Thank you so much for the feedback. I really appreciate it. I am glad I can help. Keep learning and practicing and you will slowly get better at it. There are a lot of groups on Facebook for Haitians so feel free to join them. I find that many Haitians write in Haitian Creole and English in those groups so that should at least help you with the writing part of it. I am glad to hear you enjoyed your trip to Haiti. It's a beautiful country that is suffering. Enjoy your next trip. Until then, let me know if there is anything in particular you would like to learn.
Congratulations! That's great you're trying to learn. Also, remember to ask him to speak creole with you as if you already know how to speak it. Anything you don't understand he can fill in the blanks and you will most likely remember the next time you hear it.
That's awesome! Keep practicing with him. It's the best way to learn. It's possible to become fluent without ever learning how to write or read Haitian Creole.
This video is great I am Learning even litte bit I repeat some to my coworkers love from all my hatians you guys are ĺoveing caring smart and hard working wish me luck I need practice more I am American who grow up with domicans parents
AAAAAAAAH I am so excited to learn creole, I was thinking yesterday about this because in my city there is a lot of haitianos and actually I met a guy yesterday from Haiti and daawn, he started to talk with his friend and I just think, this language is so beautiful to listen and I want to study others languages and I was thinking in learn french or japanese first besides english, that I am learning now, but definitively I going to study creole. Thanks ma'am for provide these classes.
That's great to hear! It's always nice to learn about new languages and cultures. I have a friend who lives in Brazil and I hope to visit some day. Happy New Year
Hello my name is Nadege and I’m from Hattie so I have a Haitian background and now English but I still want to keep my Haitian language so I think this is going to help I ❤️ you video keep doing them 😊😊 God bless you😊😀
Thank you. That's what I have heard. I actually watched a video once where people from different countries were speaking their countries' creole and I was amazed at how similar how languages are.
I'm french but I want to learn Haitian Creole! A lot of words/sentences are similar to french so I can understands some things already but I'd love to be able to speak it correctly =)
Yes indeed! So many of the words are identical except Haitians don't really pronounce the Rs but the French do. What are you using to learn creole? Do you live in France? and Do you have Haitian friends?
@@HaitianCreoleMsCreole Yes I currently live in France =) I sadly don't have any Haitian friends, so I've mostly been learning using the internet either with youtube videos or translating texts on google traduction.
@@GrimesTheOG Oh I see. UA-cam videos are fine to learn new vocabulary and maybe sentences but you would need to practice. Here's a group with a whatsap link. You can practice speaking with others on whatsapp. You can practice listening and writing too. facebook.com/groups/663373087918270
You're actually in a really good position to learn it since your family already speaks it. Just try to practice with them as often as you can even if you make mistake. Before you know it, you'll be fluent. It's much easier when you're exposed to it.
Haitian-Creole MsCreole I hope I'll be fluent soon, but I know with your channel it will be allot easier so thank you ❤️ Keep making grate content ❤️👍🏾
My next 3 videos are all requests so if there's anything in particular you want, please let me know. Otherwise, I will be creating and posting things I think people need to learn to build vocabulary.
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hello you’re videos are very helpful, I remember a month ago I had to learn all of this and now I only don’t know a few I realized something at 9:11 If “parents” were plural would the sentence be the same? Kote paran ou ye? = where is your parent/ where are your parents?
Hi there, I was wondering if you could help me, I wanted to know how to spell Self Concept in Creole? ,as I asked my grandparents and they wasn't sure. I would very much appreciate the help. Thank you
Hello, I am sorry for the late reply. It's not always easy to find an exact word when in comes to translations. For example, English has over one million words and Creole does not. The definition for Self-Concept is how one views himself or herself. So in Creole, you could simply say "Jan mwen wè tèt mwen" for how I see myself. Or "Jan m santi m" How I feel. "Jan m gade tèt mwen" How I look at myself. "Sa m santi m ye" Who I feel I am. I hope this helps. Let me know if you have any other questions and again I am really sorry for not seeing this sooner. In the future, do not hesitate to send me an email if you do not receive a response in the comment section.
Thank you. The translation would not really make much sense. It's taken from French which is "pas de quoi" and we pronounce it almost almost the same way, like 99% the same way. But if I wanted to translate it, I would probably say it says "no for what, for nothing, no big deal, don't mention it" but easier translation is "You're welcome"
If you don't speak French, it looks so complex. If you do speak French it is the easiest thing in the world. EXAMPLES (Creole/FRENCH): Ki lang ou pale. QUELLE LANGUE VOUS PARLEZ? Kote ou soti? DE QUEL CÔTÉ VOUS ETES SORTI? Mwen byen kontan MOI, BIEN CONTENT. It is just French with phonetic spelling.
thanks for asking. Kote means a location or a place, the "ki" makes it a question automatically. So "ki kote" pretty much means what place or what location which equals to "where" in English. So when asking where are you? we say "ki kote ou ye?". On the other hand, we can also say "kote ou ye" which also means where are you? You will find that when the "ki" is not added, the person asking the questions expresses himself or herself in a tone that ends like a question. But the short answer is, you can ask the question with or without the "ki".
@@HaitianCreoleMsCreole Excellent! Thank you for the clarification :) I just came across your channel and I'm so happy to see how much vocabulary you have here. I am making lots of notes in my little "Haitian Kreyol composition book". I started trying to learn Haitian Kreyol on a whim just over a year ago. I found the Pimsleur language CDs at my library and loved it, but they only offer 30 lessons so once I finished those I began searching youtube for any tutorial channels. I've found several helpful channels so far and now I'm adding yours to my list. Thank you for the excellent quality videos :)
Here you go! This will help. By adding "an" at the end, we're pretty much saying that we're talking about one child. Pitit mwen an, my child, just one. Pitit mwen yo, my children. More than one child. See this link. The sentences don't always end with an but they do indicate one object or person and in many cases these last words represent the letter "the". www.howtocreole.com/2015/12/learn-haitian-creole-definite-article.html
Bonjour. Il y a des Haïtiens qui disent « frèè » pour le mot « frère » quand ils parlent en français, ils le prononcent avec un « è » long, mais sans le « r » à la fin.
It's hard to say. I have a relative who never spoke creole with his children who were living in Haiti so the kids only spoke French although they understood some creole they could not speak it. So I guess the answer is no, not all Haitians speak creole at home but I would say the majority do. So probably greater than 99.9% of Haitians speak creole at home. And of course French is taught in school but my understanding is some schools in Haiti now teach Haitian Creole which didn't happen when I attended school in Haiti.
Hi Holly, there are a lot of similarities between Haitian-Creole and French. Not all the greetings are French. for example we say Alo, sak pase, Sa kap fèt, and maybe more to greet each other. But you are correct most of our greetings are French with a slight difference in the pronunciations.
Hi Mel, I've heard the same thing about Haitian-Creole. Some say we made our own language out of French and whichever African language we used to speak. I didn't know they spoke Creole in Mississippi. I knew about Louisiana since I've met at least one person from there who could speak creole. That was good information. Thank you.
@@HaitianCreoleMsCreole The gulf of Mississippi is Creole too. Us American Creoles spreaded to major cities in the 30s to states and cities like Chicago, Texas, California, Alabama and northern Florida... Very small section in Arkansas!
Haitian people are very loving and strong. The creole language sounds so much alike. Much love from a St. Lucian sister. We love y'all
Thank you very much. I have a few friends from St. Lucia and you are correct, our languages are similar.
Hum
Am haitian i wanna learn inglish
I would like to become an interpretor
They are so beautifully and quietly strong. My husband is my rock.
Thanks!
Pa gen pwoblèm.
My husband is from Haiti 🇭🇹 . So, I'm learning his language to impress him. New Subscriber here❤️
Aww that is really nice of you. Have you joined our facebook group?
@@guyanese_empress9559 aww that’s so nice. it will make him so happy
Some people said 11 thumbs down because they don't even know how to speak Creole I know how to speak Creole and it's 100 something thumbs up
Thank you Frantzz. That means a lot.
theres a girl who lives near me thats so beautiful but she doesnt speak english that well, im inspired to learn creole cause of her, my dad is haitian and never taught me but i see her as a way to get in touch with the other sides of my roots.
That's awesome! Maybe she can teach you Creole and you can teach her English.
Very good class, sweetheart, I like that class. I am an English student and I also studied Creole or learned street skills, but now with you I am learning it the way it is or how it is. Thank you for continuing to teach me.
I am glad to hear that. Thank you so much for your kind words.
Can't wait to surprise some people at work with these lol.
Y ap kontan anpil. Kijan sa te pase? (They will be happy. How did it go?) I am sorry for not seeing this sooner.
Thank you so much!! I lived in Haiti for 2 months in 2017 and I fell in love with the people ❤❤❤ my knowledge of French helped me with communication but we took Haitian Creole classes and I loved it!!! I now that I will be back to Haiti, I don't know when but I will. I haven't been able to practice it all these past years, however this is one of my 2020 resolutions, studying Haitian Creole to be ready when the Lord sends me back to Haiti. This channel is the BEST I Have found so far. THANK YOU SO MUCH, please keep helping us learn your beautiful language 🥰🥰🥰🥰 Greetings from Nicaragua! Gracias mi profesora (Thank you my teacher) Blessings ❤❤
Hello Valerie! Thank you so much for the feedback. I really appreciate it. I am glad I can help. Keep learning and practicing and you will slowly get better at it. There are a lot of groups on Facebook for Haitians so feel free to join them. I find that many Haitians write in Haitian Creole and English in those groups so that should at least help you with the writing part of it. I am glad to hear you enjoyed your trip to Haiti. It's a beautiful country that is suffering. Enjoy your next trip. Until then, let me know if there is anything in particular you would like to learn.
Thank you so much for sharing. My soon to be husband is Hatian and I'm now trying to learn some ......
Congratulations! That's great you're trying to learn. Also, remember to ask him to speak creole with you as if you already know how to speak it. Anything you don't understand he can fill in the blanks and you will most likely remember the next time you hear it.
I became friends with a haitian guy and I'm learning too. These videos help alot.
That's awesome! Keep practicing with him. It's the best way to learn. It's possible to become fluent without ever learning how to write or read Haitian Creole.
this is actually very helpful, thank you for this video!
I am glad to hear that. You're welcome.
This video is great I am Learning even litte bit I repeat some to my coworkers love from all my hatians you guys are ĺoveing caring smart and hard working wish me luck I need practice more I am American who grow up with domicans parents
Ah bòn chans! Vini nan gwoup Whatsapp sa a. facebook.com/groups/663373087918270
Thanks because my whole family speaks Hatian Creole even my little sister speaks creole while I don’t so thank you
Aww you actually have an advantage because you can use your family to practice listening and speaking.
Learn Haitian Creole Aprann Kreyòl Ayisyen I try sometime I could learn a little bit but it is difficult to remember all the words
AAAAAAAAH I am so excited to learn creole, I was thinking yesterday about this because in my city there is a lot of haitianos and actually I met a guy yesterday from Haiti and daawn, he started to talk with his friend and I just think, this language is so beautiful to listen and I want to study others languages and I was thinking in learn french or japanese first besides english, that I am learning now, but definitively I going to study creole. Thanks ma'am for provide these classes.
That's great to hear! It's always nice to learn about new languages and cultures. I have a friend who lives in Brazil and I hope to visit some day. Happy New Year
Hello my name is Nadege and I’m from Hattie so I have a Haitian background and now English but I still want to keep my Haitian language so I think this is going to help I ❤️ you video keep doing them 😊😊 God bless you😊😀
Thanks so much Nadege. I am hoping to publish a new one this weekend.
I wrote every word down... time to study...Mesí anpil ❤️
De ryen. M byen kontan. Fè m konnen si ou gen kesyon.
OMG, I am from Mauritius, your creol is very similar to our Mauritian creol. Congratulations.
Thank you. That's what I have heard. I actually watched a video once where people from different countries were speaking their countries' creole and I was amazed at how similar how languages are.
👍You are an awesome teacher thank you. Ustéd es muy buena maéstra Gracias.
Mèsi anpil
Sometimes in Haitian Creole we use “tanpri souple “ as wheedling form of request.
Tanpri souple ede’m prye.
Keep us in your prayers , pretty please 🙏
That is absolutely correct. It can also be used as a way to beg for something. Thanks for visiting the channel. I appreciate your contribution.
Tanpri. JE T'EN PRIE. Souple. S'IL VOUS PLAÎT.
I'm french but I want to learn Haitian Creole! A lot of words/sentences are similar to french so I can understands some things already but I'd love to be able to speak it correctly =)
Yes indeed! So many of the words are identical except Haitians don't really pronounce the Rs but the French do. What are you using to learn creole? Do you live in France? and Do you have Haitian friends?
@@HaitianCreoleMsCreole Yes I currently live in France =) I sadly don't have any Haitian friends, so I've mostly been learning using the internet either with youtube videos or translating texts on google traduction.
@@GrimesTheOG Oh I see. UA-cam videos are fine to learn new vocabulary and maybe sentences but you would need to practice. Here's a group with a whatsap link. You can practice speaking with others on whatsapp. You can practice listening and writing too. facebook.com/groups/663373087918270
@@HaitianCreoleMsCreole Thank you! This will definitely help! =D
You're welcome. Let me know if you have any issues.
This is the perfect Chanel for me 😮
My whole family is Haitian and speaks creole but I don't know as much as them
You're actually in a really good position to learn it since your family already speaks it. Just try to practice with them as often as you can even if you make mistake. Before you know it, you'll be fluent. It's much easier when you're exposed to it.
Haitian-Creole MsCreole
I hope I'll be fluent soon, but I know with your channel it will be allot easier so thank you ❤️
Keep making grate content ❤️👍🏾
Thank you I appreciate that. I will be making more videos now that the kids are in school. :)
Haitian-Creole MsCreole I'm very happy to here that 😀
Can't wait to see what you post next 💯👍🏾
My next 3 videos are all requests so if there's anything in particular you want, please let me know. Otherwise, I will be creating and posting things I think people need to learn to build vocabulary.
God Loves You Daily Reminder ❤️🙏🏾✝️
Mèsi
I am enjoying. I just wish I had someone to speak it with.
Join the whatsapp group l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fchat.whatsapp.com%2FF1EmTq5SFbr301lmE1JQJC%3Ffbclid%3DIwAR3SJ_fnKuD-rcjVcwLmxxtFb_hc8Mgan4EfHDovCtOyxbdjZA1w-iuqVpc&h=AT2apLrwGw7-JVQPkjF3no9BNRttuZEv6zRoVYXbvoST8GepmTEIgTLp-IFGPjqrIeUoSfbdfL_MhBNaDdkeYL3MRIEoVznG1aOyRpL11sl66iRs6UlEvPNv4i9bMZ385XXB3E0AqntTIFtKWggUC_sjWNEEbEJSgiKCN9KxxtwUXa2rMi9LrNhPmZp4tCNQYCIaY4UuDq5cgXWHqu2X8xkBD-yjRXRva48lLLsSNXPHwjyIw6BnNtBgc9izMAAF0xCpngE5mPWMt5tFdwBQtFQ8fmTYmMyNQUvqbb7qtp494z0VT-3Z&__tn__=-UK-R&c[0]=AT0fFFBExNfUQicow-xEjvAxep_jGEWaiqv_v--VysJafyWc_5ruGSQcZHcTN6EjHtHcpkCvhF-7tdrmJmN6mjIA0r6ihltwB3zQtJgQD2cWo2WxphbN7xDfr1Y_zBVaPkeAymLGf6spqRap7-6ELVELvQ79vw6VcznhFN0
Bon ane 🇭🇹 2023 🎆🎆🎆 ready to learn 🇭🇹 creole
Mèsi. Bòn ane 2023! M swete tout rèv ou yo reyalize.
I love it, I’m learning!
M byen kontan.
Thanks your my God bless you my dear
Mèsi. Ou menm tou.
great video, thanks so much for sharing! i learned a lot!!
M kontan tande sa.
hello you’re videos are very helpful, I remember a month ago I had to learn all of this and now I only don’t know a few
I realized something at 9:11
If “parents” were plural would the sentence be the same?
Kote paran ou ye? = where is your parent/ where are your parents?
For plural you would simply add yo. Kote paran w yo ye?
@@HaitianCreoleMsCreole oooh, so should there have been a “yo” because it was plural? Thank you
@@robossthinking1056 Yes, Yo is used for more than one.
Well done Mimi ✅
Thanks Nado
❤❤❤❤love this language 💜
Mèsi
Merci.je suis indien.j'aime langue creole.moi j'ai Des amis Creoles en pondichery j'apprends Creole Haitian.
Ah! you write French beautifully. Do you live in India?
Libon continue apran 😂🤣👀am from Mauritius
Mèsi
Mesi anpil 🙏🏽
de ryen.
Excellent video. Thank you.
Thank you Peter. I appreciate the comment.
Bonjour et merci beaucoup
Bonjou! De ryen.
@@HaitianCreoleMsCreole ❤️ dako
Florida wap viv ou New York?
@@tipasefar7403 Non, m rete Californie
@@HaitianCreoleMsCreole Bien
Hi there, I was wondering if you could help me, I wanted to know how to spell Self Concept in Creole? ,as I asked my grandparents and they wasn't sure. I would very much appreciate the help. Thank you
Hello, I am sorry for the late reply. It's not always easy to find an exact word when in comes to translations. For example, English has over one million words and Creole does not. The definition for Self-Concept is how one views himself or herself. So in Creole, you could simply say "Jan mwen wè tèt mwen" for how I see myself. Or "Jan m santi m" How I feel. "Jan m gade tèt mwen" How I look at myself. "Sa m santi m ye" Who I feel I am. I hope this helps. Let me know if you have any other questions and again I am really sorry for not seeing this sooner. In the future, do not hesitate to send me an email if you do not receive a response in the comment section.
@@HaitianCreoleMsCreole Thank you for getting back to me, I understand. Would you use Konsèp as one of the spelling as well?
Great teaching! I am learning so much.
Thank you Tabrina
Hello and love your videos. Can I ask what the literal translation of Pa Dekwa is?
Thank you. The translation would not really make much sense. It's taken from French which is "pas de quoi" and we pronounce it almost almost the same way, like 99% the same way. But if I wanted to translate it, I would probably say it says "no for what, for nothing, no big deal, don't mention it" but easier translation is "You're welcome"
@@HaitianCreoleMsCreole thankyou so much!
If you don't speak French, it looks so complex. If you do speak French it is the easiest thing in the world. EXAMPLES (Creole/FRENCH): Ki lang ou pale. QUELLE LANGUE VOUS PARLEZ? Kote ou soti? DE QUEL CÔTÉ VOUS ETES SORTI? Mwen byen kontan MOI, BIEN CONTENT.
It is just French with phonetic spelling.
That's true. It's much easier if you can speak French I realize that most of our words are in fact French with a few small twists to them.
Well done
Mèsi
The writing style is easier to grasp than the standard french orthography. I'm East African and my main languages are English and Swahili
Yes, it is. It's similar to American Sign Language.
Mesi anpil sister
Mèsi
Thank you good job
Thank you. I appreciate the comment.
Mwen komprann tou, mèsi.
Bravo!
im learning creole for my boyfriend .
Aww that's great. How is it going so far?
Nice
Mèsi
Thank you theacher
Mèsi anpil.
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Hi. "Nou" can also be "you" but in the plural form of you. Ex. Avek nou. With us or With you
That is correct Carlos
thank you
De ryen.
@@HaitianCreoleMsCreole Sa K Pase 🙂
The creole is sound good
thanks Nado
Mwen gen yon frè yon sè😅😅😅😊😢❤❤❤❤
🤩
Bonswa
Alo
Can you explain why "Ki kote" is sometimes used while at other times "kote" alone is used?
thanks for asking. Kote means a location or a place, the "ki" makes it a question automatically. So "ki kote" pretty much means what place or what location which equals to "where" in English. So when asking where are you? we say "ki kote ou ye?". On the other hand, we can also say "kote ou ye" which also means where are you? You will find that when the "ki" is not added, the person asking the questions expresses himself or herself in a tone that ends like a question. But the short answer is, you can ask the question with or without the "ki".
@@HaitianCreoleMsCreole Excellent! Thank you for the clarification :) I just came across your channel and I'm so happy to see how much vocabulary you have here. I am making lots of notes in my little "Haitian Kreyol composition book". I started trying to learn Haitian Kreyol on a whim just over a year ago. I found the Pimsleur language CDs at my library and loved it, but they only offer 30 lessons so once I finished those I began searching youtube for any tutorial channels. I've found several helpful channels so far and now I'm adding yours to my list. Thank you for the excellent quality videos :)
Aww thank you
Mwen renmen sa
Can you please tell me why and where "an" is used. Like pitit mwen an. What does "an" mean
Here you go! This will help. By adding "an" at the end, we're pretty much saying that we're talking about one child. Pitit mwen an, my child, just one. Pitit mwen yo, my children. More than one child. See this link. The sentences don't always end with an but they do indicate one object or person and in many cases these last words represent the letter "the". www.howtocreole.com/2015/12/learn-haitian-creole-definite-article.html
I like creole language
Wi..c/oui..f=yes
Bonjour. Quand les Haïtiens parlent en français, est-ce qu'ils prononcent le « r » à la fin du mot « frère »?
Oui
Bonjour. Il y a des Haïtiens qui disent « frèè » pour le mot « frère » quand ils parlent en français, ils le prononcent avec un « è » long, mais sans le « r » à la fin.
Bonsoir. Est-ce que vous comprenez l'accent québécois?
Non :(
Les Québécois prononcent le « â » de « pâte » en allongeant.
Merite =you welcome
Thanks for your comment. Merite means deserve.
Bien.f...byen.c=good
Wi
When do you use "ou" and when do you use "w"
W is short for ou. Like in any other languages, natives tend to speak fast so the ou is shorten with w because the ou is pronounced too quickly.
Knowing some French helps me. I also love you showing the dialogue balloons.
Ah wi, anpil nan mo yo prèske menm jan ak Fransè.
Same may family speak it to
Waw chérie bon travail net wi vérité ne cache pas mon amour
Thank you so much. I appreciate the comment.
@@HaitianCreoleMsCreole thanks 😊
Bonsoir. J'aimerais savoir si tous les Haïtiens parlent créole à la maison?
It's hard to say. I have a relative who never spoke creole with his children who were living in Haiti so the kids only spoke French although they understood some creole they could not speak it. So I guess the answer is no, not all Haitians speak creole at home but I would say the majority do. So probably greater than 99.9% of Haitians speak creole at home. And of course French is taught in school but my understanding is some schools in Haiti now teach Haitian Creole which didn't happen when I attended school in Haiti.
Est-ce qu'il y a des cours de créole à l'école?
Yes I think some schools have it now. I am not sure if the fancy schools teach it though. They didn't have it when I attended school in Haiti.
Avant, les Parisiens prononçaient le mot « brin » et le mot « brun » différemment, maintenant, ils le prononcent tous « bran », et les Haïtiens?
I don't know what the word 'brin' means but we do say 'brun' when someone is not too light and not too dark.
How do I say:
Thank you for watching
Sorry I just saw the message. Mèsi dèske ou te gade. Dèske is pronounced like desk but you add the e which is pronounced like the a in bake.
Lot of different between French with Creole
Indeed! The two languages are quite different and yet have some similarities.
Combien de l'argent (f)kombyen lajan (c))= how much money
Yes, many of our words are very similar to french. Most of the time we just don't pronounce the "r".
Mw la
Mesi
De ryen.
@@HaitianCreoleMsCreole repete fraz anglè yo 2 fwa pou mw. apresa mw byn aprann mèsi anpil
@@freolyrics7553 Ok sa se menm videyo a ak plis anglè ua-cam.com/video/YuhIQhtNWyM/v-deo.html
@@HaitianCreoleMsCreole ok mèsi
Travay..c/travail..f=work
It seems like the Haitian Creole Greetings are French , but the rest is not
Hi Holly, there are a lot of similarities between Haitian-Creole and French. Not all the greetings are French. for example we say Alo, sak pase, Sa kap fèt, and maybe more to greet each other. But you are correct most of our greetings are French with a slight difference in the pronunciations.
Hi Mel, I've heard the same thing about Haitian-Creole. Some say we made our own language out of French and whichever African language we used to speak. I didn't know they spoke Creole in Mississippi. I knew about Louisiana since I've met at least one person from there who could speak creole. That was good information. Thank you.
@@HaitianCreoleMsCreole The gulf of Mississippi is Creole too. Us American Creoles spreaded to major cities in the 30s to states and cities like Chicago, Texas, California, Alabama and northern Florida... Very small section in Arkansas!
wow that's interesting. I had no idea. One is never too old to learn. Thank you for that.
Plis anglè
Wi mwen tè fe yon lòt ak plis anglè. Men li. ua-cam.com/video/YuhIQhtNWyM/v-deo.html
bnn,
vgt